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To gain entire likeness to Christ, I ought to get a high esteem of the happiness of it. I am persuaded that God’s happiness is inseparably linked in with His holiness. Holiness and happiness are like light and heat. God never tasted one of the pleasures of sin. Christ has a body such as I have, yet He never tasted one of the pleasures of sin. The redeemed, through all eternity, will never taste one of the pleasures of sin; yet their happiness is complete... Every sin is something away from my greatest enjoyment... The devil strives night and day to make me forget this or disbelieve it. He says, Why should you not enjoy this pleasure as much as Solomon or David? You may go to heaven also. I am persuaded this is a lie — that my true happiness is to go and sin no more.
Robert Murray McCheyne

Steamed Carrot Pudding

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables, Eggs, Grains Welsh Puddings, Welsh, Usenet 1 Batch

INGREDIENTS

2 c Flour, all-purpose, sifted and measured
1 1/2 ts Cinnamon
3/4 ts Cloves
1 1/2 ts Salt
2 ts Baking powder, double-acting
1 1/2 c Potatoes (raw), grated, or ground
1 1/2 ts Baking soda
1 1/2 c Carrots (raw), ground (use medium blade)
1 1/2 c Bread crumbs (dry, not toasted)
1 1/2 c Crisco (vegetable shortening)
2 lg Eggs, lightly beaten
1 1/2 c Brown sugar (light or dark, depends on what you like)
1 1/2 ts Lemon extract
1 1/2 ts Vanilla
1 1/2 c Walnuts, finely chopped (black walnuts are wonderful if you can get them)
15 oz Raisins
1/4 c Water
1/2 c Brown sugar (I use a mixture of light and dark)
1 ts Vanilla
1 ts Lemon extract
1/8 ts Cornstarch, well-divided
1 tb Butter

INSTRUCTIONS

DRY INGREDIENTS
OTHER INGREDIENTS
SAUCE INGREDIENTS
MAKE PUDDING:  Mix the dry ingredients and set them aside. Grease
completely three large (25-oz) tin cans, such as the kind used for tomato
puree.  Do NOT use the plastic-lined variety. Alternatively, grease one
large steaming mold, with a hole in the center. Or improvise.
Add the potatoes.  Mix well.  Then, in turn, add the baking soda, the
carrots, the bread crumbs and the Crisco, making sure that you mix well
after adding each ingredient. This matters, so do it! You may have to get
some help from King Kong to blend adequately after adding the shortening.
Add, in sequence, the brown sugar, the beaten egg, the lemon extract and
the vanilla, mixing well after each addition. Now, add the dry ingredients
mixture, a bit at a time. The mixture will be extremely thick and very
difficult to mix.  Add the walnuts and the raisins. Mix them in. Go ahead.
You're strong enough.
Push the mixture into the tins, with each about 3/4 full, or a little more.
Seal the tins with aluminum foil and use a rubber band to hold the foil on
(the pudding should not be exposed directly to the steam). Steam 1 1/2 to 2
hours, (until the pudding seems uniform. You can't overcook it, so err on
the long side, please!) and cool if you're not going to serve it right now.
Make the sauce by combining all of the sauce ingredients in a small
saucepan and heating until it bubbles and all ingredients are dissolved. To
serve, reheat by steaming for at least 45 minutes, or serve out of the
original pot.
  NOTES:
*  An old Welsh steamed carrot pudding -- This is a good steamed pudding,
despite the list of ingredients that are "good for you". The sauce
(following the recipe) is not a necessity for good taste, only for
authenticity, although I LIKE it with the sauce. Some add rum to this
sauce.  Suit yourself.  I like it both ways.
This is a very old recipe, I gathered it from my grandmother, who would
have been 101 (sniff) this year, who learned it from her Welsh mother, who
learned it from her... (in Wales), ergo it's at least 200+. Given its
similarity to some late Medieval puddings, one might suspect that its
origins are much earlier. I determined the quantities listed here by
measuring what my grandmother tossed into the pot. Yield: makes about 5
pounds.
*  This stuff keeps in the fridge nearly forever (at least a month) as long
as you don't let it dry out.
*  Decant or spoon out (depends on if you want to be fancy or not) and
serve with sauce. Then, don't eat for two days to make up for the calories.
Difficulty:  moderate (considerable physical work required); Time: 1 hour
preparation, 3 hours steaming; Precision: no need to measure.
: Jim Johnston, (ihnp4;allegra;research)!alice!jj
: AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ
: Copyright (C) 1986 USENET Community Trust
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

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