I have seen so many recipes for bread pudding, and one day I figured I'd make some for myself. I'd seen Paula Deen make it a bunch of times on her TV show, but I didn't want to make a big pan of it, since I only had a few slices of bread. I really wanted French toast, but didn't feel like standing over the stove to make it, so I improvised. I figured French toast and bread pudding have basically the same ingredients, so this is what I came up with. I later tried a more traditional recipe, but I liked my version better.
Most recipes include a recipe for a sweet sauce to top it, but I don't see the need. Use what you have. If you want a syrup, just use it sparingly!
Optional Toppings:
Maple syrup
Hershey's chocolate syrup
Ice cream topping
Fresh or canned fruit
Why make it more complicated? It's the easiest thing to make, you just toss a bunch of stuff together anyway! It makes enough for one huge portion or two smaller portions. But it's easier to make the full recipe than to divide an egg in half.
Quick and Easy Bread Pudding for One (or Two!)
Ingredients:
3 slices bread
2 or 3 Tbsp melted butter
1 egg
1/3 to 1/2 cup milk
2-4 Tbsp sugar or brown sugar
1/4 tsp vanilla
Optional Add-ins:
cinnamon or cocoa
fresh or dried fruit
chocolate chips
nuts
Instructions:
Cut or tear bread into pieces, and put into a pie pan. Add melted butter and stir well, to coat bread evenly. If you want to add cinnamon or other spices, mix it into the bread at this point until evenly coated. Mix the egg, sugar, milk and vanilla in a bowl. Add half this mixture to the bread and stir to coat. If you like it drier, more like French toast, only use half the liquid. If you like it more eggy, custard-like, add all the liquid. You can add any add-ins now, if you want. Bake.
Note on baking:
Most bread puddings call for a 350 degree oven, but I usually use 400. Bake time is somewhere around 45 minutes, but since it's a smaller portion than most recipes, start checking it at about 30 mins. I like mine drier, so I cook it longer.
Bread Pudding is so easy, and it's forgiving. Add things you like, use more or less liquid, try different breads or types of sugar or flavoring. If you have a favorite French toast recipe, try that. Paula Deen makes a bread pudding with pumpkin, which looks yummy!
When I get up in the morning, I throw it all together and toss in the oven and when I'm dressed and ready, so is the pudding! Or you can prepare the night before and keep in the fridge and bake in the morning.
Have fun trying new things and enjoy!
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Saturday, August 18, 2012
Delusions of God - Update 1
I shared a post on my Facebook page, and this is the conversation that followed. I think she's still posting... The timeline is off because the conversation continued as I was cutting and pasting.
Yes, the conversation did continue on...
Denise Cook I
just realized something you said, Jan. And, well, I don't want to be
mean about it, but you obviously don't know as much about your religion
as you think you do. You said, "Karma is a bitch." You should realize
Christianity is opposed to Karma. ( http:// www.christophermcummings.co m/2009/04/ karma-and-christianity.html ). Karma is a Hindu principle, not Christian.
8 hours ago
Jan Well now you are just being a smart ass!
3 hours agoSo if I point out a flaw in your theory, I'm being a smart-ass? And I just thought I was being smart.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Stop The Madness!
I was sitting my apartment being smothered by my neighbor's cigarette smoke, which is so thick in the air that I'm literally coughing and choking, my throat is sore, and my eyes burn from it. Not only does it permeate my apartment (she says she quit, but yet here it is), but it's made worse because they are menthols. I am literally nauseous from breathing the polluted air.
It made me wonder how many people die from cigarette related illnesses each year, so I started researching.
According to the CDC, each year, an estimated 443,000 people die prematurely from smoking or exposure to secondhand smoke, and another 8.6 million live with a serious illness caused by smoking. (http://www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/resources/publications/aag/osh.htm).
Each year approximately 16,000 are killed in alcohol related crashes (http://dui.lifetips.com/cat/61352/drunk-driving-facts-stats/index.html).
In one year, 31,593 people died from gun violence and 66,769 people survived gun injuries (National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC))(http://www.bradycampaign.org/facts/gunviolence/).
Smoking and cigarettes kill almost 10 times as many people as drunk driving and gun violence combined! And that doesn't even account for the millions who suffer from smoking-related illnesses!
We fight against drunk driving, and we fight against gun violence, which is good, we need to fight until no one dies from those things. But statistically, we are all more likely to die from diseases caused by smoking, even if we are not smokers ourselves.
How many of you realized this? That you are more likely to die from smoke-related disease? Honestly, I find it sickening. I was actually shocked by the numbers, but these statistics are all from reputable sources.
We have to fight harder as Americans to have clean air and to put an end to cigarettes and smoking. I realize that won't be a popular stance with many people, but if it's illegal to drink and drive, and illegal to shoot someone with a gun, why isn't it illegal for them to kill with cigarettes?
My neighbor told me many times (which is a big part of why I ended our friendship) that her right to smoke should override my right to breathe clean air. She claimed to have quit, but I can smell it, so I know she didn't. This is the same neighbor who is on oxygen for COPD, but yet smokes with her oxygen tube on. She's actually caught herself of fire, TWICE! She first caught the oxygen tube on fire and burned the inside of her nose, the second time, she caught her head on fire and is permanently scarred on the top of her head (second or third degree).
The reason cigarettes are still legal is all about money. Cigarette companies make billions of dollars a year and they pay lobbyists to pay politicians to keep them legal. We've all known for decades that smoking causes cancer, and we need to be smarter and we need to fight harder to keep our air and our lungs clean. I'm sick, literally and figuratively, and I'm tired of having breathing and lung problems caused by other people's smoke. Why should people like me have to suffer at someone else's hand? It isn't right, it isn't fair, and we need to find a way to end it.
It made me wonder how many people die from cigarette related illnesses each year, so I started researching.
According to the CDC, each year, an estimated 443,000 people die prematurely from smoking or exposure to secondhand smoke, and another 8.6 million live with a serious illness caused by smoking. (http://www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/resources/publications/aag/osh.htm).
Each year approximately 16,000 are killed in alcohol related crashes (http://dui.lifetips.com/cat/61352/drunk-driving-facts-stats/index.html).
In one year, 31,593 people died from gun violence and 66,769 people survived gun injuries (National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC))(http://www.bradycampaign.org/facts/gunviolence/).
Smoking and cigarettes kill almost 10 times as many people as drunk driving and gun violence combined! And that doesn't even account for the millions who suffer from smoking-related illnesses!
We fight against drunk driving, and we fight against gun violence, which is good, we need to fight until no one dies from those things. But statistically, we are all more likely to die from diseases caused by smoking, even if we are not smokers ourselves.
How many of you realized this? That you are more likely to die from smoke-related disease? Honestly, I find it sickening. I was actually shocked by the numbers, but these statistics are all from reputable sources.
We have to fight harder as Americans to have clean air and to put an end to cigarettes and smoking. I realize that won't be a popular stance with many people, but if it's illegal to drink and drive, and illegal to shoot someone with a gun, why isn't it illegal for them to kill with cigarettes?
My neighbor told me many times (which is a big part of why I ended our friendship) that her right to smoke should override my right to breathe clean air. She claimed to have quit, but I can smell it, so I know she didn't. This is the same neighbor who is on oxygen for COPD, but yet smokes with her oxygen tube on. She's actually caught herself of fire, TWICE! She first caught the oxygen tube on fire and burned the inside of her nose, the second time, she caught her head on fire and is permanently scarred on the top of her head (second or third degree).
The reason cigarettes are still legal is all about money. Cigarette companies make billions of dollars a year and they pay lobbyists to pay politicians to keep them legal. We've all known for decades that smoking causes cancer, and we need to be smarter and we need to fight harder to keep our air and our lungs clean. I'm sick, literally and figuratively, and I'm tired of having breathing and lung problems caused by other people's smoke. Why should people like me have to suffer at someone else's hand? It isn't right, it isn't fair, and we need to find a way to end it.
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