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The Ultimate Pub Food: Steak Pudding (no Kidneys Involved!)While a steak pie is made with a short crust pastry (or puff pastry if it's a Scottish steak pie), a steak pudding uses suet pastry and is steamed in a bowl on the cooktop, versus baked in the oven.
To make the suet pastry, put the flour in a large bowl and stir in the suet, parsley and salt. Stir in enough water to make a soft, spongy dough - you'll probably need around 250ml/9fl oz.
Place a little of this mixture in the pudding basin on top of the suet pastry. Prick the lemon all over with a cocktail stick and then place it in with the apples so that it sits upright.
Preheat the oven to 180 degrees. For the suet pastry, sift the flour into a mixing bowl with the suet and season. Mix in about four tablespoons of cold water so you have a moist but firm dough.
What suet gives to baking, British especially, is a lightness and fluffiness that butter doesn’t. A traditional steak and kidney pudding just wouldn’t be the same with a butter pastry ...
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