Featured in the Fall 1988 issue of Domain Magazine

Bruce Auden's Gingered Rice Pudding

A family dessert with an elegant twist

Serves 8

Gingered Rice Pudding

1 quart half-and-half
2 pints heavy cream
1 cup uncooked long-grain white rice
1 cup sugar
2-inch piece unpeeled fresh ginger,
sliced in a fan shape but still in one piece
1/2 vanilla bean, split
Pinch kosher salt
5 egg yolks
1 pint heavy cream, whipped firm
Cranberry-cactus pear sauce (recipe follows)
Persimmon purée (recipe follows)
Cherry conserve (recipe follows)
Maple-chocolate sauce (recipe follows)
8 sprigs fresh mint (optional)

Combine first 7 ingredients in a heavy-bottomed pan. Bring to a boil, then simmer uncovered until mixture becomes thick, at least 1 hour. Stir often, using a wooden spoon to prevent sticking. When mixture is thick, remove from heat. Remove ginger and vanilla bean. Stir in yolks while mixture is hot. Cool in refrigerator, stirring occasionally. When completely cool, gradually fold in whipped cream; thickness of pudding is determined by amount of cream added. (If pudding becomes too runny, spoon into cups and glaze under broiler until brown and serve in cup. Sauces and conserve may then be added in small amounts.)

For efficiency in preparation, start the pudding, then make, in order, cranberry-cactus pear sauce, persimmon purée, cherry conserve, and maple-chocolate sauce.

To arrange, cover each plate with 2 ounces of persimmon purée. Highlight with drizzles of cranberry sauce. Spoon on rice pudding, and drizzle with chocolate sauce. Spoon conserve onto plate. Garnish with mint.

Cranberry-Cactus Pear Sauce

1 cup cranberries
4 fresh red cactus pears
Juice of 3 oranges
Zest of 1 orange, in large pieces

Peel cactus pears, discarding thick peel and saving red pulp. Combine pulp with other ingredients in saucepan and bring to boil. Then simmer 10 minutes. Remove from heat. Remove zest and purée mixture in blender. Strain and cool.

Note: Sauce is very tart. If you are using it for another dish, it should be sweetened to taste.

Persimmon Purée

3 large, overripe persimmons
Apple juice or other juice as needed

Squeeze pulp of persimmons by hand into blender and purée. Thin to smooth, pourable consistency with juice and strain.

Tart-Cherry Conserve

2 cups dried cherries
2 cups apple cider
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1 cup sugar
Pinch ground cinnamon, to taste
Pinch ground cloves, to taste
1/2 cup pecan halves

Combine first 3 ingredients in saucepan. Cover and cook until cherries are soft, about 10 minutes. Remove lid and add sugar, cinnamon, and cloves. Slowly bring to a boil, stirring occasionally. Boil about 10 minutes, stirring often. Add nuts the last 3 minutes of cooking. Remove from heat and serve at room temperature.

Maple-Chocolate Sauce

3 ounces bittersweet chocolate, in small pieces
1 ounce maple syrup

Combine both ingredients in top of double boiler, stirring until chocolate is melted. Keep warm until ready to use.

 

 

The Fairmount Restaurant
The Fairmount Hotel
401 S. Alamo
San Antonio, Texas

"Rice pudding is one of my favorite dishes -- we used to have it once a week when I was growing up in England," Bruce Auden says of the inspiration for this autumnal dessert. "But you can never order it in a restaurant." When Auden, the executive chef at the Fairmount Restaurant in San Antonio, craves a rice pudding, you can be sure he's not going to make something bland or dreary. As one of this country's most daring culinary pioneers, the 33-year-old Auden has proved himself a bold orchestrator of Southwestern style and international flavors. And that's true in this gingered rice pudding, with a tart-cherry conserve. "What I was looking for was a dessert that wasn't too elegant," Auden explains. "These are warm Thanksgiving flavors we all use around this time of year. Of course, I still think my mother makes the best rice pudding of anybody."



Dairy
1 quart half-and-half
3 pints heavy cream
eggs

Produce
1 lemon (for juice)
3 large, overripe persimmons
cranberries
4 fresh red cactus pears
3 oranges
fresh ginger
fresh mint (optional)

Grocery
bittersweet chocolate
maple syrup
2 cups dried cherries
apple cider
apple juice, or other juice
white rice
sugar
cinnamon
ground cloves
pecan halves
1 vanilla bean
kosher salt



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