Hasty Pudding

Hasty Pudding

Frederic P. Miller, Agnes F. Vandome, John McBrewster

     

бумажная книга



Издательство: Книга по требованию
Дата выхода: июль 2011
ISBN: 978-6-1337-0259-2
Объём: 128 страниц
Масса: 215 г
Размеры(В x Ш x Т), см: 23 x 16 x 1

Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Hasty pudding is a pudding or porridge of grains cooked in milk or water. In the United States, it invariably refers to a version made of ground corn. Hasty pudding is notably mentioned in a verse of the early American song Yankee Doodle. Since the 16th century at least, hasty pudding has been either a British dish of wheat flour cooked in boiling milk or water until it reaches the consistency of a thick batter or an oatmeal porridge. Hasty pudding was used as a term for the latter by Hannah Glasse in The Art of Cookery (1747). Extant North America recipes include wheat, oat, and corn-based puddings. Eliza Leslie, an influential American cookbook author of the early 19th century, includes a recipe for flour hasty pudding in her 1840 Directions for Cookery, In Its Various Branches, and calls the corn type "Indian mush" (she calls an oatmeal version burgoo). She stresses the need for slow cooking rather than haste, and also recommends the use of a special mush-stick for stirring to prevent lumps. (This mush-stick is perhaps related to the pudding stick of the nursery rhyme beating.)

Данное издание не является оригинальным. Книга печатается по технологии принт-он-деманд после получения заказа.