Featured Post

10 Easy Homemade Ice Cream Recipes- How to Make Ice Cream at Home

01- Homemade Ice Cream in 5 Minutes #chocobar #chocobaricecream #icecream 02- Choco bar Ice-Cream Recipe | Eggless & Without Cr...

Make the Banana Pudding That People Wait in Line for All Over the World

New York-based Magnolia Bakery’s excellent pudding is easier to make than you think

Extremely ripe bananas (along with sourdough) were among the must-have ingredients at the beginning of shelter-in-place orders, when it seemed like everyone was baking for comfort. But while bread flour and sourdough starter became much harder to find in the spring, we always have bananas — America’s most popular fruit — for our banana bread baking and, if you’re getting creative, building layers of banana pudding.

According to culinary historian Robert Moss, bananas began to touch down in small numbers in the U.S. before the Civil War, arriving by boat from the West Indies. Then, thanks to decades of aggressive ad campaigns touting the banana’s nutritional benefits, demand for the delicate, tropical fruit skyrocketed and bananas became an unmovable part of the American diet. By the end of the 1800s, over four million bunches were arriving annually to ports, with New Orleans enjoying the greatest share, and more and more cooks were getting creative with how to use them.

Some say banana pudding’s reputation as a “Southern food” is due to its arrival in Southern ports, like NOLA’s. Additionally, Moss makes the case that the ease of making banana pudding — in large batches, without having to turn the oven on — made it ideal for serving at large Southern social gatherings and events.

But recipes for banana pudding were in the North as early as the 1880s and variations abound, from using lady fingers in place of sponge cake (the original base) to topping it with meringue or infusing it with citrus. In 1921, Laura Kerley published a banana pudding recipe that swapped in vanilla wafers as the base; Nabisco jumped aboard and was publishing a recipe for banana pudding on the side of its wafer boxes by the 1940s. By the ’50s and ’60s, the banana pudding we know today was the norm: bananas, vanilla wafers, custard, and whipped cream.

Today, the most famous maker of banana pudding is probably New York-based Magnolia Bakery. Though it shot to fame thanks to its cupcakes and a couple of pop culture references, it’s the excellent (and arguably better) banana pudding that keeps lines snaking at nearly 20 locations worldwide. You can find the recipe for Magnolia’s version below, prepared by chief baking officer Bobbie Lloyd. Magnolia also offers kits to help recreate the signature recipe at home.


Magnolia Bakery Classic Banana Pudding

Ingredients:

1 14-ounce can sweetened condensed milk
1½ cups (360 grams/12.7 oz) ice cold water
1 3.4-ounce package instant vanilla pudding mix, preferably Jell-O Brand
3 cups (720 grams/25.5 oz) heavy cream
1 11-ounce box vanilla wafers, preferably Nilla brand
4 to 5 ripe bananas, sliced

Step 1: In a medium sized bowl whisk together the sweetened condensed milk and the cold water. Place the pudding mix in another medium sized bowl and slowly whisk in the liquid, whisking until there are no lumps and the mixture is smooth, about 1 minute. Cover and refrigerate until firm at least an hour or overnight.

Step 2: In a stand mixer with the whisk attachment or using a hand mixer, whip the heavy cream on medium speed for about 1 minute until the cream starts to thicken. Increase the speed to medium-high and whip the heavy cream until stiff peaks form. Be careful not to over-whip.

Step 3: Carefully add the pudding mixture to the whipped cream and mix on low speed until blended and no streaks of pudding remain.

Step 4: Using either a trifle bowl or a wide glass bowl with a 4- to 5-quart capacity, spread one-quarter of the pudding over the bottom and layer with one-third of the cookies [save 4 to 5 cookies for the garnish on top] and about 1 to 1 12 of the sliced bananas — enough to cover the layer. Repeat the layering twice more. End with a final layer of pudding. Garnish the top with additional cookies or cookie crumbs.

Step 5: Cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 4 to 6 hours. Cookies should be tender when poked with a knife. It’s best served within 12 hours of assembling. Enjoy!



from Eater - All https://ift.tt/35VHySX