I am often asked for the best way to cook with maple syrup and the answer is easy: paired with dairy.
Butter, milk, cream, even yogurt, bring out the best in maple. Yes, maple syrup alone is heavenly poured over your pancakes but add a pat of butter on top and you elevate the stack to St.Johnâs choir singing âOde to Joyâ from Beethovenâs Ninth. It is for this reason that so many restaurants in Vermont have a maple crĂšme brĂ»lĂ©e on their menu; a cream custard is the perfect vehicle to taste every last nuance of mapleâs complexity.
With props to that ubiquitous dessert, I wanted to switch it up (or down, depending on your tastes) and make a more earthy American maple pudding. Pudding and crÚme brûlée are close cousins. Both use egg yolks and sugar in a slow cooking method to thicken cream. Pudding, however, uses corn starch to make sure that the mixture thickens into pillows of creamy ambrosia. I have actually witnessed people needing to close their eyes and sigh from the pleasure delivered by this pudding.
Having been freed of the refinement that a crÚme brûlée requires allows one to plop a homemade oatmeal or cinnamon cookie at the side of the pudding. Top it off with whipped cream.
As long as Iâve thrown in one musical analogy, Iâll say that this is John Mellencamp kind of food. Even if he is not your favorite, who doesnât start doing the chin jut when âJack and Dianeâ comes on? This pudding is like that: all-American and makes you hum.