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Well Seasoned: Indian Corn Pudding

As the calendar page turns, we can all leave behind the uber-sweet revelry of Halloween and focus on the next holiday—Thanksgiving. It’s a time to celebrate the plenty that we are blessed with here in this country that we share.

This content was originally published by the Longmont Observer and is licensed under a Creative Commons license.

As the calendar page turns, we can all leave behind the uber-sweet revelry of Halloween and focus on the next holiday—Thanksgiving. It’s a time to celebrate the plenty that we are blessed with here in this country that we share. Time to shift from candy corn to dried corn, root vegetables, and hearty foods that will sustain us in the colder temperatures.

How interesting it has been to go to the Longmont Farmers Market each Saturday morning and appreciate the seasons through food. In spring the vendor tables were bright with greens and radishes, hearty spears of asparagus, and tiny white Hakurei turnips. The turnips swelled over the growing season and are now as big as baseballs, but still sweet for a member of Brassica rapa.

Cornmeal (Photo by Anne Quinn Corr/ Longmont Observer)

Sweet corn has disappeared but dried popcorn in various shades of red, blue and white and cornmeal are now offered, along with dried beans to make hearty soups. I invested some dollars in Aspen Moon’s heritage cornmeal, speckled with red flakes and was impressed with its flavor and texture. Few things can beat a quick cornbread at suppertime but Indian pudding may be one item that can.

Indian pudding is a homey and wholesome dessert that can get you in the mood for Thanksgiving. No one will want to trade it in for pumpkin pie, but as a precursor to the holiday, it is a sure winner. As we all start to commemorate, we can be sympathetic to the plight of the colonists so far from their familiar, who were welcomed by the native population—initially at least.

How happy were those surviving colonists, one year after their arrival at Plymouth Rock, having braved a winter that reduced their number by more than half? They forged a new life in a new world and made friends with some of the natives there, who showed them how to grow and use indigenous plants to feed themselves. They fashioned houses from the forest and built palisades around their village with its wide view of the open sea and the life of relative refinement that they had abandoned in England.

They brought their recipes with them, especially for the popular puddings of the day, and adapted the ingredients with what they had on hand. Indian Pudding is a recipe derived from English cookery that resonates with Native American ingredients and may well have been on the table at the first dinner that gave thanks for the harvest in 1621.

Our own celebration of Thanksgiving is an adaptation, with roots in the past, but embellished with what we have come to expect since Abraham Lincoln first proclaimed a National Day of Thanksgiving to be celebrated on the last Thursday in November in 1863.

What is documented to have been on the table at that first Thanksgiving was venison and waterfowl—ducks or geese—though wild turkey is also a possibility. Squash was plentiful, so pumpkin is likely, though not in the form of a pumpkin pie that is Thanksgiving’s traditional dessert. Flour supplies were depleted after a year in America and there was no oven built at that time at the settlement. Food was cooked over an open fire, roasted on a spit, or boiled in a cauldron.

Puddings provided a taste of home and were a source of nourishment that preceded many meals. Oats were available in England and were the key component in hasty pudding, a recipe adapted by the Pilgrims to include the hard, flint corn grown in New England. Corn mush, Indian mush, and Indian pudding were some of the names for the hasty pudding of the New World, immortalized in the somewhat derisive but all-American tune, Yankee Doodle:

Father and I went down to camp

Along with Captain Goodin,

There we saw the men and boys

As thick as hasty pudding 

The only required ingredient in Indian pudding is dried corn, that quintessentially American grain that adapts as well to empanadas and cornbread as to polenta and grits. The sweetener can be molasses, sugar or maple syrup. Eggs and milk provide a creamy custard texture and optional ingredients can be pureed pumpkin, berries or raisins.

It’s November, and we are moving into the hunkering-down time. Let us all move on and make ourselves thankful—one pudding at a time.

Indian Pudding (Photo by Anne Quinn Corr/ Longmont Observer)

Pumpkin Indian Pudding with Crème Fraiche

Serves 8

  • 4 cups milk
  • 5 tablespoons yellow cornmeal
  • 2 tablespoons melted butter
  • 3/4 cup maple syrup
  • 1/2 cup canned pumpkin puree (or very well drained steamed or roasted pumpkin)
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 eggs, beaten
  • 1 cup cold milk

Garnish:
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 1/3 cup sour cream

Make the garnish ahead of time. Combine heavy cream and sour cream and set aside in a warm place for a couple of hours and then refrigerate.

Preheat the oven to 300°F and butter a 2-quart baking dish and set aside. Scald the 4 cups of milk in a 2 or 3-quart saucepan (bring it up to just under a boil) and sprinkle in the cornmeal while whisking. Cook and stir over a low heat until thickened. Remove from the heat and mix in the melted butter, the maple syrup, the pumpkin puree, the cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cloves and salt. Add some of the cornmeal mixture to the beaten eggs to temper them, and then stir the tempered eggs into the saucepan. Pour the cornmeal mixture into the prepared baking dish and bake for 45 minutes. Remove the pudding from the oven and whisk in the 1 cup of cold milk. Continue to bake for an additional hour. The pudding can be served hot, warm, room temperature or cold, topped with a dollop or drizzle of the crème fraiche.