Friday, December 14, 2018

How Coconut Oil Is Made

how is coconut oil made

If Google Trends is any indication, coconut oil continues to proliferate in pantries and medicine cabinets as the go-to slick of choice among the health conscious. Whether it ends up in your brownies or in your hair, all coconut oil starts out in a coconut (of course). But, how does it get from drupe to store?

Tamil Nadu Agricultural University guides us through the process. Like coconut milk, coconut oil starts out as a white layer inside a coconut, called the “kernel” or the “meat” (pictured here in this diagram from the Coconut Handbook). After the coconut is cracked open, the meat is removed, heated, and dried, turning that kernel into “copra.” Then, oil is pressed out from the copra with an expeller, which is a tool that looks like this, and works by applying intense pressure to the coconut product. An expeller press can cause friction which creates heat in this process. Filtering the oil is the final step.

Viva Naturals Organic Extra Virgin Coconut Oil, 16 Ounces for $10.44 on Amazon

From baking and cooking to beauty applications, this is good for you inside and out.
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This produces refined coconut oil. The differences between refined and unrefined coconut oil relate to the state of the coconut meat at the time of extraction, and, in turn, affect the resulting flavors. Refined coconut oil uses the heated and dried coconut meat, while unrefined coconut oil uses fresh coconut meat for extraction.

Because of this, unrefined oil maintains a much stronger coconut flavor, which is important to keep in mind when deciding which oil to use in recipes. Unrefined coconut oil is also considered “raw” when the extraction process doesn’t use any heat. For example, Vita Coco touts that their coconut oil is “cold-pressed.” “Virgin” is one more term applied to coconut oil, but this is really more of a marketing term rather than something overseen by a regulating body.

Another difference between the two is refined coconut oil has a higher smoking point, meaning it can handle hotter temperatures before it starts to smoke. This makes it the better choice for recipes that require frying foods in oil with high heat.

Roasted Purple Yam with Coconut, Lime, and Tahini

Roasted Ube with Coconut, Lime, and Tahini recipe

AJ Meeker

Coconut oil is a great alternative to butter for dressing roasted veggies, like ube, which gets a little extra tropical flavor in this recipe from lime juice, and depth from tahini. Get the Roasted Purple Yam with Coconut, Lime, and Tahini recipe.

Vegan Chocolate Banana Crunch Muffins

Vegan Chocolate Banana Crunch Muffins recipe

Chowhound

Coconut oil turns up in lots of vegan recipes too, like these dark chocolate muffins with bananas, maple syrup, and granola for crunch. They’re easily made gluten-free too. Get our Vegan Chocolate Banana Crunch Muffins recipe.

Chocolate Shell Ice Cream Topping

homemade chocolate Magic Shell ice cream shell topping

Chowhound

Did you know coconut oil is the no-longer-so-secret ingredient in many versions of Magic Shell? It’s super easy to make at home (in lots of other flavors besides chocolate, too). Get our Chocolate Shell Ice Cream Topping recipe.

Related Video: How to Make Vegan Dark Chocolate Coconut Tart

All featured products are curated independently by our editors. When you buy something through our retail links, we may receive a commission. For more hand-picked products, check out the Chowhound Shop.



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Candied Walnuts

Walnuts. Sugar. That's pretty much all you need to make these Candied Walnuts! These crunchy caramelized nuts are a great party snack, or serve them in a salad or sprinkled over ice cream.

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9 Reasons Your Holiday Baking Was a Big Disaster

Your Christmas cookies crumbled and your black bottom cupcakes turned out black (really black). What went wrong? Allow me to count the potential pitfalls. Baking is a science, and before you can turn that triple layer cake into a work of edible art, there are countless ways to screw it up. Don’t blame the recipe if you’re committing one of these nine major baking mistakes.

1. You didn’t really preheat the oven.

By the clock, your cake should be ready, but it’s toast on the outside—browned, maybe even burned. On the inside? Not so much. Why? Because you slammed those cake pans into the oven five minutes after you turned it on.

“Modern ovens are designed to preheat FAST! Every heating unit in the oven comes on full power until the oven reaches the set temperature,” observes Shirley O. Corriher in “Bakewise: The Hows and Whys of Successful Baking.”

BakeWise: The Hows and Whys of Successful Baking with Over 200 Magnificent Recipes, $28.54 on Amazon

Because baking is a science, after all.
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So if you set it at 350°F, your oven is blasting those cakes with 500°F heat for a while before the heating unit clicks off, the temperature settles, and the preheat cycle completes. That kind of fluctuation might fly when you’re braising a roast, but when you’re baking Jacques Torres’s chocolate chip cookies, the timing and conditions required for essential chemical reactions to occur (say, rising or browning) are far more exact.

Baking maven Dorie Greenspan even recommends waiting several minutes after the oven registers preheated before you slide your pans in. “Ovens cycle on and off to maintain an average temperature,” she says. “The oven hits its stride and keeps the most consistent temperature after it has cycled on and off three times.”

2. You’ve never calibrated your oven.

You think you’re baking at 350°F because the digital display on your oven says it’s so, but if you’ve never run the most basic temperature test, your oven could be 10°F to 20°F off. Break out a probe thermometer with digital display and conduct the definitive test, according to Nathan Myhrvold, coauthor of “Modernist Cuisine at Home:”

1) Place the bottom oven rack in the lowest position.
2) Preheat your oven to its lowest setting, and give the temperature a minute or two to settle after the oven registers preheated.
3) Clip the probe to the middle of the rack so the probe points to the center of the oven.
4) Close the oven and give the temperature time to resettle, then note the temperature on the oven and on the digital display. Do the numbers match up?
5) Repeat the process with the probe clipped near the back corner and door of the oven to note any hot spots or cool zones in your oven.
6) Increase the oven temperature by 50°F and repeat the tests.

Rubbermaid Stainless Steel Oven Thermometer, $11.90 on Amazon (originally $17.30)

An oven thermometer is a small investment that pays off big time.
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3. You used the wrong pan.

Your olive oil cake runneth over or domes in the middle because you used an 8-inch cake pan instead of the 9-inch called for in the recipe. Your cranberry-orange quick bread is flat and dry because you doubled the recipe and baked it in a glass casserole. If you use a different pan because you scaled a recipe up or down or don’t have the correct-size bakeware, you’ve changed the amount of batter surface area exposed to the heat.

To compensate for the difference, you need to adjust the baking time and oven temperature. The rule of thumb: If the pan makes the batter shallower than the original recipe, increase the oven temperature and decrease the baking time. If the pan makes the batter deeper, decrease the temperature and increase the baking time. Example: Pastry Chef Hedy Goldsmith recommends upping the oven temperature by 25ºF and reducing the bake time by 25 percent if you switch from an 8-inch pan to a 9-inch.

Basic Equipment

Guide to Essential Baking Tools

4. You didn’t sift.

Wonder why your muffins and cookies always turn out crumbly or dense? You’re using too much flour because you didn’t sift. Over time, flour settles and packs down into its container. Sifting aerates the flour, which not only makes for a more accurate measure (Parade found that 1 cup of unsifted flour weighed as much as 25 grams more than 1 cup sifted), it allows other ingredients, such as baking soda or baking powder, to distribute more evenly during mixing and baking.

Chef’n Sift ’n Sieve, $17.95 at Sur La Table

Aerate your flour and sift lumps from sugar (and strain fruit, and do a lot more with this handy tool)...
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5. You nuked your butter to soften it.

Blame the butter if your cookies spread and flatten during baking. If it’s too soft or melted, or you’ve overbeaten the butter and sugar together, the milk solids separate and the butter loses air. Butter should be softened to cool room temperature; your finger should leave a small dent if you press it lightly, says Handle the Heat baker-blogger Tessa Arias. The butter is too warm if it pools or looks greasy around the edges.

6. You substituted yogurt or applesauce for oil.

You can healthy-up certain baked goods by swapping out a bit of fat for these ingredients, but if your cake falls flat or those cookies don’t brown, you need to adjust the amount of liquid and leavener, as well. Yogurt and fruit purées are more acidic than the fat you’re replacing and will react differently in recipes using baking powder, which also contains acidic ingredients. “The [baked good] can have an off flavor or color, a funny texture, not rise as high, crack, and a whole host of other problems because the pH of the recipe is too acidic,” says baking expert and CraftyBaking.com CEO/founder Sarah Phillips. “Generally, you have to lower the baking powder and substitute it with some baking soda.” Exactly how much baking soda depends on the recipe, and you’ll have to make that cake a few times to get it right, says Phillips. “It takes a lot of baking knowledge, food science, and painstaking testing to get the leaveners balanced once you start substituting a major ingredient like fat. You have to take the whole recipe into account because every ingredient contains different amounts of fat, water, fiber, etc., and interacts as a whole differently.”

7. You used dark baking pans.

Baking pans with a dark surface (whether it’s nonstick or not) absorb and retain heat to a higher degree, and can burn or turn yellow Bundt cakes and muffins brown before the center is set. Light-colored aluminum pans are best for baking because they absorb and conduct heat evenly. If you bake in dark metal pans, Cooking Light recommends reducing the oven temperature by 25°F and start checking for doneness about 10 minutes sooner.

8. You used ancient baking powder or baking soda.

If your apple-cheddar quick bread turns into a brick, your leavener may have lost its bubbling powers. Under ideal conditions—stored in a cool, dry, dark place—baking powder can last up to one year after the best-by date listed on the box and baking soda can last indefinitely, according to EatByDate.com. To test a leavener’s effectiveness, combine 1 teaspoon baking powder with 1/2 cup hot water, or 1/4 teaspoon baking soda with 2 teaspoons vinegar. If the mixture bubbles immediately on contact, the leaveners will work in your recipe.

9. You used the wrong measuring cup.

Put down the liquid measuring cup and step away from the flour. If you’re using dry and liquid measuring cups interchangeably, your measures may be slightly off—not to mention messy. Dry measuring cups enable you to employ Julia Child’s scoop-and-sweep method of measuring dry ingredients like flour and sugar: Dip into the ingredient, fill the cup to overflowing, then sweep the excess away. Unless you’re using a scale and measuring by weight, this is the most accurate way to measure dry ingredients. The pour spout and below-the-rim measure lines on liquid measuring cups make for less spillage and more accurate measuring of liquid ingredients as well.

Greater Goods Digital Kitchen Scale, $9.95 on Amazon

A scale is really the best way to be sure your measurements are all spot-on.
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Related Video: 10 Cookie Baking Mistakes

All featured products are curated independently by our editors. When you buy something through our retail links, we may receive a commission. For more hand-picked products, check out the Chowhound Shop.

Colleen Rush is a food and travel writer who eats, drinks, cooks, and writes mostly in New Orleans, but also … everywhere else. She is the author of “The Mere Mortal’s Guide to Fine Dining” (Broadway Books, 2006), and co-author of “Low & Slow: Master the Art of Barbecue in 5 Easy Lessons” (Running Press, 2009) and the upcoming “Low & Slow 2: The Art of Barbecue, Smoke Roasting, and Basic Curing” (Running Press, 2015). Follow her on Twitter @FoodRush or Instagram @NewOrleansFood.



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Cinnamon Snap Cookies

Cinnamon Snaps! This version of crispy gingersnap cookies are packed with cinnamon and sweetened with honey. They're a good choice for bake sales and holiday cookie trays.

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The Fascinating History of Figgy Pudding

So bring us some figgy pudding, so bring us some figgy pudding—but wait, what is figgy pudding?

If your only exposure to figgy pudding comes from the classic Christmas song in which carolers demand the dessert and refuse to leave unless they get some, you might wonder if it’s really that good—and maybe you also wonder what it actually is. Allow us to satisfy your Christmas curiosity.

So…What Is It?

Well, basically, it’s a boozy, sticky, dense steamed cake of sorts studded with dried fruit, typically aged at least one month, and flambéed at the table before serving. It’s also known as plum pudding (and formerly, plum pottage), although there are no plums in it—and generally no figs, either. Figs did appear in several Medieval cookbooks; there were multiple recipes for “figge” or “fygeye” (and other variations on that spelling), which involved boiling figs in wine and mixing them with bread or almonds, spices, and raisins. That probably accounts for the eventual “figgy pudding” variation on plum pudding, but “plum” itself was an Elizabethan-era term denoting all dried fruit, most commonly raisins, dates, and sultanas (aka golden raisins). Because this particular type of fruity pudding was served during the holidays, it also garnered the much less confusing name Christmas pudding.

British Christmas pudding with rosemary and ginger

Jamie Oliver’s Christmas pudding with rosemary, pecans, ginger, bourbon, and golden syrup, courtesy of The Happy Foodie

Okay, that can still be a bit confusing for Americans, since we generally think of “pudding” as something smooth, jiggly, and creamy, perhaps sometimes in conjunction with rice or bread. But in England, “pudding” refers to dessert in general, and also more specifically applies to boiled or steamed sweets with a texture akin to dense sponge cake. That said, savory puddings do exist.

The Shift from Savory to Sweet

In fact, the first recorded pudding recipes were all savory, or rather all made of various meats and animal products, including blood and suet. They were devised as a way to preserve meat without smoking or salting it, and often contained heavy doses of warm spices like nutmeg, cloves, and ginger, as well as dried fruits like currants and raisins, plus a measure of sugar, but they were definitely not desserts. These heavily spiced, meaty mixtures, with grains and even vegetables mingling with the other ingredients, were usually stuffed into casings of animal intestines and boiled. (The precursors to pudding were pottages, which were soupier, but contained similar combinations of ingredients. And another extant ancestor of these pottages and puddings is the infamous haggis.)

steamed puddings in cloth

Cloth-wrapped individual Christmas puddings courtesy of Food to Love

As fruit became more plentiful at the market, these mixtures shifted to be more sweet and less meaty, although traditional Christmas pudding recipes still call for a bit of beef suet to add moisture and richness (it can be replaced with butter if you prefer that to chunks of kidney fat). By the 17th century, puddings were also being steamed wrapped in cloth rather than animal casings, which is why Mrs. Cratchit encounters a “smell like a washing-day” when removing her Christmas pud from the pan in Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol“—”A smell like an eating-house and a pastrycook’s next door to each other, with a laundress’s next door to that. That was the pudding.” (The beef suet would presumably account for the eating-house aromas.)

Banned in Britain

Over 150 years before Dickens published his Christmas classic, however, Christmas pudding—and Christmas itself—was actually banned in England for several years. Oliver Cromwell, 17th century British Puritan and politician, is often personally blamed for this, but in reality, the entire government then in power was pretty Grinchy.

illustration of Oliver Cromwell and English Christmas ban

Oliver Cromwell, not a fan of Christmas, courtesy of BBC

In the mid-1600s, caroling was prohibited, businesses were ordered to remain open on Christmas Day, and soldiers were authorized to seize any Christmas food (and Christmas drink) they found while patrolling. This actual war on Christmas (there were literal pro-Christmas riots in England in 1647) even spread to the British colonies; the holiday was banned in Boston from 1659 through 1681, and people in many parts of New England were fined if caught celebrating in any form.

Christmas pudding is definitely a secular dessert these days, but it is claimed to have religious associations: its traditional total of 13 ingredients is said to represent the 12 apostles plus Jesus; the traditional prickly holly garnish allegedly signifies the crown of thorns placed on Christ’s head; and the practice of setting the pudding alight is claimed to represent the passion of the Christ. This would have been a particularly good example of what the Puritans considered the pagan and papist abominations of the holiday, but at the time, the traditional dessert was likely still a soupier plum pottage (or porridge)—still, its association with Christmas would have made it anathema to the Puritans in any form.

The ban on Christmas in England was lifted in 1660, at which point, British citizens were once more free to make merry, and make any holiday desserts they liked.

How Do You Make It?

Making Christmas Pudding, a photograph by Catherine MacBride, via Fine Art America

“Making Christmas Pudding” photograph by Catherine MacBride, courtesy of Fine Art America

Because the flavor needs time to fully develop, Christmas pudding is meant to be made well in advance, specifically on the last Sunday before the Advent season (so, the last week in November). This is known as Stir-up Sunday, when the whole family takes turns stirring up the Christmas pudding (or Christmas cake, or mincemeat, which all need time to mature), but the name also alludes to a passage from the Book of Common Prayer: “Stir up, we beseech thee, O Lord, the wills of they faithful people.”

Christmas pudding or figgy pudding

A lovely Christmas pudding, courtesy of Evening Standard

By the Victorian era, Christmas pudding was made pretty much the same way as it is today: dried fruit (raisins, currants, and sultanas, sometimes with the addition of fresh or candied fruits) are mixed with citrus peel, nutmeg, cinnamon, ginger, clove, brown sugar, almonds, bread crumbs, suet (or butter), eggs, and milk. Booze (usually brandy and/or beer) is added, and then the mixture is left to sit overnight. The next day, flour is added, it’s poured into a mold and wrapped up (in parchment or foil instead of pudding cloth these days, though you can still use cheesecloth or muslin), and boiled or steamed in a water bath for up to 8 hours (naturally, you can find instructions for steaming it in your Instant Pot today). Once completely cooled, the wrapping is replaced with fresh paper, and the pudding is stored from anywhere between one month and one year (if not longer). When it’s time to serve, the pud is steamed once more, turned out onto a platter, decorated, and flambéed at the table.

Here’s Dickens again, describing the traditional look of the finished product: “like a speckled cannon-ball, so hard and firm, blazing in half of half-a-quartern of ignited brandy, and bedight with Christmas holly stuck into the top.” Lest you doubt such a sturdy-sounding dessert’s appeal, know that Mr. Cratchit “regarded it as the greatest success achieved by Mrs. Cratchit since their marriage.” (Poor Tiny Tim.)

Charles Dickens A Christmas Carol Christmas pudding illustration by CE Brock

The triumphant pudding scene from “A Christmas Carol,” illustrated by Charles Edmund Brock

Because making figgy/plum/Christmas pudding is clearly rather labor-intensive, and it must be done so far in advance for proper flavor, commercially made puddings became available as far back as 1899. One such vintage specimen was recovered after 112 years, but the tin was too damaged to risk tasting it. However, some intrepid souls have tasted a Christmas pud clocking in at 46 years old–and liked it!

More Yuletide Treats

Sticky Toffee Pudding
Chowhound Gift Guide 2018: Gifts for Fans of 'The Great British Baking Show'
Did We Always Hate Fruitcake?

Isn’t This Just Fancy Fruitcake?

Jamie Oliver's A baked Chai sticky date pudding with toffee sauce

A baked chai sticky date pudding with toffee sauce, courtesy of Jamie Oliver

If you’re thinking that figgy pudding sounds suspiciously like fruitcake, you’re not totally wrong—but don’t let that put you off! Done right, the combination of boozy fruit, warm spices, and dense yet moist (or “damp” if that sounds any better) and sticky cake is wonderful. There are several key differences between fruitcake and figgy pudding, though:

  • While they’re both made far in advance and stored (soaked in liquor) until Christmas, whereas fruitcake is ready to slice and eat, figgy/plum/Christmas pudding is steamed again just before tucking in—and while steamed fruitcake recipes do exist, they’re more often simply baked. As for the aforementioned liquor, it’s usually just brandy, rum, or (less frequently) sherry when it comes to fruitcake, whereas Christmas pudding might have a mixture of any of those, and often includes beer as well.
  • There is plenty of dried fruit in Christmas pudding, but usually not the preservative-laden, artificially neon-colored glacé or candied fruits often found in fruitcake (particularly cherries, which don’t appear in traditional Christmas pudding, although you can find such variations now).
  • Unlike fruitcake, Christmas pudding does sometimes contain a coin, the idea being that whoever gets the piece with the silver will have good luck in the coming year.
stirring a coin into Christmas pudding

Stirring a coin (and vegetarian suet) into the pudding, courtesy of The Proof of the Pudding

  • Christmas pudding, once brought to the table, is doused in even more brandy and set on fire, so it’s definitely got theatrics going for it. (And while some people might prefer to set the stereotypical rock-hard fruitcake ablaze and let it burn instead of eating it, there’s no intrinsic element of spectacle to it. Point: pudding.)
  • Once the flames are extinguished, Christmas pudding often gets a warm sauce (sometimes boozy) or cream spooned on top, while fruitcake rarely even has icing (and if it does, it’s probably Christmas cake, yet another British holiday dessert tradition).

Christmas pudding is a cousin not just to fruitcake; it’s also similar in many respects to mincemeat pie—which, in at least one historical case, has been made with whale meat…so compared to that, beef suet doesn’t sound so bad, huh?

So What’s the Deal with the Song?

By about 1600, traditional English Christmas activities included caroling and wassailing, where people went singing door to door in the hopes of getting something good to eat or drink in return—some of them must also have genuinely wanted to spread holiday cheer, but “bring us some figgy pudding” is an earnest, if light-hearted, exhortation. Many sources claim that “We Wish You a Merry Christmas” existed in some form as far back as the 1500s, but to use a dreaded phrase, according to Wikipedia, it was not contained in several early published books of carols. That doesn’t mean it wasn’t sung before its first written record in 1953—and figgy pudding certainly existed well before then—but all we know for sure is that the song really took off in the States, while the sweet itself did not.

The Proof of the Pudding Is In the Eating

Instant Pot Christmas pudding

Instant Pot Christmas pudding, courtesy of Every Nook and Cranny

The only way to find out if you’re a caroling-level fanatic about this dessert is to try some yourself. If you want to make your own figgy pudding (by whichever name you choose to call it), you can buy a steamed pudding mold for under $20, or you can make it in a Bundt pan.

Mrs. Anderson’s Baking Non-Stick Steamed Pudding Mold with Lid, $19.43 on Amazon

Make a perfect pud at home with the proper equipment.
See It

If you’re too short on time, a sticky toffee pudding makes a fine substitute—it has fairly similar flavors, though sweeter and without the warm spices or booze; it requires no suet or aging; and it has a relatively short baking time. Or, you could always buy yourself a ready-made pudding, as plenty of British and Australian families do!

Otherwise, file this away for next year, and in the meanwhile, try one of the easier pudding-inspired desserts (some more loosely inspired than others) below.

Figgy Pudding Cookies

Christmas pudding cookies

Tikkido

Christmas cookies meet Christmas pudding! These do actually contain dried figs, but no suet; the brandy is there in the glaze. If you think your decorating skills aren’t quite up to snuff, try these simple figgy pudding butter cookies instead—but the adorable miniature replicas are certainly way easier than the real deal. Add some cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and ginger to the cookie dough if you want a bit more spice. Get the Figgy Pudding Cookies recipe.

Chocolate Coffee Figgy Pudding Cakes

chocolate coffee figgy puddings

Jackie’s Happy Plate

Not traditional, but delicious, these easy baked pudding cakes combine fresh dark figs, cocoa powder, cinnamon, and black coffee. Drizzle with our warm Bittersweet Chocolate Sauce (bumped up with liquor if you like), and/or serve with vanilla ice cream for maximum decadence. Get the Chocolate Coffee Figgy Pudding Cakes recipe.

Christmas Pudding Ice Cream

Christmas pudding ice cream

Baking Mad

Speaking of ice cream, you can also make a lovely frozen version of the traditional Christmas pudding. (We’re big fans of cold weather ice cream in general.) This recipe does require conversion from metric, or you can simply use the flavors and decoration instructions as a guide when adapting an American ice cream recipe you like. Get the Christmas Pudding Ice Cream recipe.

Gluten Free Paleo Figgy Pudding

gluten free paleo figgy pudding

What Great Grandma Ate

This is another newfangled take that does actually use figs—and it’s also gluten-free and paleo (replace the butter and honey to make it vegan and everyone can try it). It has the damp, sticky texture of traditional pudding, plus warmth from cinnamon, and chewy spots of raisins and dates. Get the Gluten Free Paleo Figgy Pudding recipe.

Brown Butter Gingerbread Figgy Puddings

brown butter gingerbread figgy pudding

Gringalicious

These individual brown butter puddings would be right at home on a Harry Potter dinner party table (just call them Golden Snitch Christmas puddings!), but equally as delightful at any holiday spread. They’re made from gingerbread cookie crumbs, brandy, dried figs and raisins, orange zest, and semisweet chocolate chips for good measure, with a brown butter glaze pooling on top. Get the Brown Butter Gingerbread Figgy Puddings recipe.

Divine Figgy Pudding Cupcakes

chocolate figgy pudding cupcakes

Divine Chocolate

These cupcakes also combine chocolate and figs; there’s fig puree in the chocolate cake itself, piped into the center of the sweets, and mixed into the frosting, along with brandy for that authentic boozy flavor. Get the Divine Figgy Pudding Cupcakes recipe.

Bringin’ Figgy Pudding Cocktail

Christmas figgy pudding cocktail

Finger Lakes Distilling

If you’re looking for a Christmas cocktail, try one inspired by figgy pudding. You could make a version with port, one with gin and fig preserves, a figgy twist on an Old Fashioned, or even concoct your own recipe using Christmas pudding spiced rum. This one contains fig-infused bourbon, maple syrup, and citrus, with a dash of balsamic vinegar, which sounds intriguing. Get the Bringin’ Figgy Pudding Cocktail recipe.

Spiced Honey Cake with Caramelized Figs

spiced honey cake with caramelized figs

Chowhound

This sweet, golden cake is spiced with cinnamon and cloves, and sports a moist crumb beneath a crisp crust. Rather than being baked inside, here, the figs are caramelized in honey and honey liqueur and mounded lusciously on top. Get our Spiced Honey Cake with Caramelized Figs recipe.

Gateau de Riz aux Figues (French Fig Rice Pudding)

fig rice pudding with coconut milk

Tartelette

This is perhaps the farthest away from traditional figgy/plum/Christmas pudding here, but it is another sort of pudding, and does contain figs, so why not? It’s a super simple coconut milk rice pudding with fresh fruit baked on top, and the perfect thing to make if you’re into subverting expectations. Get the Gateau de Riz aux Figues (French Fig Rice Pudding) recipe.

For more holiday hacks, tips, tricks, and recipes, check out our Ultimate Guide to Christmas and Holiday Entertaining Headquarters.

Related Video: What Is Figgy Pudding?

All featured products are curated independently by our editors. When you buy something through our retail links, we may receive a commission. For more hand-picked products, check out the Chowhound Shop.



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Chowhound Gift Guide 2018: Eco-Friendly Food Gifts That Give Back

best eco-friendly sustainable food, kitchen, and dining gifts that give back

It feels great to give gifts (and, let’s be honest, to receive them too), but it’s even better if they give back to the world in some way, with proceeds going to charity or preservation efforts. That’s why we’ve rounded up some great sustainable and eco-friendly food-, cooking-, and dining-related gifts from companies that also donate to various organizations doing good things.

You’ll be happy, your giftee will be extra grateful, and you’ll be helping out. What could be better than that?

Eco-Friendly Slow Cooker, $39 – $59 at Wonderbag

Wonderbag eco-friendly slow cooker

Wonderbag

The Wonderbag is a simple but revolutionary slow cooker that’s non-electric, portable, and eco-friendly (since it reduces energy and fuel use). It’s also handy for keeping meals warm for long periods if you’re taking them elsewhere. They’re machine washabable and come in several sizes, and best of all, for every Wonderbag sold, $1 is donated to the Wonderbag Foundation, which provides Wonderbags to families in need (and helps save lives, since wood smoke from cooking fires is a major health and environmental issue in Africa; learn more here).See It

Sustainable Farming Gifts, $10 and up at Heifer International

Heifer International sustainable food gifts

Heifer International

Heifer International is a unique organization that allows you to buy gifts for families in need around the world—most of these gifts are in the form of livestock that will provide both sustenance and an ongoing income for the families, so they have better access to education, healthcare, and basic necessities. For instance, gifting a lama will provide wool for clothing and blankets, milk that’s higher in calcium than a cow’s, and improved soil thanks to their unique hooves’ impact on the ground where they roam. The gift of a water buffalo provides nutritious milk and the ability to farm more efficiently, and a flock of ducks provides eggs to eat, as well as income from selling surplus eggs, feathers, and down. While some of these obviously aren’t the best choice for your vegan friends and fam, you can also purchase gifts like clean water and irrigation pumps in their name, or send a girl to school. And although you don’t get any tangible items with this option except a card denoting your food gift, it’s a wonderful organization (and feeling)!See It

The Bee Cause Project Honey, $15 at Savannah Bee Company

Savannah Bee Company Bee Cause honey

Savannah Bee Company

The Savannah Bee Company sells lots of lovely gifts, from honeycomb to natural beauty products, but sales of their “Bee Cause” honey will benefit the organization of the same name, which helps fund the installation of classroom observation hives in schools across America, to encourage the next generation to understand, love, and protect honeybees. Since this is a natural product and the bees that produce the honey feed on several different wildflowers, the flavor varies, but is sure to be delicious.See It

Organic Nut and Seed Butters, $7.49 and up at NuttZo

NuttZo organix nut and seed butter

NuttZo

For the socially conscious nut butter lover on your list, a jar (or several) of Nuttzo‘s protein-packed nut and seed butters are great stocking stuffers. They’re chock-full of flavor and nutrition, and a portion of all sales goes to Project Left Behind, which helps provide food, medical care and supplies, and education to children in Peru, Nepal, and India. (Similarly, Help Good Spread sells organic probiotic peanut butter and for every jar sold, they donate MANA—a fortified, peanut butter-based medicinal food—to malnourished children.)See It

Gourmet Chewing Gum Variety Pack, 12 for $19.95 at Project 7

Project 7 chewing gum sampler pack

Project 7

Project 7 is named for the company’s mission to use at least 10 percent of their profits to help support 7 areas of basic humanitarian need both domestically and abroad (historically, they have actually donated between 30 and 50 percent of their profits)—which they make by selling gourmet flavors of gum and chewy candies. So if you know a kinder-hearted version of Violet Beauregarde, gift them a sampler pack of 12 different flavors like Fairytale Fruit, Cotton Candy, Thin Mints, and Coconut Lime. (Or stuff some stockings with smaller packs of gummy candies, like their “Champagne Dreams” brut and rose gummy bears!)See It

Snack Bar Variety Pack, 12 for $23.99 at This Bar Saves Lives

This Bar Saves Lives variety pack

This Bar Saves Lives

Who among us doesn’t love snacks? Satisfy anyone’s cravings for a whole month with a sampler pack from This Bar Saves Lives, which provides food aid to malnourished children—for every bar sold, they donate a Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food to a child in need. “The more the merrier” was never more appropriate, then. Your gift recipient will get 2 of each flavor (Madagascar Vanilla Almond & Honey; Dark Chocolate & Peanut Butter; Dark Chocolate & Cherry; Wild Blueberry & Pistachio; PB&J; and Dark Chocolate & Coconut) in this sampler pack.See It

12-Month Bread Subscription, $350 at Hot Bread Kitchen

Hot Bread Kitchen 12-month bread subscription box

Hot Bread Kitchen

Hot Bread Kitchen has a variety of great breads, from stollen and chocolate babka to global flatbreads (and a New York bread box with bialys, rye, and challah). They come in at various price points, but if you want to splurge, a 12-month bread subscription is a truly great gift for any carb lover. They also run two fabulous community programs: Bakers in Training, a paid on-the-job program that gives women facing economic insecurity culinary training along with key skills like English as a second language, knife skills, kitchen math, and science (100 percent of graduates who seek employment are placed in fair wage positions with access to benefits and opportunities for advancement), and HBK Incubates, a shared commercial kitchen space and business support program that allows entrepreneurs to mitigate start-up risk and grow their food ventures in a community of business owners.See It

The Hot Bread Kitchen Cookbook: Artisanal Baking from Around the World, $22.86 on Amazon

They also have a cookbook if you know (or are) a home bread baker!
See It

Glitter Bottles Sparkling Wine, $29.99 – $360 at One Hope Wines

One Hope Wines glitter bottles sparkling wine

One Hope Wines

Each bottle of wine sold by One Hope Wines goes to a different charity, including organizations for veterans, for animals, and for children. The proceeds from these ultra-festive glittery bottles of sparkling wine go towards children’s charities: each silver and gold bottle sold provides two meals to a child in need, while profits from the rainbow glitter bottles go towards the Trevor Project for at-risk LGBTQ youth. If you want to gift a subscription instead of a single bottle, they also have The Grapeful Club that lets you donate an additional 10 percent to the charity of your choice (while also saving money on every shipment).See It

Faucet Face Eco-Friendly Water Bottles, 3 for $32.50 on Amazon

Faucet Face eco-friendly water bottles

Faucet Face

Faucet Face makes eco-friendly reusable water bottles that not only help prevent plastic waste, but make your drink taste better—and they donate a portion of all sales to clean drinking water charity Third Millennium Awakening. You can save money on multiple gifts when you buy this trio of bottles, but if you only want to buy one, each design is available on its own for $13.99. (If you know your giftee must sip from a straw, check out sustainable straws in metal and glass too, like those from Simply Straws.)See It

VOSGES(RED) 9-Piece Chocolate Collection, $32 on Amazon

Vosges Haut-Chocolat RED truffles

Vosges Haut-Chocolat

This limited-edition truffle collection from Vosges Haut-Chocolat includes three flavors, designed to be paired with cabernet, bourbon, and Champagne, respectively—and 20 percent of proceeeds go toward the nonprofit organization (RED)‘s fight against AIDS.See It

Hand-Crafted Kitchen and Dining Items, $4.99 and up at Ten Thousand Villages

Ten Thousand Villages sustainable fair trade hand crafted items

Ten Thousand Villages

Ten Thousand Villages is, in their own words, “a global maker-to-market movement”—they sell handmade items from artisans in developing countries around the world, and pledge that every purchase you make directly impacts the life and community of the maker. They have an array of beautiful kitchen and dining items, from textiles and cutting boards to mugs and utensils, even cool martini glasses and goblets—as well as tons of other handcrafted items, so you can find something for everyone on your list.See It

A Year of Chocolate Collection, $100 at Askinosie Chocolate

Askinosie Chocolate Year of Chocolate gift set

Askinosie Chocolate

Missouri-based Askinosie Chocolate not only supports local community organizations Chocolate University and Lost & Found Grief Center, they are sustainably feeding many students every day in Tanzania and the Philippines through their “A Product of Change” program. They also pay above Fair Trade prices for the beans they buy and profit share with their farmer partners. You have plenty of gift options to choose from, including traditional Filipino hot chocolate disks, a chocolate tasting kit, and several chocolate bars (both flavored and plain), but big spenders can go with a set of all 12 of their single-origin chocolate bars, plus a tin of cocoa powder for purists.See It

FEED Collaboration Hand-Crafted Wooden Serving Pieces, $19.99 – $34.99 at West Elm

West Elm FEED collaboration hand crafted wooden dining ware

West Elm

Feed provides meals to children in need around the world, and is committed to products that are hand-crafted under fair-labor conditions, with environmentally friendly materials whenever possible. In collaboration with West Elm, they’re selling these acacia wood serving bowls, boards, utensils, and napkin rings, with between 20 and 30 meals provided to those in need for each piece sold (depending on which item you purchase).See It

Fair Trade Organic Coffee, $13.99 and up at Grounds and Hounds

Grounds and Hounds coffee

Grounds and Hounds

For those who love coffee and animals, a gift from Grounds and Hounds is perfect, because they donate 20 percent of all profits from their fair trade, organic, specialty coffees (and related products) to support no-kill shelters for dogs who are between homes. They offer a variety of bean blends, including “Morning Walk Breakfast Blend” and “Hush Puppy” for decaf fans, as well as apparel and accessories—and you can purchase subscriptions, gift sets, or one-off items as you please. (For a double dose of caffeine and warm fuzzies, throw in a little something from Rescue Chocolate too.)See It

“Ugly” Fruit and Veggie Subscription Boxes, $11 – $43 at Imperfect Produce

Imperfect Produce fruit and veggie subscription box to fight food waste

Imperfect Produce

Imperfect Produce fights food waste and hunger by shipping customers subscription boxes of “ugly” produce that may not be pretty enough for store shelves but is still perfectly delicious and nutritious—and by donating thousands more pounds of produce each week to food banks and nonprofits. Delivery is currently available in several locations around California, as well as some major metropolitan areas of Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Texas, Oregon, Washington, and Wisconsin (check here for specifics). If you know a home cook who would appreciate the produce and the mission, this is a great gift to give them this holiday season, especially since it offers full customization for those with more particular tastes.See It

For more great gift ideas, see our Gourmet Food and Drink Gift Guide and our Best Kitchen Gadgets, Tools, and Appliances Gift Guide.

Related Video: The 5 Essential Things You Need to Know Before Making Charitable Donations

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Honey Mulled Wine

Get into the holiday spirit with Honey Mulled Wine! This red wine is sweetened with honey and spiced with cinnamon. It's an easy (and easy to love) winter warmer.

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