Wild
Persimmon Pudding
A pudding is milk plus sweetening with a key
staple ingredient plus a binder, usually cooked. Our accountant, W. L. "Bill" Pickler, told me in
2003 how much he loved his aunt's wild persimmon pudding...she cooked him a recipe every
November (she had died). To me, persimmons were wild fruit (Diospyros virginiana)
which older children coaxed younger children into tasting before fully ripe. On doing so, the
taster felt like the taste "made his mouth turn inside out". After marrying Betty and
building on the farm she grew up on, I noticed several big persimmon trees...but did not have
good luck at making persimmon pudding; now, the cows beat us to the fallen fruit. I can also
recall that Betty's mother never mentioned having made any kind of persimmon desert (see
below). Bill gave me a recipe by Jane Mull (Hickory, N. C.) from a 12/05 issue of the
Charlotte Observer:
- milk: 1 &
3/4 cup.
- sweetener: 1 to 1
& 1/2 cups sugar.
- staple ingredient: 2 cups of persimmon pulp
- binder:
- 3 eggs,
beaten.
- 2 cups all-purpose
flour; 1/2 teaspoon baking soda; 3 tablespoons melted butter or margarine.
- taste enhancer:
vanilla, 1 teaspoon; salt, 1 teaspoon
The soft wild persimmons
are picked up from the ground and washed & put through a metal fruit sieve (or, squeeze &
"mush them up" to separate the big seeds out, possibly wringing them through a mesh bag such as a
produce bag; or rub pulp through something like a colander). If some skin comes through with pulp,
that is okay. Excess pulp can be frozen for later use. You can see some good information on
YouTube.
Mix wet stuff together: the eggs and pulp
together. Then mix dry stuff together: add flour, baking soda, salt, and sugar. Then mix dry
into wet. Then stir in melted butter and vanilla. Then pour the mix into a greased or
Pam-sprayed 13 by 9 inch baking pan and bake at 300 degrees for about an hour until "done"
(when a knife inserted in the center comes out clean). Serve plain or with whipped cream
topping. Store leftovers in refrigerator.
Experimenters: My mother-in-law's friend,
Sara Stockman, is said to have had just a simple, general recipe for fruit pudding of 2
cups each of pulp, flour, and sugar...I presume some milk...and a teaspoon of cinnamon. Check
the internet & note that some use spices in recipes (ground cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger,
cloves, or allspice). Raisins add taste variety and sweetness, but do so as discrete packets
of taste released only as chewed. One can vary this recipe by adding other types of fruit
(dried cranberries), nuts (pecans, walnuts), or taste enhancers or texture variants (maybe
even some grape hulls!). And, one can make a "richer" desert by adding, say, milk plus
cottage cheese (or other soft cheese), or half-and-half instead of milk, or even whipping
cream instead of milk. Some puff it up a little with 1/4-1 teaspoon of baking powder. If the
pudding gets too dry, serve with cream poured over it or ice cream on it, or Cool Whip or
real whipped cream. The pulp can also be used to make fruit breads, pancakes, and molded
salads.
BUT: I have tried two seasons to get enough pulp
for some pudding or a pie (in the manner of pumpkin pie) and just found it way too much
trouble to go through the whole process. On some future date, maybe I'll try with
commercially grown persimmons!
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(posted 11 December 2005; updated 31 October
2009)
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