Pudding recipes do vary in the method in which they're cooked (some heat up the milk, whereas some combine everything then heat it up).
So, for recipes which involve heating the milk/cream, and adding it to a cold egg mixture and heating again: When it comes to adding the milk to the eggs, add a tiny amount first and whisk like mad until the pudding is smooth and combined. Then slowly add the rest of the milk, whisking constantly. Keep the pan on a low heat, whisking whilst the pudding cooks, remembering to scrape the sides and base of the pan to avoid burning. (Yes, you do need a whisk, a spoon or a fork will not suffice). And if all else fails, put it through a sieve at the end.
For recipes where everything is combined then heated up together: Firstly, make sure all your cold ingredients are thoroughly combined - use an electric hand whisk if you have one; this really gets rid of lumps and results in a very light pudding. Pour the combined mixture into a pan, medium heat (just until everything warms up). Keep whisking! Once the mixture has warmed, turn the heat down to low and whisk until it's thickened.
For both methods, stop cooking as soon as the mixture has thickened, otherwise you risk curdling the eggs (however if there's sufficient flour/cornflour in the recipe, this should not happen). It's also important to keep the heat low once the pudding is warm, but not yet thickened, since it tends to thicken quickly.
The most important way to avoid lumps is to add the polenta very slowly to the boiling water sprinkling it over the top of the water in one layer at a time and whisk while you pour. Stop pouring if you see the polenta forming a layer until you get that whisked in and then start slowly pouring again. They keep whisking when it's all in the water until it's very smooth.
my head is full of pudding lumps
I would think not. The word "instant" implies that it comes together in contact with water, and without cooking.
No. Pudding and brownies are very different. To microwave pudding would make warm pudding.
yeah of course try it
don't make chocolate pudding.
no, but to replace the pudding mix u can use mashed potato powder, BUT make sure u add cornflour to make it sticky, and maple syrup to make it sweet.
eat pudding with a lump of butter
Pudding is important to the very core of our existence. The universe would be ripped to shreds by angry intergalactic pudding lovers without it.
no
Pudding
No, you use the pudding mix as a dry ingredient.
One without pudding