Duff (dessert)

Duff is a Bahamian cuisine dessert dish made with fruit (especially guava) in a dough.[1] Fruit is folded into the dough and boiled, then served with a sauce. Ingredients include fruit, butter, sugar, eggs, nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves, flour, rum, pepper, and baking powder. The dessert is often accompanied by switcha (a lemon, water and sugar mixture) or beer.[2]

Duff is also an english (possibly slang) term for pudding. Examples are Christmas duff, Plum duff and Suet duff.[3]

In the 1901 short story by Henry Lawson, The Ghosts of Many Christmases, published in Children of the Bush,[4] plum pudding is referred to both as pudding and duff:

The storekeeper had sent them an unbroken case of canned plum pudding, and probably by this time he was wondering what had become of that blanky case of duff.

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