You said you'd feed me brandy and Christmas cake
Of course, the other day's question about my leftover red wine missed the most important detail. So did I until now. There was me worrying about red wine when there was also leftover prosecco in the fridge (slack bastards, my dinner guests, never finish anything).
Anyway, I'm now addressing the issue. It's not as fizzy as it might be, but is otherwise surprisingly decent.
However: settle an important conundrum for us, will you?
I want to know what you think is usual to put on Christmas pudding. Not necessarily what you want on your pud, or that weird thing that your family's done for years, but the list of things you might consider it customary to offer, or put, on Christmas pud. (Why yes, the use of the pejorative word "normal" in the poll does indicate that I have an axe to grind ;)
[Poll #1948620]
If, like me, your answer is different based on whether the pud is hot or cold, this one is being served hot.
Anyway, I'm now addressing the issue. It's not as fizzy as it might be, but is otherwise surprisingly decent.
However: settle an important conundrum for us, will you?
I want to know what you think is usual to put on Christmas pudding. Not necessarily what you want on your pud, or that weird thing that your family's done for years, but the list of things you might consider it customary to offer, or put, on Christmas pud. (Why yes, the use of the pejorative word "normal" in the poll does indicate that I have an axe to grind ;)
[Poll #1948620]
If, like me, your answer is different based on whether the pud is hot or cold, this one is being served hot.

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There remains the question of whether it should.
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It was always rum sauce in our house. Though of the people who've filled in the poll, only my mother has said she wants it on her pudding so maybe we're outliers.
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What I still haven't made my peace with is mince pies. Fortunately my mother is lovely, and always makes me some pies with apricot filling which look almost exactly like mince pies from the outside (you have to learn the code - round hole in the top means apricots, two little slits means its mincemeat).
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Do you like Xmas cake? If so, you can have mine after I've nicked the marzipan.
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More puddings should be served ablaze in my opinion. British puddings are world class, but they'd be even more obviously so if, say, we routinely served apple crumble laced with burning Calvados and spotted dick flambéed with rum.
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I've set a pudding ablaze in my life just once; at a Christmas dinner cooked in a shared house in Oxford the first year after I graduated. None of us really knew exactly how to do it, and we, er, got a bit over enthusiastic and there was Some Conflagration.
The pudding survived, but I learned not to dip a very hot spoon into very hot brandy. Pretty, mind.
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They wouldn't necessarily be customary to have with Xmas pud though. But when entertaining, I would want guests to pick what they like most, not what was traditional. Plus there would be other puddings on offer, so it wouldn't be strange to have the other sauces to hand.
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How am I ever supposed to build a database of what you earthlings do if you keep changing your minds?
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If I were offering a range of puddings (inc pies, cakes etc) suited to the time of year and a range of sauces that are customary for at least one of the offered puddings, I don't police what combination my guests would have.
Or if a guest said "I don't like sauce X", I might enumerate the set of sauces I had in that I think might to be more to their taste. It's customary to make guests feel welcome with food they might like, even when their likes are clearly strange and wrong :-)
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I've never heard of brandy sauce as a Thing, but accept that armed with the concept of rum sauce I can just about conceive of it :)
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-Wensleydale cheese
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*Dried fruit is generally** vile, but Xmas pud is honorary not dried fruit
**Dried mango is nice, as is dried pineapple. But candied dried fruit or dried grapes/berries are pretty much exclusively vile. Unless rehydrated with lots of boozahol. Or tea.
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I've never heard of non-alcholic stuff to put on Christmas pudding. It doesn't sound right...
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What I would want on it is a tricky question to answer, because dessert is an exact science. I would inspect the options on offer most carefully and most likely pick a combination of more than one.
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There's a thing like custard but not quite so thick or vanillaish (vanilline?) and also completely white. I think it's called white sauce, but that might be something that goes on the turkey - or is that bread sauce?
Anyhow, this white nearly-custard is acceptable as a normal thing to put on Christmas pudding. However, I don't like it! It sometimes has an unintended metallic aftertaste for some reason.
For me, you can't beat really thick custard or sensible single cream.
beckyc loses a kudo for spelling it with an X.
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Rice milk turns a savoury white sauce into a sweet white sauce. This is less than ideal if you are using it as a base for mushroom sauce and are feeding it to guests.
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http://www.epicurus.com/food/recipes/christmas-pudding-with-non-alcoholic-hard-sauce/1921