An old-fashioned English bread and butter pudding that goes easy on the wallet. Day-old bread works best in this recipe.

Each serving provides 408 kcal, 12.5g protein, 44g carbohydrates (of which 20g sugars), 20g fat (of which 11g saturates), 2g fibre and 0.9g salt.

Desserts

Buyer's guide

Butter labelled as 'salted' contains three per cent or more salt; the salt was traditionally added to butter to help preserve it. Salted is best for spreading rather than cooking, allowing the cook to maintain control of the seasoning. 'Slightly salted' butter contains 1-2.5 per cent salt and is more versatile than salted.

Storage

Butter will store for several weeks in the fridge. Make sure it is well wrapped as it can absorb odours and flavours from other, smellier fridge items. You can freeze butter if it is well wrapped. Salted butter will freeze for 12 months and unsalted butter should keep in the freezer for 6 months. Butter can be grated from frozen into flour to make very flaky pastry.

Preparation

Because butter contains milk deposits it can burn easily, so it can be a temperamental cooking medium. Adding some oil (which burns at a higher temperature) to the cooking pan with the butter can help get around the problem. Alternatively, clarifying the butter will make it more stable. For baking, pale, creamy unsalted butter (sometimes called 'sweet' butter) is better than unsalted butter as it allows the cook to control the amount of salt going into the finished dish.

You can make your own butter at home with just cream and a jam jar. This activity will take a little patience and some stamina in the arms as you shake and shake the cream in a jar, but it will all be worthwhile when, quite suddenly, you're shaking a lump of butter.