A history of the Clootie Dumpling, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (2024)

Clootie dumpling is the traditional Scottish pudding I think most closely associated with Christmas and Hogmanay, at the least for high days and holidays as a celebration cake.

Many Scots have fond memories of their grandmothers or their mothers making so it is something many Scots are fond of.

In case you haven’t tried this comforting pudding, why not try making a clootie dumpling this Christmas to keep the tradition alive.

After all, this is the time of year we can hopefully indulge ourselves, and set aside some time to make some traditional things like this.

For those of you who don’t know what it is - clootie dumpling is simply a spiced pudding studded with dried fruits that is wrapped in a cloth and simmered in water for a lengthy period.

Outcomes a giant steamed dumpling ready to be sliced and served with custard.

If you look back far enough you will find the origins of a clootie dumpling are really just a plum, or Christmas, pudding.

Clootie dumpling, however, is more plain and not as rich. Take for instance Hannah Glasse’s recipe for ‘A boiled plumb pudding’ in The Art of Cookery made Plain and Easy.

It is practically identical to a modern recipe for clootie dumpling. It calls for the same ingredients as well as tying it up in a cloth to boil it.

Remember this book was first published in 1747 so the recipe hasn’t changed in almost 300 years. Incidentally, this old method for boiling puddings produces the classic round pudding shape we associate with a perfect Dickensian Christmas.

Clootie dumpling is a Scottish colloquialism and gets its name from the cloth it is boiled in, cloot being Scots for cloth. Clootie dumpling follows the same tradition of hiding lucky charms inside a Christmas pudding.

Although, there is no tradition for setting the pudding alight with brandy. I would imagine at Christmas the Scots are more likely to keep precious alcohol in their glass rather than sending it into the ether.

The clootie dumpling is a relic from times past. The method for cooking puddings in a cloth is an ancient one, and one that seems to have persisted in Scotland where other places it has died out. Perhaps it is the Scots’ natural aversion to anything too fancy or novel.

In the past all sorts of steamed puddings, savoury as well as sweet, were cooked in this way. Most of the best recipes are English, think of jam roly-poly or spotted dick (oh those naughty Victorians). In Scotland there are versions for oatmeal dumplings, which were served up with a stew or soup.

You could potentially steam a clootie dumpling in a pudding basin but it would no longer be a clootie dumpling. A glutinous ‘skin’ forms on the outside of the dumpling as a result of being boiled in a cloth, and this is what gives clootie dumpling its character. Sometimes people use old pillow cases for the job as it is just the right sort of material.

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Hopefully there is no ‘character’ imparted by the cloth it is cooked in! Traditionally when the cloth was removed the clootie dumpling would be left to dry out before the fire to form a crust on the outside. Today, an oven does the best job for drying it out.

If you make one this size you will likely have some leftover, so you can eat it for Breakfast on Boxing day. You need a strong digestion, but fried in butter and served with bacon and eggs it makes a fine breakfast. If you are confident, you could play around with the recipe a bit.

As Christian Isobel Johnstone said in The Cook and Housewife’s Manual -‘There are a thousand other ways of making a plum-pudding’. Fine ground oatmeal could be a nice addition. I have come across quite a few recipes that contain grated carrot, always good for making a cake moist.

I would serve this with custard, failing that double cream. The instructions do look long, but it is very easy to make a clootie dumpling

Recipe: Clootie Dumpling

A history of the Clootie Dumpling, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (1)

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Ingredients

• 500g plain flour (or plain cake flour)
• 200g beef suet
• 250g castor sugar
• 250g raisins
• 250g sultanas
• 1 tsp ground cinnamon*
• 1 tsp ground allspice
• 1 tsp ground ginger
• 1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
• 3 tsp baking powder
• 1/2 tsp salt
• 2 large eggs
• 1 bramley apple, peeled and grated
• 3 tbsp black treacle
• 100ml whole milk
• extra plain flour for dusting

*you could add 3 tsp mixed spice instead of adding the cinnamon, allspice, ginger and nutmeg.

Method

Bring a very large pot of water to the boil, the largest you have. You want to leave 2 - 3 inches of water from the top to make sure the dumpling can be accommodated. Equally there needs to be enough water to make sure the dumpling has room to float.

Meanwhile, in a large mixing bowl combine all the dry ingredients (flour, sugar, spices, salt, baking powder, dried fruit and beef suet). In another bowl mix the eggs, milk and black treacle together with the grated apple. Then combine the wet mixture with the dry mixture.

The clootie dumpling bag. Picture: FW

Dip your dumpling cloot into the boiling pot of water to soak it for a few minutes.

Wring it out to remove the excess water. Now spread the cloot* over a large work surface and dust it fairly generously with plain flour.

The layer of flour does not need to be thick but do make it even. The wet cloot and flour combine to form a protective glue-like waterproof surface so make sure the flour reaches far enough to the edges of the cloot, so that the flour will cover the whole dumpling when the cloot is drawn up around it.

Empty the dumpling mixture on to the cloot and draw up the cloot around it.

Tie it with string, wrapping the string twice around, tie it twice as tight as can be pulled. When you tie the cloot leave a bit of spare room at the top, for the dumpling will expand a little.

Make sure to cut a generous length of string so you can tie the excess on to the pot handles to suspend the cloot when it is submerged in the water.

Put the lid on and keep on a low simmer for 4 hours. When the dumpling is ready you can lift it out by the string that was attached to the handle. Remove the cloot and transfer the dumpling to a baking tray.

Dry the dumpling in a 180˚C preheated oven for 15 - 20 minutes. When you first remove the cloot you will have a white glutinous skin which covers the surface of the dumpling.

After it has been in the oven it will become darker and form a nice crust on the outside of the dumpling.

*For the Cloot (cloth), make sure to use a good quality tea towel, not terrycloth but flat with a dense weave.

Sometimes in ironmongers or kitchen shops you see clootie dumpling bags like I used. Otherwise you can buy a length of calico from a haberdashery.

Alternative Recipes

Ingredients

• 500g self-raising flour
• 500g dried fruit (such as currants, sultanas and raisins)
• 125g suet, grated
• 100g breadcrumbs
• 200g sugar
• 1 large egg, lightly beaten
• 120ml milk
• ½ tsp mixed spice
• ½ tsp ground cinnamon
• 1 tsp baking powder
• 1 pinch salt
• 1 tbsp golden syrup

Ingredients

• 225g (8oz) plain flour, plus 25g (1oz) for sprinkling
• 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
• 1 tsp mixed spice
• 1 tsp ground cinnamon
• 1 tsp ground ginger
• ¼tsp sea salt
• 175g/6oz caster sugar, plus 1 tbsp for sprinkling
• 100g/4oz shredded suet
• 100g/4oz sultanas
• 75g/3oz currants
• 75g/3oz chopped stoned dates
• 50g/2oz Muscatel raisins
• 1 apple or carrot, coarsely grated
• 1 tbsp black treacle
• 1 medium farm-fresh egg
• 150ml/5fl oz buttermilk
• 225g/8oz clotted cream

A history of the Clootie Dumpling, including a recipe for making your own | Scotsman Food and Drink (2024)

FAQs

What are the origins of clootie dumpling? ›

A pudding steeped in Scottish history, the humble clootie dumpling dates back to 18th Century Scotland where it's focal ingredients such as dried fruits, oats and suet could be found cheaply and in abundance.

What is another name for clootie dumpling? ›

Since its recipe calls for boiling a traditional pudding in a bag, the clootie dumpling has been called the sweet version Scotland's other famed dish: haggis, which replaces the sweet cake and cloth sack with savory offal and an animal's stomach.

What is the difference between a clootie dumpling and Christmas pudding? ›

How is it different from a Christmas pudding? If you look back far enough you will find the origins of a clootie dumpling are really just a plum, or Christmas, pudding. Clootie dumpling, however, is plainer, not as rich and has a lighter texture.

How do you eat clootie dumplings? ›

You can eat your clootie dumpling cold however the texture may feel a little dense due to the vegetable suet for the best results we suggest warming in the microwave or oven. How do I clean my cloot after making my Clootie Dumpling Kit? You can reuse your cloot time and time again.

What is the history and origin of dumplings? ›

Legend traces the history of dumplings back to a man called Zhang Zhongjing–also known as the Sage of Traditional Chinese Medicine–in the Eastern Han Dynasty (206 B.C. to 220 A.D). The idea of dumplings supposedly struck Zhang when he returned to his ancestral village during the winter after a long period of absence.

How old is clootie dumpling? ›

In Hannah Glasse's book, 'The Art of Cookery made Plain and Easy', first published in 1747, her recipe for ' A Boiled Plumb Pudding', shows the ingredients are very similar to Clootie Dumpling . Look at a modern day recipe and you will see that the recipe has not changed much in over almost 300 years.

What does clootie mean in scottish? ›

A clootie is Scots for a rag or cloth. Clootie may refer to. Clootie dumpling, a spiced suet fruit pudding boiled in a cloth. Clootie well, a sacred well where strips of cloth are left for healing.

What were dumplings originally called? ›

Chinese dumplings, or jiaozi, are one of the most historic foods in existence. Much of the food we eat today has only been around for a few hundred years, but the Chinese have made jiaozi for over 2000 years. Dumplings are delicious with each bite – they're warm, savory, beautiful, and a fantastic addition to a meal.

How long does a clootie dumpling last? ›

It never lasts long in our household because we love to eat it quickly! However many chefs and bakers recommend no longer than two months depending on the conditions it is kept. Scottish Recipes are always happy to answer questions about Clootie Dumpling.

Why is my clootie dumpling soggy? ›

The water should come about half-way up the dumpling. If it is too high it will get into the dumpling and make it soggy at the top. Tie the ends of the string to the pot handles to keep it upright.

Why is my clootie dumpling dry? ›

After a few days Clootie Dumpling pudding can become a wee bit dry and therefore by frying the dumpling all of the wonderful flavours from the bacon and sausage reignite and compliment the Clootie Dumpling pud.

What do Scots call pudding? ›

Dictionaries of the Scots Language:: DOST :: pudding.

What is clootie dumpling made of? ›

Clootie Dumpling is a traditional Scottish pudding, comparable to Christmas Pudding but unique in it's own way. The dumpling itself is made up mostly of dried fruits, such as raisins & currants; as well are flour, breadcrumbs, sugar, suet and milk – as well as a few other flavourful ingredients.

What are the charms for the clootie dumpling? ›

Many generations ago a Scottish Clootie Dumpling often had coins, six-pence or 'tanners' or silver charms hidden inside for a lucky child or adult. The charms all had meanings and were there to give an insight into the diner's future.

Can you freeze a clootie dumpling? ›

Suitable for freezing. Shelf life - 3 months. All dumplings are individually handmade, please allow a maximum of 7 days from the day your order is placed, for preparation and delivery.

Where did Jamaican dumplings originate from? ›

Fried dumplings have their origins in Jamaican colonization and slavery, where workers would pack fried biscuits to take with them on long journeys. Sometimes called “journey cake” or “Johnny Cake”, today's islanders often enjoy fried dumplings with other breakfast dishes like ackee and saltfish, callaloo, or kidney.

Where were dumplings originally made? ›

Where Did Dumplings Originate? Dumplings are thought to have been created in Northern China. Eventually they moved south to the Cantonese, who were the first Chinese immigrants to America, and brought their dumplings with them. As a result, this led to their popularization in the US.

Who invented Jamaican dumplings? ›

History of Fry Dumplings

Fry dumplings is rooted from Jamaica colonization. Workers would take these fulfilling dumplings on long trips, hence the name johnny cakes or Journey Cakes.

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