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Old 12-03-2011, 03:32 PM
  #29  
QuiltE
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Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 18,358
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Originally Posted by thepolyparrot
There's a series with Joanna Bogle on EWTN called "Feasts and Seasons," and she was just talking about Stir-Up Sunday last Sunday. The first Sunday of Advent - you "stir up" your faith and anticipation of the Advent of our Lord while you stir up your Christmas pudding.

I'm going to try making a Christmas pudding one day. I guess most people don't like it, but I'm one of those weirdos who likes fruit cake, so I might well like Christmas pudding, too.

My mother used to make insane fruitcake, well-basted with brandy and rum. *hic* I'm not ambitious enough for that.

I make a cake during the holidays that was called "Bishop's Bread" by my Polish mother-in-law. It has no fruit in it except maraschino cherries but you can add dates if you like, too. Very easy to make, beautiful to look at and tastes like a chocolate-covered cherry.



Bishop's Bread:

Beat 3 eggs with the juice from a jar of cherries (about a 12 to 15 oz jar)
Mix in a cup of sugar, a tablespoon of baking powder, a half-teaspoon of salt, beat smooth.
Mix in two cups of flour and stir until smooth.

Add a cup each of walnuts, pecans, chocolate chips and the drained cherries and stir to disperse everything in the batter.

Grease and flour a tube pan or two loaf pans and pour the batter in. Bake at 325º for about an hour.

With all those add ins, it can't help but be delicious!

What texture would it be?? .... when you say bread, I think of a fruit loaf that is more dense and heavy than the lightness of a cake. Or with that much fruit, is it more fruit than batter, making it more like a Christmas Cake?
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