South African sweet pudding
Malva pudding![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b1/Malva_Pudding.jpg/250px-Malva_Pudding.jpg) |
Type | Pudding |
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Place of origin | South Africa |
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Serving temperature | Hot |
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Main ingredients | flour, sugar, milk, apricot jam , balsamic vinegar |
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Malva pudding is a sweet pudding of South African origin. It contains apricot jam and has a spongy caramelised texture. A cream sauce is always poured over it while it is hot, and it is usually served warm with cold custard and/or ice-cream. Many South African restaurants offer this pudding, which is thought to originally be of Dutch[1] then Cape Dutch origin, and is synonymous with the Cape.[2][3]
The pudding gained popularity on the West Coast of the United States after Oprah Winfrey's personal chef, Art Smith, served it for Christmas dinner in 2006 to pupils of the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa.[4]
There are various theories on the origin of the name.
- The Oxford English Dictionary says it comes from Afrikaans malvalekker, meaning "marshmallow" (ultimately from Latin malva, a mallow).[5] This may arise from a resemblance between the pudding's texture and that of a marshmallow or a similar Afrikaner sweet, the malvelekker, made with the extract of marsh mallow.[6]
- Malva is also Afrikaans for geranium (in the broad sense, including Pelargonium).[7] Another botanical theory is that the batter was originally flavoured with the leaves of the lemon- or the rose-scented geranium, varieties of South African native plants.[6]
- Art Smith said that according to Colin Cowie, his hospitality ambassador in South Africa, the pudding was named after a woman called Malva.[8]
- Another theory is that the sauce originally contained Malvasia (malmsey) wine. Proponents of this theory include brandy or sherry in the sauce.[6]
- Others suggest that the pudding was originally accompanied by Malvasia wine.[9]