Suet Pudding
Grandma made steamed pudding often. Usually they contained dried plums, raisins, or dried apricots, dark sugar, spices, eggs and she always used beef fat that was finely minced. She spoke often of her mother making them. Grandma's family came first to Alberta, Canada and then migrated to the US so maybe there's a Canadian influence of what they ate. Yet, I have a great aunt whose maiden name was Bos and married into the van Belle family. She also makes Suet puddings and at the annual family reunions the steamed puddings were served hot around 7:00 when the meal was warmed up for a seconds. Grandma's pudding was dark, moist and heavily spiced which she served with custard sauce. Aunt Gertrude's pudding was much lighter colored, dryer and served with a lemon sauce made from bottled Lemon extract. Neither one were big sellers and no one ever questioned why they both made them but it was clear Grandma's was better. We all dutifully had some of Aunt Gertrude's pudding as well so to avoid the Suet Pudding Wars. Mind you this is the same family reunion where the pies outnumber the guests and we eat from 1:00 PM until 1:00 AM playing cards, catching up, sharing the latest jokes and having a ball all day long. There are so many us of now we rent the gynasium of the Christian School which is connected to the Netherlands Reformed Church. My grandfather got sideways with an elder of the Netherlands Reformed in the 40's and he was not allowed to take communion because Maid o'Clover picked up milk from his cows on Sunday's which constituted doing business on the Sabbath. Grandpa spent a week in prayer and reading the bible and then sold all his cows, plowed up the pastures and hay fields to plant potatoes and orchards and never set foot in a church again. Most of the family drifted over to the more progressive Christian Reformed and the bulk of the family went to Grand Rapids Michigan to Calvin College.