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« Strawberry Scones | Home | Party-in-a-Bowl Potato Salad »

Lemon Pudding Souffle

By Char | July 8, 2008

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Ingredients:

4        large eggs

1        cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar

4        tablespoons unsalted butter, very soft

1        tablespoon finely grated lemon zest

1/4    cup flour

1/4    cup freshly squeezed lemon juice

1/8    teaspoon Watkins Vanilla Extract

Pinch of salt

1 1/2    cups milk

Powdered sugar, for garnish

Directions:

Generously butter a 1  1/2 quart souffle dish or straight-sided casserole, or 6 individual 1-cup ramekins or souffle dishes (a pastry brush works well),  and set them aside.  Heat the oven to 350 degrees.

Separate the eggs, reserving 3 of the whites in a medium-size mixing bowl and all 4 of the yolks in a separate medium-size bowl.  Take care that none of the yolk gets into the whites, or the whites won’t stiffen properly when they’re beaten.

Add 1 cup of the sugar, the butter and the lemon zest to the bowl of reserved yolks.  Using an electric mixer, beat the ingredients on medium-high speed until well blended, about 2 minutes.  Then blend in the flour, followed by the lemon juice, vanilla extract and salt.  Set the mixer to low and slowly add the milk.

Clean and dry the mixer’s beaters.  Beat the egg whites on low speed, gradually increasing to medium-high, until they hold soft peaks.  Add the remaining 2 tablespoons of sugar and continue to beat the whites until they are semistiff.  Gently but thoroughtly fold half of the beaten whites into the batter until they are evenly mixed, then do the same with the remaining half.

Pour the batter into the prepared souffle dish or ramekins.  Place the dish or dishes, evenly spaced, in a shallow 13 x 9 inch pan.  Carefully pour hot water into the pan to a depth of about 3/4 inch.  Bake the pudding souffle on the center oven rack until it’s puffed and golden brown, about 35 to 40 minutes for the large one or 25 to 30 minutes for the small ones.  Don’t open the oven door or your dessert may collapse.

Remove the dish or dishes from the water bath and transfer them to a wire rack.  Let them rest for 15 minutes.  Some folks enjoy this dessert at room temperature with the pudding still warm and saucy; others prefer it cold, with the pudding a bit thicker.  It takes the large dish about 8 hours in the refrigerator (overnight is fine) to cool completely and the small dishes, about 3 to 4 hours.  The souffle top will fall a bit, but the fluffy texture will remain.  Dust the souffle with powdered sugar before serving.

Topics: Dessert, Recipes |

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