PERSIMMON PUDDING, an antique recipe –

381px-PersimmonWatercolor

Public domain illustration of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Recipes are good-will ambassadors.” Mrs. Cordell Hull as quoted in Pioneer “Vittals”

The glorious gold-orange globes of hachiya persimmons arrive in the market along with the autumn chill. There are several kinds of persimmons, but the ones generally available to me are the hachiya. These must be very ripe to eat raw or use in cooking.  They have high tannin levels, which makes them bitter when unripe. When the persimmons become as soft as a ripe tomato, you can cut them in half, scoop out the flesh with a spoon, and eat them raw.  Or you can use the pulp for breads, cakes, and puddings.

I found the recipe below, which I offer for historical interest, in a charming booklet compiled by Sarah Dougherty of Russellville, Tennessee.  There’s no date on the book and no copyright to give us a hint.  It would appear that Mrs. Dougherty lovingly collected old Tennessee recipes and probably self-published this tiny, three-by-five, brown-covered gem.  According to the booklet, this recipe is from the mountains of East Tennessee and dates back to the 1800s.

Persimmon Pudding

  • 3 eggs
  • 1 cup brown sugar, packed
  • 1 cup seeded persimmons
  • 1/2 cup buttermilk
  • Pinch salt
  • 1 teaspoon soda dissolved in buttermilk
  • 1 cup flour
  • butter, the size of an egg
  • 1/2 teaspoon each of spice, cinnamon and nutmeg

Mix all together and bake in moderate oven until done.

Serve with whipped cream.

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2 thoughts on “PERSIMMON PUDDING, an antique recipe –

  1. It looks delicious, but is not gluten-free. It contains a cup of flour. I suppose it could be adapted, but I am not skilled enough to do that. :(

    • Hi, Joiegirl … and apologies. I just corrected this post. I put it up for its historic interest and you’re right. It’s not gluten-free. I’ve not experimented with this because I keep the sweets to a minimum, but I’m told you could substitue one-for-one a cup of Jules Flour:
      http://www.julesglutenfree.com/
      or Better Batter
      http://betterbatter.org/
      in any recipe and that these will work.

      Again, I haven’t played with this recipe nor have I tried either of those flours. I will say that when I was first diagnosed and in other recipes I tried King Arthur’s gluten-free multi-purpose flour
      http://www.kingarthurflour.com/shop/special-diets/gluten-free
      and Bob’s Red Mill all-purpose gluten-free flour
      http://www.bobsredmill.com/gf-all_purpose-baking-flour.html
      and I didn’t care for the results. That could be because I haven’t focused my effort on learning to use these flours and on baking sweets.

      It seems healther to me to just avoid these foods and go with plain fruit for dessert. Gluten-free baking flours are not while-grain and are very high glycemic.

      Best wishes with your own explorations.

      Jamie

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