Light Banana Bread Pudding with Homemade Caramel Sauce

with caramel and ice cream

I don’t know about you, but I seem to have an endless list of recipes that I want to make.

Every day I find multiple new things to add to the list. The problem with a list that is always changing is I never know what I need. So it’s rare that I have all the ingredients for a recipe, unless I just went to the grocery store. But one day when I was distracted by the Internet, I read a recipe for banana bread pudding that sounded to die for. And I had all the ingredients I needed!

When I say “banana bread pudding” I mean traditional bread pudding ingredients, with the addition of banana. This is not made with banana bread, although that would be delicious.

banana and bread  Light Banana Bread Pudding with Homemade Caramel Sauce

The best part about bread pudding is the ingredient list is short, and procedure is extremely simple. All you really need is bread, eggs, milk, sugar, and vanilla. This is a great recipe for people who don’t like to waste money or food.

In honor of spring break and New Year’s Resolutions [Read more...]

Baking – Back to Basics.

Here is a list of what I have found to be the terms that you might need a definition for if you haven’t done much baking.

Bake – a dry heat method of cooking.

Batter – a mixture of flour, liquid, and other ingredients that is thin enough to pour, something like a pancake batter.

Beat – to thoroughly combine ingredients and incorporate air…think of how cookie dough is made.

Caramelize – heating sugar until it’s melted and brown -giving it the combination a very rich, nutty aroma and a dark, sort of toffee flavor.

Cream – beating together ingredients – usually a fat, sugar, and/or eggs until smooth and fluffy.

Crimp – sealing the edges of 2 layers of dough (like on a pie) with a fork or your fingers.

Cut in – distributing solid fat (butter, shortening) throughout dry ingredients with a pastry blender or fork to a crumbly texture sort of like cornmeal kind of.

Dough – a soft, thick mixture of flour, liquids, fat, and other ingredients…chocolate chip cookie dough..om nom nom.

Dot – to distribute small amounts of margarine or butter evenly over the surface of pie filling or dough.

Flute – to make or press a decorative pattern into the raised edge of the pastry.

Fold in – gently combining a heavier mixture with a more delicate one with out losing the air. Something I like to do I learned on the Food Network, to cut it in half (not all the way through), fold and turn the bowl a quarter turn…3-4 turns is usually pretty good.

Glaze – coating something like a pound cake, or brownies with some sort of liquid, loosened jelly, or thin icing before or after food is cooked.

Knead - this is taking a dough, pressing the heels of your hands into the dough, folding it in half, then again and repeat that process until it feels like the toughness of an earlobe.

Partially set – refrigerating a gelatin mix until about the thickened consistency of unbeaten egg whites.

Proof – allowing a yeast dough to rise before baking. Or, dissolving yeast in a warm liquid and leaving it in a warm place for 5 to 10 minutes until it expands and becomes bubbly. (some microwaves and ovens have a setting for proofing)

Scald – heating a mixture or liquid to just below boiling point. This is typically seen done with milk.

Score – cutting shallow slits into food, commonly done to the top of bread before baking it to add some decoration.

Soft peaks – beating egg whites or whipping cream to the stage where it forms soft rounded peaks where beaters were removed.

Stiff peaks – this is the same process as soft peaks but to a stage when once you remove the beaters the mixture holds stiff peaks. (Notice how the frosting on the beaters holds its shape)

Zest – the outer part of citrus fruit (only color, not the white part) used for its intense flavor. It’s generally a stronger flavor then the juice itself.

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