Recipes>Chocolate Recipes

Milk Stout and Chocolate Steamed Pudding

by The Ethicurean from The Ethicurean Cookbook: Recipes, foods and spirituous liquors, from our bounteous walled garden in the several seasons of the year

Serves 6

From The Ethicurean Cookbook, this milk stout and chocolate steamed pudding recipe is a real winner. The dark cocoa is enhanced with the deep beer flavour.

Discover more delicious Pudding recipes

From steamed puddings to fruit crumbles

From the book

The Ethicurean Cookbook

The Ethicurean

The Ethicurean Cookbook: Recipes, foods and spirituous liquors, from our bounteous walled garden in the several seasons of the year

120 recipes celebrating locally-sourced British food

Traditional recipes with a fresh, modern twist

Creative combinations of delicious ingredients

Buy From

Introduction

This recipe is a combination of two of our favourite things: milk stout and a British steamed pudding. When we first opened The Ethicurean, we drank Bristol Beer Factory’s chilled milk stout on the lawn overlooking the garden. It had the most remarkable balance of sweetness and roast malt that we had ever tasted. Since this boozy summer evening, ‘milk stout on the lawn’ has become shorthand for, ‘Hurry up, let’s go and have a beer.’

Milk stout was first brewed on the Bristol Beer Factory site in the 1900s and its recent revival was an excellent move. During the brewing process, unfermentable lactose sugar is added, giving the beer a residual sweetness.

This pudding, served with an inappropriate amount of double cream, should be regarded as a new British classic.

Tags

Ingredients

160mlBristol Beer Factory’s milk stout
150gbutter, cut into cubes
235gcaster sugar
45gcocoa powder
160gplain flour
85mlsoured cream
1large egg
2 tspvanilla extract
1½ tspbicarbonate of soda
Double cream, to serve

Essential kit

You will need a 1.2-litre pudding basin and a steamer basket.

Method

Place the milk stout and butter in a saucepan over the lowest possible heat and whisk until the butter has just melted. It is important not to overheat the mixture or the butter will split, resulting in an oily pudding. Add the sugar and stir until dissolved.

Sift the cocoa powder and flour into the mixture in 2 lots, whisking thoroughly after each to blend well. Set aside.

Lightly whisk the soured cream, egg, vanilla and bicarbonate of soda together until combined. Add this to the stout and flour mixture and whisk briefly to incorporate once more.

Thoroughly grease a 1.2 litre pudding basin with butter. Add the pudding mixture. Take a piece of foil large enough to cover the top of the basin generously, folding a thick pleat in the centre (this will allow the pudding to expand during steaming), and place it on the basin, tucking the edges firmly under the rim. Put the basin in a steamer basket and set it over a pan containing about 10cm boiling water. Cover and steam over a low heat for 2 hours, checking the water level every 30 minutes and topping up when necessary.

Remove the basin from the steamer and leave to stand for 5 minutes. Take off the foil, run a knife around the edge of the pudding, then turn it out on to a plate. You’ll need plenty of cream, as this pudding is seriously thirsty!

Reviews

Have you tried this recipe? Let us know how it went by leaving a comment below.

Cancel reply

Your review

Name *

Our team will respond to any queries as soon as we can - this may take longer over weekends. You do not need to resubmit your comment.

Please note: Moderation is enabled and may delay your comment being posted. There is no need to resubmit your comment. By posting a comment you are agreeing to the website Terms of Use .

Be the first to leave a review

Ingredients
Method

More Pudding Recipes

View all

José Pizarro’s Baked Orange Rice Pudding with Strawberry Compote

by José Pizarro from The Spanish Home Kitchen

Alison Roman’s A Bowl of Salted Chocolate Pudding

by Alison Roman from Sweet Enough

More British Recipes

View all

Jamie Oliver’s Really Good Roasties

by Jamie Oliver from Easy Air Fryer

Nigella Lawson – Lily’s Scones

by Nigella Lawson from How To Be A Domestic Goddess

More Dinner Party Recipes

View all

Mary Berry’s Horseradish Beef Cheeks

by Mary Berry from Mary 90: My Very Best Recipes

Mary Berry’s Gravadlax with Mustard Dill Sauce

by Mary Berry from Mary 90: My Very Best Recipes

Get our latest recipes, features, book news and ebook deals straight to your inbox every week