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Baked Custard

Ingrediants
2 cups milk
3/8 cup sugar, you can use about 1/3 cup Honey too
1/8 teaspoon salt
3 egg yolks, one whole egg, and one egg white
3/4 teaspoon good vanilla extract, also you can use some nutmeg

Instructions
Mix and blend the milk sugar/honey and salt. Add and beat well the
eggs. You should add the egg white, beaten to firm peaks, last.
Finally add the flavorings, vanilla extract and/or nutmeg. Don't use
much nutmeg it is quite stong in the custard. Also don't beat it too
much or you will kill the egg white.

When it is all incorporated, pour it into a baking pan (for individual
servings use individual custard cups) Place the pan in a pan of warm
water and bake at 300-325 degs for about an hour.

Testing custard is abit tricky. after about an hour slip a knife
between the edge of the custard and the pan. It should be clean. The
center should still be soft. It will continue to cook for a bit after
you take it out. If you suspect that the center is done too much put
the pan in a pan of cold/ice water to stop the cooking process. You
can use the knife test to see if it is too done in the middle.


Submitted by Jim Catanich


[ history ]

Dessert

Dessert is a course that typically comes at the end of a meal, usually consisting of sweet food but sometimes of a strongly-flavored one, such as some cheeses. The word comes from the Old French desservir, "to clear the table." Some common desserts are cakes, cookies, fruits, pastries and candies.

The word dessert is most commonly used for this course in U.S., Canada, Australia, and Ireland, while sweet, pudding or afters would be more typical terms in the UK and some other Commonwealth countries. According to Debrett's, pudding is the proper term, dessert is only to be used if the course consists of fruit, and sweet is colloquial. This, of course, reflects the upper-class/upper-middle-class usage. More commonly, the words simply form a class shibboleth; pudding being the upper-class and upper-middle-class word to use for sweet food served after the main course, sweet, afters and dessert being considered non-U. However, dessert is considered slightly better than the other two, owing to many young people, whose parents say pudding, acquiring the word from American media.[1][2]

Although the custom of eating fruits and nuts after a meal may be very old, dessert as a standard part of a Western meal is a relatively recent development. Before the rise of the middle class in the 19th-century, and the mechanization of the sugar industry, sweets were a privilege of the aristocracy, or a rare holiday treat. As sugar became cheaper and more readily available, the development and popularity of desserts spread accordingly.

Some have a separate final sweet course but mix sweet and savoury dishes throughout the meal as in Chinese cuisine, or reserve elaborate dessert concoctions for special occasions. Often, the dessert is seen as a separate meal or snack rather than a course, and may be eaten apart from the meal (usually in less formal settings). Some restaurants specialize in dessert. In colloquial American usage "dessert" has a broader meaning and can refer to anything sweet that follows a meal, including milkshakes and other beverages.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



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