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Award-winning chef, author and forager Alan Bergo. Food is all around you.

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Hackberry Bonet

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Hackberry Bonet Pudding Recipe I’ve been having a lot of fun working with my stash of hackberries. As I mentioned in my intro post on hackberries, there’s a number of things you can make with them, but hackberry milk is one of the most versatile. Besides drinking the milk (it tastes reminiscent of squash) you can also use the finished product in cooking and baking. A hackberry bonet pudding is arguably the best thing I’ve made with them yet. 

Edible Wild Hackberries

Dried hackberries

Hackberry milk is delicious, but it will still have little tiny bits of seed here and there, that will give baked goods a bit of texture you’ll notice. My recipe for hackberry milk, and more specifically not pressing the milk through a strainer removes most of the seed, but there will still be some. 

In dreaming up how I could mask the seed texture a bit (it’s not unpleasant) I remembered one of my favorite Italian custard recipes that I used to make from Gina DePalma’s book Dolce Italiano. If you’re not familiar, her book was the sweet counterpart to the legendary Babbo cookbook by the now canceled Mario Batali. However you feel about Mario, his books still stand as shining examples of fine cooking in my world. Dolce Italiano is no exception, and is a treasure trove of obscure and interesting Italian desserts. 

Hackberry Bonet Pudding Recipe

What’s a bonet? 

A bonet, as explained by DePalma, is a sort of custard from Piedmont, a bit like a pot du creme. The bonet differs from a typical baked pudding in one big way though: before baking, crushed amaretti cookies are sprinkled into the ramekins, which, while baking,  get hydrated by the custard, but also sink down to the bottom, giving the finished pudding a sort of subtle, tender cake-like bottom.

I knew that adding some crushed amaretti might be just the thing to add to a custard made with hackberry milk, since from experiments with them already I knew that the leftover seeds from the hackberry would also sink to the bottom of the custard as it baked. Mingling with the seeds, the amaretti add the perfect amount of texture to compliment the hackberry, as well as disguise the texture of the seeds a bit for the uninitiated. Try it if you’re making some hackberry milk. 

Hackberry Bonet Pudding Recipe

Hackberry Bonet Pudding Recipe
Print Recipe
5 from 3 votes

Hackberry Bonet

Small puddings made with hackberry milk inspired by the bonet custard of Piedmonte, Italy. Makes 4 small 4 oz jelly jars.
Prep Time30 mins
Cook Time1 hr
Course: Brunch, Dessert
Cuisine: American, Italian
Keyword: Custard, Hackberry
Servings: 4

Ingredients

  • ¾ cup hackberries
  • 2 ¼ cups water
  • 3 egg yolks
  • Pinch cinnamon
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • ¼ cup maple sugar or brown sugar
  • ½ teaspoon Galium extract or vanilla extract
  • 3 tablespoons ginger cookie crumbs crushed amaretti cookies or unseasoned breadcrumbs (any of these are fine, just don’t skip it)

Instructions

Make the hackberry milk

  • Toast the hackberries on the stove for a few minutes, but don’t burn them add the water to the pan and bring to a boil, then pour into a blender and, carefully, making sure there’s a vent in the top to prevent the lid from blowing off, blend the berries and water on medium-then medium-high, and then high, lasting for about 45 seconds.
  • Strain the hot milk through a fine strainer or a nut bag or cheesecloth, squeezing out the excess when you can handle it. If you use a strainer, do not press the solids through or you will get too much of the crunchy seeds.
  • Measure the nutmilk, you should have 12 oz.

Build the custard

  • Heat the butter, cinnamon and maple or brown sugar until melted and sizzling, allowing it to cook and sizzle a bit to cook off moisture before adding the nutmilk. Add the nutmilk, whisk to combine and cool until 90F (or room temp) then add the eggs and extract and puree with a handblender or in a blender.

Baking

  • Stir the cookie crumbs or bread crumbs into the custard then pour into 4 four-ounce ramekins or jelly jars and put in a baking pan with high sides. Fill the pan with hot, but not boiling water halfway up the custards, then bake, uncovered, for 30 minutes.
  • After 30 minutes, turn the heat of the oven off, open the door to let some heat out, count to five, then close the door and allow the custards to cool in the oven until room temperature.

Serving

  • Remove the cooked custards, wipe the bottoms clean, screw on lids or wrap in cling film and refrigerate until needed. Allow to come to room temperature before serving. Garnish with whipped cream, stewed berries, and toasted, freshly cracked nuts. The custards will last for 4 days in the fridge.

Related

Previous Post: « Prickly Ash Sausage
Next Post: Homemade Maple Mustard »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Sheri R McMahon

    May 2, 2021 at 12:21 am

    5 stars
    I have several hackberry trees along my property line, only learned what the trees were when I had a friend do tree trimming. So these are the things that hurt when you walk on them barefoot! Also, sometimes when I’m outside in the lawn chair, I get hit by hackberries knocked off by squirrels high up in the trees. My dog loves the berries. I thought she was eating rabbit turds, but realized what she was crunching was the berries. She’s wander all over eating them one at a time.

    Reply
    • Alan Bergo

      May 4, 2021 at 12:00 pm

      Funny to hear dogs will eat them!

      Reply
    • Yoni Katz

      October 29, 2021 at 11:25 am

      5 stars
      This is very funny to hear. My dog who doesn’t eat any raw fruit loves hackberries and even crunches up the seeds like I do. I guess dogs like hackberries.

      Reply

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Alan Bergo
I made vegan fish sauce from ramp juice. You tak I made vegan fish sauce from ramp juice. 

You take the pure juice of the leaves, mix it with salt, Koji rice, and more chopped fresh ramp leaves, then ferment it for a bit. 

After the fermentation you put it into a dehydrator and cook it at 145-150 F for 30 days. 

The slow heat causes a Maillard/browning reaction over time. 

After 30 days you strain the liquid and bottle it. It’s the closest thing to plant-based fish sauce I’ve had yet. 

The potency of ramps is a pretty darn good approximation of the glutamates in meat. But you could prob make something similar with combinations of other alliums. 

The taste is crazy. I get toasted ramp, followed by mellow notes from the fermentation. Potent and delicate at the same time. 

I’ve been using it to make simple Japanese-style dipping sauces for tempura etc. 

Pics: 
2: Ramp juice 
3: Juicy leaf pulp 
4: Squeezing excess juice from the pulp
5: After 5 days at 145F 
6: After 30 days 
7: Straining through Muslin to finish

#ramps #veganfishsauce #experimentalfood #kojibuildscommunity #fermentation #foraging
Oeufs de Gaulle is a classic morel recipe Jacques Oeufs de Gaulle is a classic morel recipe Jacques Pepin used to make for French president Charles de Gaulle. 

You bake eggs in a ramekin with shrimp topped with creamy morel sauce and eat with toast points. 

Makes for a really special brunch or breakfast. Recipe’s on my site, but it’s even better to watch Jacques make it on you tube. 

#jacquespepin #morels #shrimp #morilles #brunchtime
Morels: the only wild mushroom I count by the each Morels: the only wild mushroom I count by the each instead of the pound. 

Good day today, although my Twin Cities spots seem a full two weeks behind from the late spring. 2 hours south they were almost all mature. 

76 for me and 152 for the group. Check your spots, and good luck! 

#morels #murkels #mollymoochers #drylandfish #spongemushroom #theprecious
The first time I’ve seen fungal guttation-a natu The first time I’ve seen fungal guttation-a natural secretion of water I typically see with plants. 

I understand it as an indicator that the mushrooms are growing rapidly, and a byproduct of their metabolism speeding up. If you have some clarifications, chime in. 

Most people know it from Hydnellum 
peckii-another polypore. I’ve never seen it on pheasant backs before.

Morels are coming soon too. Mine were 1 inch tall yesterday in the Twin Cities. 

#guttation #mushroomhunting #cerioporussquamosus #pheasantback #naturesbeauty
Rain and heat turned the flood plain forest into a Rain and heat turned the flood plain forest into a grocery store. 

#groceryshopping #sochan #rudbeckialaciniata #foraging
Italian wild food traditions are some of my favori Italian wild food traditions are some of my favorite. 

Case in point: preboggion, a mixture of wild plants, that, depending on the reference, should be made with 5-23 individual plants. 

Here’s a few mixtures I’ve made this spring, along with a reference from the Oxford companion to Italian food. 

The mixture should include some bitter greens (typically assorted asters) but the most important plant is probably borage. 

Making your own version is a good excercise. Here they’re wilted with garlic and oil, but there’s a bunch of traditional recipes the mixture is used in. 

Can you believe this got cut from my book?!

#preboggion #preboggiun #foraging #traditionalfoods
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