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Daily dispatches on the Washington, DC area's food, restaurant and dining scene.

Recipe Sleuth: Oya’s Banana Bread Pudding

Is there a restaurant dish you’d love to get the recipe for? We’ll track it down. Today we’ve got the goods on Oya’s banana bread pudding.

By Jessica Sidman

While many restaurants use leftover bread to make their bread pudding, the sleek Asian-fusion restaurant Oya uses croissants. The result is a rich and moist dessert that two of our readers told us they would LOVE (yes, their caps) to learn how to make. “It’s one of those comfort foods that everyone knows,” Oya chef Eddie Marine says. “Bananas are foods of all countries, so it fits the restaurant.” The $10 bread pudding, which the restaurant serves with rum-raisin ice cream, caramel sauce, and coconut, has been a favorite at Oya since its opening. Marine says the recipe is easy to make—just make sure the oven is not too hot so that the bread pudding cooks slowly.

Oya’s Banana Bread Pudding

Makes six four-ounce servings

6 three-ounce croissants torn into small pieces
2 cups heavy cream
2 cups half-and-half
8 egg yolks
½ cup sugar
½ vanilla bean, split
¼ cup dark rum
5 bananas

Preheat the oven to 325 degrees.

In a large pot set over low heat, heat the cream, half-and-half, and vanilla bean until hot but not simmering or boiling. In a large mixing bowl, whisk the egg yolks with the sugar until smooth. Slowly drizzle the hot cream mixture into the bowl of yolks, stirring constantly. Set aside.

Fold the croissants into the cream mixture. In a blender, purée the bananas with the rum and stir into the pudding. Bake in a buttered oven-proof dish for 35 to 40 minutes.

Have a restaurant recipe you'd like sniffed out? E-mail recipesleuth@washingtonian.com

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Category Tags: Recipe Sleuth


Comments


I LOVE Oya’s Bread Pudding... yum, yum, and thanks!
And I get the "not too hot reference" you don’t want it to dry out, or to get too crispy on the outside--you want to slowly cook the Bread pudding. Yep

Posted by: Fem, Aug 21, 2009 08:49:47 AM

"The oven is not too hot?"

Not too cold?

Posted by: questionaire, Aug 05, 2009 07:42:34 PM

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