A Christmas Suet Pudding

Week 49: #52 Ancestors – Family Recipe

By Eilene Lyon

Holidays at Grandma Halse’s house included an old-time dessert: suet pudding. This is not a gooey type of pudding, but a very moist raisin cake served with a glazing sauce. It gets it’s rich, dark-brown color from a generous measure of molasses.

Because we were served Grandma’s homemade recipe from an early age, there was no “yuck” factor to overcome, though young ones today may turn up their noses. (Perhaps a name change is in order. Just “Christmas Pudding” or “Raisin Cake” perhaps?)

Of course, vegetarians and vegans will have nothing to do with it. That’s because suet is beef fat. It comes from around bovine kidneys or subcutaneously from the loin. Unlike smooth, rendered pig fat (lard), suet is firmer and crumbly. Suet can be clarified, in which form it is known as tallow. Suet and lard are essentially the animal-fat equivalent of margarine or shortening.

The only suet I use these days is prepackaged as cakes of bird food. Some people like to make their own bird cakes, so it may be possible to find suet readily available at your grocery store. It can certainly be obtained by special request.

Preformed suet cakes that I feed the birds in winter.

What about that pudding, though?

I will attest that I always looked forward to it and found it quite yummy. I only made it once myself, for a couple reasons. The process of cooking it is by steaming, not baking, requiring a special container and a deep kettle. And because if I served it, I’d probably be the only one eating it—and who needs the extra calories?

Crisco and coffee used to come in smooth-sided, metal cans with tight-fitting metal lids. That is what Grandma used to steam her suet pudding. One journalist found another method, using a bowl, parchment paper, and aluminum foil. (The article has a pudding photo, second one in the top scroll.)

An antique Crisco can with metal lid.

Grandma’s recipe can be a little hard to follow as written, so below is a slightly modified version. For the sauce, she wrote two versions. Both include vanilla, which is an interesting side story.

After Grandpa died, Grandma eventually went to work in the chemistry department at the nearby university (Oregon State in Corvallis). One of the professors brewed his own homemade vanilla that he gifted to Grandma regularly. She shared it with family and that’s what we used in baking and in ice cream, etc.

My cousin Brian, many years later, deduced that the university chemist actually created his “vanilla” in the lab, using no vanilla beans! Brian gifted me a bottle of the genuine article he’d made himself—in the kitchen.

Version two of Grandma’s recipe
Christmas (Suet) Pudding
  • 1 cup suet (ground in a food processor)
  • 1 cup molasses
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 cup raisins
  • 2 ½ cups flour
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • ½ tsp ginger
  • Pinch of salt

Mix all ingredients and put into a metal container with a tight metal lid (like an old coffee/Crisco can) and place inside a large kettle. Fill with water to within an inch of the can lid (must be over the level of the pudding batter). Cover and bring water to a boil. Simmer/steam for two hours.

Sauce

Cream a cup of sugar with a ½ cup of margarine or butter. Add 3 cups of water. Bring to a boil and thicken with corn starch until the consistency of cream. Flavor with vanilla.

Slide the pudding out of the can and slice into serving size. Place each slice in a bowl and pour over a generous amount of sauce. Eat up!

A typical postprandial scene at Grandma’s house after a holiday dinner, finished with suet pudding.

58 thoughts on “A Christmas Suet Pudding

Add yours

  1. So many recipes that bring back memories, but just don’t get made anymore. We have a similar one called Clootie Dumpling. It too is made with suet. Ours isn’t cooked in a can but in a cloth(clootie) and boiled for three hours. Then bake to form an outer skin. My sister and I tried making it a few Christmas’s back but without success. I’m not sure why we tried because I never liked it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. That’s a hilarious story, Heather! Why make it, indeed? Going through all that effort for something you don’t even want to eat seems…well, crazy. I would eat suet pudding anytime. It’s really good! Some people aren’t raisin fans, but I think about anyone else would like it.

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  2. Grandma Ruby Neal also made suet pudding every Christmas. I wanted to duplicate it when we lived in Idaho so she sent the recipe, which included steaming the can of batter. I’d never heard of steaming something before. In 1967, I had to head to the library to learn what it meant. These days, it’s just easier to use the sauce over spice cake.

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  3. I think the birds and squirrels in my yard would relish the suet pudding hanging from a tree to nibble on, me- not so much! Those old recipes often came over from Europe with immigrants and changed in small ways as folks adapted to life here but were still passed on because of their purpose- to provide solid, hearty food that sustained the family. The historical significance is invaluable when you think about how many of us eat today not even knowing what’s in our prepackaged options.

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    1. You make a valid point. So many people just by packaged, prepared food and don’t bother reading the ingredient list (or health info). I won’t say I avoid all that entirely, but I do try to minimize it and cook from scratch. There’s no question of there being a significant amount of calories in a serving of suet pudding if you’re a farmer or miner. Very welcome, I expect.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. We did have suet pudding at home when I was young, and I think it was a staple of school lunches too. You can still get boxes of suet and veggie equivalents. However, I’ve never been minded to try my own hand at it, though in the days before you could buy veggie haggis I used to make that for Burns Night and it was steamed in a similar way.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m a little surprised that more people haven’t chimed in with their own suet pudding stories. Glad to know you know what I’m talking about! School lunches, huh? That seems almost extravagant. Chocolate cake might be a lot easier (and probably more appreciated).

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  5. I’ve never had suet pudding. My mom used to make mincemeat tarts and we always had a fruitcake in the house at Christmastime. It does sound like a lot of work to make. I bought my mom and a neighbor some very high proof vanilla on a trip to Mexico once. Even though Mom always used pure vanilla extract, she opened the bottle I bought and said the fumes nearly knocked her over. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  6. How wonderful to have that hand-written recipe! And I love the photos – especially the post-Christmas dinner one 😀

    My mum always makes Christmas pud and I love it. None for us this year as there will be only three of us and Sean’s mum (Gail) doesn’t like it and even a small one is too much for the two of us. Gail is making a trifle instead…and I’m find with that!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I kept looking for a good picture of us all at Grandma’s house, but never came up with the right one. It sure does get challenging to cook for a small number at the holidays. The recipes are definitely designed for a crowd. Enjoy the trifle! (I’m not familiar with it.)

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  7. I read this a while ago and was supposed to leave a comment. I’m back.
    I love old hand written notes. I have a few tucked away in boxes even one sentence letters to Nana thanking her when I was about 8 years old.
    I don’t remember having suet pudding though I’m sure it would’ve been on the menu of previous generations as many old traditions were brought here by immigrants from the Northern Hemisphere. Have a safe and relaxing time over Christmas.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you, Suzanne. I’m sure I once had a copy of this recipe, but couldn’t find it, so my aunt fetched these for me. I’m so glad she has them! I wish I’d saved more of the letters I received from my grandparents over the years, but grateful for the ones I do have.

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