BUDINO made of chocolate and Autumn fruit

It all started with my purchases at the Queen Victoria Market and the fabulous autumn fruit.

I love persimmons.

I also bought, feijoas, rhubarbpomegranates and quinces. And then I saw some small pears and bought them too.

Friends were coming to dinner and I was unsure about what to make as a dessert.

I thought about making a fresh autumn fruit salad with walnuts, a persimmon crumble or the always a favourite, baked quinces. I then thought that the pears  could be added towards the end of the baking of the quinces .

A chocolate budino rather than a chocolate sauce would go particularly well with the pears.

 

Budino

In 1957 when I came to Australia with my parents my mother used to make budino for dessert. Unlike my Australian friends who had some form of dessert every night (even if it was tinned fruit and ideal milk instead of cream), my Italian family finished off a meal with fresh fruit.

My father would have his small pairing knife and peel fruit for our little family. Desserts were for special occasions and Sunday lunch was considered special, even when we did not have guests.

Although the English translation for budino is pudding, it is nothing like any form of  English pudding, whether steamed or baked.

Basically, budino is a thick custard, cooked on the stove and then allowed to set. We had no moulds, so my mother used to use a clear glass bowl. Our budino was two tone. She made two budini mixtures, one was vanilla and the other was chocolate. The slightly cooled vanilla budino was poured into the glass bowl first and once it was well on the way to setting it was topped with the slightly cooled chocolate budino. Sometimes she even managed to make some swirls. Later she started making apple strudel – Strucolo de pomi – rather than budino for guests.

When we lived in Trieste, if we were eating at home or had guests we always purchased pastries, as did my Sicilian relatives, but in Australia, we did not have access to the same range of pastry shops (we lived in Adelaide). Over time my mother taught herself how to make sweets of a higher standard and budino disappeared from her repertoire.

The budino as prepared by my mother was made of milk, corn flour, sugar, vanilla essence, butter or cream (to enrich it), and egg yolks. A bit like crème anglaise. Most of the recipes for budino do not include egg(s) and unlike many recipes for budino she did not heat the milk before making the custard. It all commenced in a thick bottom saucepan with cold ingredients.

It is dead easy to make and it tastes great.

The cream and butter enrich the budino and if you prefer a leaner version use  less of each or just one.

Chocolate version of budino

3 cups pf whole milk and 1 cup of cream (4 cups = 1 litre)
2 tablespoons of butter, if using unsalted add a pinch of salt
1/3 to 1/2 cup sugar (depending on how sweet you like it)
2 tablespoons cocoa
1/4 cup corn flour
1-2 egg yolks
150g + dark chocolate, coarsely chopped (add more if you want a stronger taste)
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

In the saucepan, mix the egg yolk(s), sugar, corn starch and cocoa. Add a little milk and stir to make a paste. Pour in the milk, vanilla and cream and continue to mix, trying to prevent any lumps.

Place the pan with the ingredients on the stove and over medium-low heat keep on stirring until the mixture is thick like custard. Add the butter towards the end.

When it begins to cool, place in the bits of chocolate and stir gently. Some of it will melt into the budino.  if you would like to taste firm chocolate, wait until the budino is cooler before you add the chocolate.

Pour into a mould  (or bowl) and when the mixture is cool, cover it and place it in the fridge for a few hours or overnight, until completely chilled. If you do not want a skin to form on top, use some baking paper or butter wrapper and cover the surface.

Sometimes I pour the budino into  individual small serving bowls or cups or glasses as I do with a mousse. If you are using a mould, the budino can be turned out onto a plate as I would do with a jelly.

Serve with a dollop of whipped cream.

Although budino was always presented plain in my childhood, berries and baked fruit is always a good accompaniment.

It keeps well for a few days.

Above, budino with poached rhubarb and apples. Below, with baked pear.

 

BIANCOMANGIARE and GELO

In Sicily, they make Biancomangiare (Blancmange).

it is also called Gelo. This too  is thickened on the stove and set like a budino. It is simpler to make and much less rich.

AUTUMN FRUIT and baked quinces

A Tale about QUINCES

GELO DI MELONE (Jellied watermelon)

CARRUBA (Carob) and its uses

 

AUTUMN FRUIT and baked quinces

Autumn Fruit in Victoria offers a stunning variety of fruit, characterised by its vibrant colours, enticing fragrances and rich flavours.

This week, my basket included quinces: golden, firm and wonderfully aromatic.

Last week’s haul was just as tempting — figs and persimmons, two of my favourite autumn fruits.

The figs were luscious and sweet, perfect eaten fresh or cooked in countless ways.

 

A few weeks earlier, prickly pears were still around too, marking the slow transition from summer to autumn.

Prickly pears

A Week of Unexpected Gifts

One friend dropped off a bag of pomegranates, and the next day another neighbour left a surprise on my doorstep — a bag filled with feijoas (the small, egg-shaped green fruit) and strawberry guavas, those deep-magenta gems that smell of strawberries and roses.

All things considered, it was not a bad week for autumn fruit.

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Strawberry guavas

The Joy of Simple Fruit

Pomegranates are now well established in Australia. Their ruby-red seeds can be eaten fresh, scattered over savoury dishes, or used in desserts.

Persimmons are equally versatile — both the crisp vanilla variety and the soft, custardy ones — but like pomegranates, I often prefer them simply sliced and enjoyed raw.

The attraction of Quinces

Quinces, on the other hand, need to be cooked to reveal their true magic. Though I must admit, I always nibble a piece of raw quince while cutting them. Their transformation from pale yellow to a deep rosy colour is one of autumn’s quiet pleasures.

In Australia quince paste (cotognata) has become familiar and some make quince jelly, but I prefer making baked quinces.

Every batch is different because I rarely follow a strict recipe — I take inspiration and then do my own thing.

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My Way of Baking Quinces

Some elements are essential:

  • Sweetener – sugar, honey, or leftover bits of jam or jelly from the pantry.
  • Acid – wine, orange juice, lemon, or lime.
  • A splash of something alcoholic – perhaps a half-finished bottle of liqueur, spirit, or aperitivo.
  • Fragrance – cinnamon, star anise, cloves, mace, bay leaves, black peppercorns, or fennel seeds.

For this latest batch, I used water, white wine, feijoa jelly (a gift from a friend), cinnamon, star anise, cloves, lemon slices, and bay leaves.

Scrub the quinces well, quarter them, and leave everything in — skin, seeds, and membranes. These help the syrup turn beautifully jelly-like. The liquid should reach halfway up the fruit.

Bake covered with foil at 170°C for about two hours, removing the foil for the last 15 minutes.

The result? Jewelled, tender fruit in a fragrant syrup that perfumes the kitchen for days.

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Fresh quinces ready for baking

The result? Rich coloured, tender fruit in a fragrant syrup that perfumes the kitchen for days.

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More recipes for Quinces:

A Tale about QUINCES

AUTUMN FRUIT Cumquats (Kumquats) and Quinces

MOSTARDA and COTOGNATA – Sweets in Moulds

PRICKLY PEARS Fichi d’India and a paste called Mostarda

IL MIO FRUTTIVENDOLO, my fruit and vegetable stall at The Queen Victoria Market

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Carmel and Gus are my greengrocers. They are my fruttivendoli (plural as there are two of them). Frutti+ vendelo= fruit+ seller = fruttivendolo. Below are the grapes I bought from them.

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I have been shopping at their stall in The Queen Victoria Market throughout the thirteen years that I have been residing in Melbourne. Before that I lived close to the Adelaide Market.

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As you can see in the photos the range and quality of the vegetables and fruit is vast and I am able to purchase some produce that is not available anywhere else in the market. I love  Fichi d’India (prickly pears).

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My Fruttivendolo is open on Thursday to Saturday.

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Here are some of the dishes I have prepared with their produce:

Fichi d’india (prickly pears in a salad with pumpkin, purslane, labneh and black tahini).

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Fig tart. I cannot resist figs. A layer of short sweet pastry, mascarpone and fresh figs with a drizzle of orange and dates whipped together with a little Cointreau .

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Salad of watercress, black grapes, beetroot etc.

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Prickly pears have prickles and need to be handled carefully. For how to peel prickly pears, see:

Prickly Pears Fichi D’india and A Paste Called Mostarda

Mascarpone:

Mascarpone and Its Many Uses. How to Make It at Home

Labneh:

WATERMELON, LABNEH and DUKKAH salad