Hasty Pudding
- Recipe by: Laura Sorkin
- Prep time: 10 minutes
- Cook time: 40 minutes
- Servings: Serves 6 - 8
Hasty Pudding* is a delicious dessert that has nearly been forgotten but deserves a comeback. It is made by combining cornmeal with milk and molasses and then boiling or baking with spices. Eggs give it some loft, and dried fruits, namely raisins, are often included as well. The result is somewhere between a cake and a custard, with a lovely duet between the sweet cornmeal and tangy molasses. It was a favorite of the colonists and fairly common on New England tables until the last century. If you’d like to read some reviews, I found the following on Whatscookingamerica.net
In 1662, John Winthrop, Jr. the first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, was so enamored of the pudding, he included a description in his letter to the Royal Society in London. In it, he wrote, “…it is a food very pleasant.” Not exactly four stars but you have to remember that the Puritans generally ate food that by today’s standards would be considered very unpleasant (boiled beef, boiled vegetables, boiled fish, you get the idea).
If you think it may sound a little heavy, John Josselyn in 1672 stated, “It is light of digestion.” He even launches into a little recipe writing himself, explaining that after you combine the cornmeal with water you, “boyl it upon a gently fire till it be like a Hasty Puden.” And then when it reaches the consistency you like, “thye put of this into Milk and so eat it.”
Our version is first cooked on a stovetop and then finished in the oven but otherwise, it is fairly true to the recipes I found from 350 years ago. We like to use Bob’s Red Mill medium grind cornmeal because they leave the germ and the bran in which makes for a tastier pudding, not to mention, settlers would have used the whole grain and part of the fun of this dish is its authenticity. Since Native Americans introduced colonists to maple syrup as well, adding a drizzle of Runamok’s Cinnamon+Vanilla Infused maple syrup, in my opinion, is also totally legit.
In short, you should include this dessert at your Thanksgiving table, not only because of its historical significance but because it tastes great. But don’t take my word for it. The American poet, Joel Barlow (1754-1812) wrote a whole poem about it.
And all my bones were made of Indian corn.
Delicious grain! Whatever form it take.
To toast or boil, to smother or to bake,
In every dish ’tis welcome still to me,
but most, my Hasty Pudding, most in thee.
*Hasty Pudding is also the name of a theater organization, an institute, and a club at Harvard. According to their website, the pudding is served at every meeting of the club. https://www.hastypudding.org/
