What’s for pudding?

A familiar refrain from my childhood, and one I often ask Nick as we finish our dinner – something sweet to round off the evening meal. I was lucky to grow up in a family where putting food on the table – in terms of affording it – was never an issue. With hindsight, I realise what a burden it must have been for my mother, preparing dinner for a family of six in the days before ready-meals and microwave ovens, after a day spent teaching German to adolescent boys, and with the evening set aside for lesson preparation and marking homework. The main course on a Monday was often meatloaf, made with leftovers from Sunday’s roast. But what I mostly remember is what came after the main course, and in our family this was called pudding. What’s for pudding, Mum?

And these are some of the puddings I remember, some made more frequently than others:

  • Apple crumble. Also apricot crumble – as I recall, Mum used a tin of stewed apricots and made the crumble mix herself.
  • Flummery – not a frequent dessert, and I remember the name more than the dish. The Macquarie Concise Dictionary‘s first definition is: a fruit flavoured jelly mixture, sometimes thickened with flour, beaten until fluffy and allowed to set.
  • Pears baked in red wine and spices
  • Baked apple, the central hole where the core was removed stuffed with dates
  • Apple charlotte
  • Stewed plums from our plum tree. I loved the sourness of the plums tempered with sugar, and the slightly marbled effect as you poured single cream over the plums and it mixed with the red juice.
  • Stewed rhubarb mixed with whipped cream – another great combination!
  • Baked “continental” style cheesecake with a crumb base. Nice and dense and not too sweet.
  • Lemon Delicious Pudding. The lemon from the lemon tree in our backyard (standard feature in most Australian backyards). I described the pudding in a poem as a ‘head-spinning tang-fest’. I’ve yet to try making a vegan version.
  • An early time-saving fallback – Sara Lee Danish Pastry or Crumble, bought frozen from the supermarket and baked in the oven.
  • Ice cream and frozen yoghurt were good standbys, as well as accompaniments to other desserts.
  • But how about avocado ice cream?? I still dream about Mum’s avocado ice cream. The creamy texture and taste, the beautiful pale green hue, the citrus hints counterbalancing the richness of the avocado mix. Melt-in-the-mouth heaven. Mum sent me the recipe for avocado ice cream many years ago, but I’ve never attempted it – yet! It should be fairly easy to create a vegan version. Maybe next summer I’ll give it a whirl.

Here is Mum’s avocado ice cream recipe:

Handwritten text reads:
Avocado Ice Cream
1 avocado; 1/2 cup orange juice; 1 tablesp lemon juice; 1/4 teasp. grated orange rind; 1/4 tsp salt; 1/2 cup caster sugar; 4oz Philadelphia Cream cheese (softened) 1/2 cup cream; 1 cup milk.
Peel avocado, mash & sieve pulp, mix in orange & lemon juice (slowly) rind & salt. Mix chopped cream cheese with sugar & beat well, then blend in cream & milk 
Combine with avocado mixture. Pour into ice cream trays.
Place in fridge with control having been set at lowest temp an hour in advance (now we tell you!)
Freeze until firm then turn into cold bowl & beat until smooth & fluffy.
Return to fridge in trays overnight. Reset fridge to normal some hours before ice cream is to be used.
[The drawbacks - it's heavy work with a manual beater. You need to remove some things soothes don't freeze overnight. But it's worth the effort.}

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