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  • Makes 2 x
  • Difficulty Easy
  • 13 Ingredients

58 Comment

This Royal Traditional Christmas Pudding recipe has been lifted straight from the Royal kitchens’ cookbook and shared with the world!

According to the Royal chefs, the Sunday before the Advent season is traditionally known as Stir-up Sunday – when home cooks ‘stir up’ their Christmas pudding mixture.

“This year, chefs in the Royal kitchens have shared their recipe for a traditional Christmas pudding,” The Royal Family Instagram post explained. “We hope that some of you enjoy making it in your own homes.”

Christmas puddings are a fruity, heavy after-Christmas dinner treat that originated in the 14th century. Originally it was more a porridge, and was made with hulled wheat, boiled in milk and seasoned with cinnamon. In some parts of the world it was actually eaten as breakfast.

It wasn’t until the 17th century that things changed, and new ingredients like eggs, breadcrumbs and dried fruit and alcohol were added. Traditionally, a Christmas pudding is meant to have 13 ingredients: raisins, currants, suet, brown sugar, breadcrumbs, citron, lemon peel, orange peel, flour, mixed spices, eggs, milk and brandy. And if you’re really going for the full effect, the pudding is dowsed in brandy and set alight before serving.

 


Ingredients (makes 2 x 1kg Puddings)

  • 250g raisins
  • 250g currants
  • 185g sultanas
  • 150g mixed peel
  • 250g suet or vegetarian suet
  • 250g breadcrumbs
  • 90g flour
  • 12g mixed spice
  • 2 whole eggs
  • 180g demerara sugar
  • 275ml beer
  • 40ml dark rum
  • 40ml brandy

Method

  1. Combine all the dry ingredients and stir.
  2. Add the eggs and liquid and stir.
  3. Grease the pudding basins.
  4. Press the pudding mix into the basins.
  5. Cover with a circle of parchment paper.
  6. Cover basins with muslin or foil and place puddings in deep saucepan.
  7. Fill with water up to 3/4 of pudding basin height.
  8. Cover with foil.
  9. Steam for six hours, refilling with water if necessary.
  10. Once cooled, wrap puddings well and keep in a cool, dry and dark place until Christmas.

Notes

If you don’t want to use alcohol, you can substitute for orange juice or cold tea. On Christmas Day, reheat your pudding in a bain-marie for 3-4 hours. Remove from the basin using a rounded knife or palette knife, flip out onto a plate, garnish or flambé and serve with brandy sauce and cream.

  • Sounds perfect but unfortunately I can’t have this but I will share the recipe with my family so they can try it.

    Reply

  • Yum, this looks absolutely decadent and delicious.

    Reply

  • Sounds lovely, might have to be quick and get the ingredients and give it a go before Christmas.

    Reply

  • I am just not a fan of Christmas pudding. I only ever ate it as a kid to find the coins that my mum and nana had hid inside it. It’s stayed with me forever.

    Reply

  • I have this recipe at home with the silver coins you can put in there too.

    Reply

  • I love this recipe, suet and all! It’s an easy recipe to follow and the video is a handy guide. I am going to give this a go and may make a GF version if it works, thank you for your recipe.

    Reply

  • Looks divine but unsure of the suet, I remember my grandmother using it along with her 3 pences & 6 pences it always tasted sensational but all that fat isn’t recommended for our diets today!


    • Fat is flavour. How many times a year would you have suet or Christmas pudding? Indulge yourself, that’s what this time of year is all about



      • I always replace suet and it tastes just as good.

    Reply

  • This Royal Traditional Christmas Pudding Recipe looks delicious and I loved the video. it always makes it easier to make.

    Reply

  • That looks amazing. Thank you for sharing

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  • Ohhhh yummy! Im going to attempt to make one of these this year for xmas. Maybe a gluten free version 🙂

    Reply

  • Just a little side of custard is the cherry on the top yummmoo !

    Reply

  • Wow! Would love to try it and see how royals eat during the festive season.
    I’m sure it’ll be so nice and indulgent.
    Thank you for sharing.

    Reply

  • Looks delicious but I do not like Christmas pudding – very fruity for my liking.

    Reply

  • And not a pudding cloth in sight. 🙁

    Reply

  • This is such a festive gem, absolutely mouth watering.

    Reply

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