Years ago I taught a
unit on pressure cooking to students at Abilene High School. That was back in
the days when pressure cookers were heavy duty pans that set on the burner of a
stove and people were often afraid they’d blow up.
Before I taught that
unit for the first time, I experimented with a pressure cooker at home. One of
the first recipes I ever tried was one for bread pudding—the first time Barry
or I had ever tasted this dessert . . . and we liked it.
Just recently I
purchased a new fangled electric pressure cooker and decided to again give
bread pudding a try. OH MY GOSH . . . it was delicious. Here’s the slightly
update recipe adapted for an electric pressure cooker.
This makes a
wonderful dessert but could also be eaten for breakfast.
Pressure Cooker Bread
Pudding
4 tablespoons butter, melted
½ cup lightly packed brown sugar
3 cups whole milk (or use almond milk)
3 eggs, beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 heaping teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon salt
Dried fruit soaking in liquor. |
½ cup dried fruit (I used a combination of raisins, craisins
& dried cherries that I let soak in a blackberry liquor to plump; or use
any other liquor of your choice or even just water)
¼ to ⅓ cup chopped walnuts or pecans
- In a large bowl, whisk together melted butter, brown sugar, milk, eggs, vanilla, cinnamon, and salt.
- Mix in cubed bread and raisins. Let rest 20 minutes until
the bread absorbs the milk, stirring occasionally.
Bread just added to milk mixture. - Add chopped nuts and pour bread pudding into a buttered 1 ½-quart glass or metal baking dish. (Be sure it fits in your pressure cooking pot.)
- Cover dish with foil. Prepare a foil sling for lifting the dish out of the pressure cooking pot by taking an 18” strip of foil and folding it lengthwise twice.
- Pour 1 ½ cups water into the pressure cooking pot and place the trivet in the bottom. Center the dish on the foil strip and lower it into the pressure cooker.
- Lock the lid in place. Select High Pressure and set the timer for 20 minutes. When beep sounds, turn off pressure cooker, and do a quick pressure release to release the pressure. When valve drops carefully remove lid.
- Remove dish from pressure cooking pot. If desired, put dish
in preheated 350° oven for 5 to 10 minutes to crisp up the top.
We added a dollop of Greek God's Honey Vanilla Yogurt to each serving of bread pudding.
Recipe without photos . . .
Pressure Cooker Bread Pudding
4 tablespoons butter, melted
½ cup lightly packed brown sugar
3 cups whole milk (or use almond milk)
3 eggs, beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 heaping teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon salt
7 ( ¾”) thick slices bread (I used homemade wheat berry bread), cubed and toasted (toast on a rimmed cookie sheet in 350º oven for 20 minutes stirring occasionally. Cool bread before continuing with recipe.)
½ cup dried fruit (I used a combination of raisins, craisins & dried cherries that I let soak in a blackberry liquor to plump; or use any other liquor of your choice or even just water)
¼ to ⅓ cup chopped walnuts or pecans
- In a large bowl, whisk together melted butter, brown sugar, milk, eggs, vanilla, cinnamon, and salt.
- Mix in cubed bread and raisins. Let rest 20 minutes until the bread absorbs the milk, stirring occasionally.
- Add chopped nuts and pour bread pudding into a buttered 1 ½-quart glass or metal baking dish. (Be sure it fits in your pressure cooking pot.)
- Cover dish with foil. Prepare a foil sling for lifting the dish out of the pressure cooking pot by taking an 18” strip of foil and folding it lengthwise twice.
- Pour 1 ½ cups water into the pressure cooking pot and place the trivet in the bottom. Center the dish on the foil strip and lower it into the pressure cooker.
- Lock the lid in place. Select High Pressure and set the timer for 20 minutes. When beep sounds, turn off pressure cooker, and do a quick pressure release to release the pressure. When valve drops carefully remove lid.
- Remove dish from pressure cooking pot. If desired, put dish in preheated 350° oven for 5 to 10 minutes to crisp up the top.
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