Crème Brûlée (French vanilla custard)

Crème Brûlée (French vanilla custard)

French50 minServes 4Medium

Ingredients


Instructions


Full Article

Here is a classic Crème Brûlée with a silky, smooth and rich custard topped with a thin pane of crunchy toffee. This is French chic personified in a dessert – classy but not stuffy, and oh-so-effortless! It takes just 4 simple ingredients: cream, egg yolks, sugar and vanilla. It’s an excellent make-ahead dessert for an elegant dinner party, yet easy enough to whip up for dinner tonight.

And no, you don’t even need a blow torch to make the toffee topping!

Spoon scooping up Creme Brûlée

Spoon scooping up Creme Brûlée

Crème Brûlée

I will never forget the first time I made Crème Brûlée because I was floored by how easy it was. I think I just assumed that something that looks and tastes so incredible, and appears on the menus of great restaurants would be really hard to make!

I think you too will be so surprised how easy Crème Brûlée is! No fancy gadgets needed (I’ll get to the toffee topping later:-)) and just 4 simple steps:

  1. Infuse cream with vanilla (10 minute simmer, and stand for 1 hour);
  2. Whisk egg yolks and sugar, then cream;
  3. Pour into ramekins, bake, then chill;
  4. Sprinkle with sugar and finally blast with blowtorch or stick it under a screaming hot grill to form the toffee topping.

“Wait, that’s it??”, I hear you exclaim incredulously. Yep. You barely need a recipe! 😂

(PS. How to pronounce Crème Brûlée: krem broo-lay. Bonus points if you can do the guttural French accent. I can’t – I can only say it with an awful Aussie drawl!)

Overhead photo of Creme Brûlée decorated with raspberries and mint

Overhead photo of Creme Brûlée decorated with raspberries and mint

What goes in Crème Brûlée

Here’s all you need to make Crème Brûlée:

Creme Brûlée ingredients

Creme Brûlée ingredients


How to make Crème Brûlée

A chic French baked custard dessert everybody knows and loves … yet it’s a walk in the park to make!

How to make Creme Brûlée

How to make Creme Brûlée

  1. Scrape vanilla bean – To scrape the vanilla bean “caviar” (seeds) out, cut an incision down the length of the vanilla bean. Then use the back of a small knife held perpendicular against the vanilla bean and scrape it along the inside to scrape out the vanilla bean seeds. See demo in the recipe video below;
  2. Infuse cream – Place vanilla seeds, empty vanilla bean pod and cream in a saucepan, and simmer over low heat for 10 minutes. Then leave to stand for 1 hour so the cream is infused with the vanilla flavour and cools (so it doesn’t cook the egg when we add it). I tend to do this with the lid off because I don’t like condensation dripping into my cream from the lid if you cover it. (I always think, “It’s diluting the cream!”, which actually makes absolutely no sense 😂.)
    It does mean removing the skin that forms on the surface before mixing into the egg;
  3. Make egg mixture – Whisk egg yolks with the sugar;
  4. Add cream – Remove the vanilla bean from the cream (and have a giggle when you see what I use to remove it in the recipe video!) Use a slotted spoon or similar to remove any skin from the surface of the cream to ensure our custard is silky smooth;
  5. Make custard – Pour the cream into the egg mixture then whisk until just combined. Don’t whisk more than necessary as this creates air bubbles. Though let’s be honest, it’s really not the end of the world if you have an air bubble or two in your custard! I’m just being a perfectionist here:-);
  6. Fill ramekins – This recipe makes 500ml / 2 cups of custard, so that’s four servings of 125ml / ½ cup each. Small ramekins holding around 150ml / ⅔ cup are an ideal size – this is what I used.
    Restaurants often serve Crème Brûlée in a flatter, larger dish so there’s more surface area and thus more toffee action. I applaud this clever move – we all love that toffee top, it’s the best part! – but regretfully I do not have such a dish;
  7. Water bath – Place ramekins in a deep(-ish) roasting pan, then fill the pan with boiling water so it comes halfway up the side of the ramekins. Don’t go any higher than this otherwise the ramekins will float around in the water!
  8. Bake 35 – 40 minutes or until the custard looks and feels set but still wobbles when you (gently!) shake the ramekin.

How set Crème Brûlée should be

Crème Brûlée is supposed to be a soft custard with a texture like a thick Greek yogurt. You should not be able to cut through it like cake! When you scoop some from the ramekin, the walls of the custard remaining in the ramekin should barely be holding upright, but shouldn’t run everywhere either. It should melt in your mouth like a rich, velvety cream. It shouldn’t even have the texture of soft jelly!

How to make the crisp toffee topping of Crème Brûlée

A blow torch makes short work of the crisp toffee topping. Just sprinkle with sugar and blast with the blow torch for around 6 to 10 seconds until the sugar melts and turns golden. It will then quickly harden as it cools.

However, if you don’t have a blow torch, just stick the ramekins under a screaming hot grill / broiler for around 45 seconds to 1 minute so the sugar melts. It works just fine, though my two little tips are: (1) the brûlée should be refrigerated overnight to ensure it is really cold to help prevent the custard from melting; and (2) after the sugar is melted, pop the Crème Brûlées back in the fridge for at least 20 minutes, and up to 1 hour. This is because the grill takes longer than a blow torch so the surface of the custard under the caramel will melt a little bit.

How to make Creme Brûlée

How to make Creme Brûlée

Creme Brûlée in white pots, ready to be served

Creme Brûlée in white pots, ready to be served

That moment when you crack through the caramel topping and are greeted with the sight of silky smooth custard … *faint*. Heaven in a ramekin!

Close up of the inside of Creme Brûlée in a pot

Close up of the inside of Creme Brûlée in a pot

What to serve with Crème Brûlée

As for what to serve Crème Brûlée with? So many options! It makes a very elegant ending to any dinner, but of course the obvious option is to round out a French menu with this impressive dessert. Here are some French menu ideas:

Head here for even more French food ideas! → French recipe collection

Bon appétit! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it


Spoon scooping up Creme Brûlée

Crème Brûlée (French Vanilla Custard)

Author: Nagi

Prep: 10

Cook: 40

Total: 50

Dessert

French

4.98 from 48 votes

Servings 4

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Recipe video above. A classic French Crème Brûlée with a silky smooth rich custard and crunchy caramel top. It's a stunner – and so easy!

Ingredients

Toffee Topping

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Instructions

Toffee Topping

Recipe Notes:

1. Cream:

2. Vanilla – It’s most authentic to use a vanilla pod but you could use vanilla bean paste. You really want those little black vanilla seeds visible for the true experience!!

3.Leftover egg whites – Here’s my list of what I do with them and all my egg white recipes can be found in this recipe collection.

4. Recipe source – Adapted in part from the Creme Brûlée recipe from Manu Fiedel’s French Kitchen cookbook.

5. Nutrition – Never mind the nutrition. This is worth it! 🙂

Nutrition Information:

Serving: 173gCalories: 599cal (30%)Carbohydrates: 29.3g (10%)Protein: 6g (12%)Fat: 52.6g (81%)Saturated Fat: 31.2g (195%)Cholesterol: 436mg (145%)Sodium: 58mg (3%)Potassium: 118mg (3%)Sugar: 25.3g (28%)Vitamin A: 2150IU (43%)Vitamin C: 0.8mg (1%)Calcium: 110mg (11%)Iron: 0.5mg (3%)

Keywords: creme brulee, french custard, french dessert, vanilla custard


My Notes