Festive Cranberry and Apricot Sponge Pudding with Caramel Sauce

Festive Cranberry and Apricot Sponge Pudding with Caramel Sauce. In a household who take Christmas baking to obsessive levels can you believe I’m the only person who likes traditional Christmas Pudding. So, I have to eat a two-pound pudding over the space of several days. To be honest nobody else has my almost unhealthy love of mince pies either and I eat most of them. Do they count towards one of my five a day as they do contain fruit? I think a diet may be called for come January.

Festive Cranberry and Apricot Sponge Pudding Mix

Stir-Up Sunday and Festive Baking

Earlier in the year I wrote an article on Stir Up Sunday, for my local newspaper, the Jersey Evening Post. This was the time when families traditionally gathered together and made their Christmas pudding. I thought it would be good to come up with an alternative that was lighter but still very in keeping with all the other festive recipes I love so much. After some experimenting in the kitchen, I think I came up with a great alternative.


So today was a Sunday off and the girls wanted to bake Christmas cupcakes. If you follow the blog you know I have a great, go to chocolate cupcake recipe ( see my Scary Halloween Double Chocolate Cupcakes ). So, it was just a matter of finding some fun way to decorate them. Flicking through magazines and online in the run to the festive season is a great way to find inspiration and I had already seen an idea for Christmas Tree light cakes I wanted to put a spin on. We all got to work and created a recipe!

Why Christmas Pudding Triple Chocolate Cookies? The family loves baking biscuits and cookies ( and eating them! ) and this year I wanted to do something different. As the girls are getting a little older, we can be a bit more ambitious in our bakes and these are really delicious. Who doesn’t like a classic slightly chewy chocolate cookie loaded with chocolate pieces?


Festive Cranberry and Apricot Sponge Pudding with Caramel Sauce

Festive Cranberry and Apricot Sponge Pudding with Caramel Sauce

Cranberries scream Christmas, alongside spices such as ginger, cinnamon, and nutmeg. To make the pudding lighter in colour I have used a small amount of dried apricots, a personal favourite and golden raisins. For a lighter texture I have made an almond sponge with gold caster sugar instead of the more normal muscovado or demerara sugars and molasses. To finish serve with a rich homemade caramel sauce and to be truly indulgent some thick cream.

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Cranberry and Apricot Sponge Pudding with Caramel sauce

The almonds in the sponge give the pudding a slightly firmer texture which helps stop the fruit pieces from sinking, but make sure you cut the apricots into small pieces.
Course Dessert, Pudding
Cuisine American, English
Keyword Alternative Christmas Lunch, Christmas Baking, Christmas Pudding, Christmas Recipes
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Servings 6 people

Equipment

  • 1 Festive non-stick cake tin

Ingredients

For the Pudding

  • 150 gr Self-raising Flour
  • 200 gr unsalted Jersey Butter at room temperature
  • 200 gr Golden Caster Sugar
  • 200 gr free-range Eggs ( 4 medium sized eggs )
  • 50 gr ground Almonds
  • 75 gr Dried Cranberries
  • 75 gr Dried Apricots cut into small pieces
  • 50 gr Sultanas or Golden Raisins
  • Juice and zest of 2 Lemons
  • ½ teaspoon Baking Powder
  • ½ teaspoon freshly ground Ginger
  • ¼ teaspoon ground Cinnamon
  • ¼ teaspoon freshly ground Nutmeg

For the Caramel Sauce

  • 250 gr Caster Sugar
  • 60 ml cold Water
  • 150 ml Jersey Double Cream
  • 50 g butter

Instructions

  • Heat oven to 165C / 325 F / Gas Mark 3. Grease a twenty-centimetre cake tin and sprinkle with a little extra caster sugar to prevent the cake from sticking. I used a Christmas tree shape tin.
  • In a large bowl beat the softened butter and sugar together. Then add in the eggs and sift in the ground almonds, flour, baking powder and spices. Beat together until smooth and creamy.
  • Gently stir in the fruit and tip into the prepared cake tin. Tap a few times on the work surface to remove any large air bubbles and level out the mix.
  • Place in the centre of your preheated oven and bake until golden brown for approximately thirty minutes. At this time cover the top of your pudding with a piece of pre-cut baking paper, to prevent burning and return to the oven for another ten to fifteen minutes.
  • Carefully prick the centre of the pudding with a small metal knife or skewer and remove. If the knife is clean the pudding is done if not return to the oven for a few more minutes.
  • Remove from the oven using oven gloves and allow to cool for ten minutes before tipping onto a plate.
  • For the caramel sauce
  • Pour the sugar into a medium sized, heavy-bottomed pan and add the water. Set over a gentle heat and stir until the sugar has dissolved.
  • Stop stirring, increase the heat and bring to a boil and bubble until you have golden brown caramel. Quickly remove from the heat, and then carefully stir in the cream and butter.
  • Leave to cool before adding the vanilla then serve with the warm sponge and some thick Jersey cream.

Notes

Allergens in this recipe are;
 
 
            Sulphites in the dried fruit
 
 
Please see the Allergens Page

Published by Christian Gott - An Island Chef

I am a food and drink writer, chef, one-time publican and restaurant manager, and qualified ASET trainer with over thirty years of experience in hospitality. I now live and work in the Channel Islands with my beautiful family. I’ve worked on six islands and in probably just about every type of business you can imagine, from beachside burger joints to world-famous pizza restaurants and in more than a few really good food pubs, historic country inns, and a former RAC Blue Riband UK Hotel of the Year. I have helped to create a small informal dinning group, been a group executive chef for eighteen diverse bars and eateries, demonstrated at food festivals, and contributed to the Real Food Festival Cookery Book, national and local publications, and podcasts. I am a proud member of the Guild of Food Writers and the British Guild of Beer Writers.

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