Sweet Baked Goods Transparent Pudding

transparent pudding
(from the Civilian & Telegraph, of Cumberland, Maryland, September 08, 1859)
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Ingredients:

12 egg yolkss​
sugar​
butter​
puff pastry​
optional fruit preserves​

Instructions:

Take the yolks of of twelve eggs; beat to a froth; add sugar to make a stiff batter; a small hit of butter; flavor with anything to suit the fancy. Have two good sized pie plates lined with pastry; pour the batter in and bake until done. Some pour preserves, (small fruit) in the pastry before the batter.


Transparent Pudding can be traced back to the frontier days where pies were often made using whatever pantry goods were on hand. Since they had no refrigeration in those days and this pudding did not have to be refrigerated, it was quite popular. Sadly, the pudding may be transparent, but the calories are not.
 
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Transparent Pudding can be traced back to the frontier days where pies were often made using whatever pantry goods were on hand. Since they had no refrigeration in those days and this pudding did not have to be refrigerated, it was quite popular. Sadly, the pudding may be transparent, but the calories are not.

Freaky. Not sure how this would taste, but I might have to give it a shot. :tongue:
 
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Too strange, but I would want to know what it tastes like. I mean it is clear, like vodka clear. It looks a lot like water in a pie tray. I mean I have never seen a rotary evaporator or heard of one. I think my trip to the future would be short. I prefer the food recognizable as in what it once was in life. Too strange I think I would like the transparent pie though. Thanks @Eleanor Rose for the trip to the past and future.
 

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