Showing posts with label creme brulee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creme brulee. Show all posts

Friday, January 6, 2012

Recipe: Vanilla Crème Brûlée

One of my many kitchen-oriented Christmas gifts this year was a set of oval ramekins and a crème brûlée
torch from my grandma, and I've been eager to test them out. Vanilla is the classic flavor for crème brûlée and, lucky for me, one of my other gifts was a bottle of Nielsen-Massey Madagascar Bourbon Vanilla Extract from my cousins, so I was all set to make my first set of crème brûlée custards. The process is surprisingly easy and, while having a crème brûlée torch helps, you can caramelize the sugar for that delicious crunchy topping by using the broiler in your oven. These little desserts turned out silky and creamy, with a heavenly vanilla flavor, and perfect, golden-brown sugar tops. 


Serves: 4
Prep time: 5 minutes
Cooking time: 5-10 minutes, plus 30-35 in the oven
Difficulty: Easy
Special equipment: Oven-safe dishes for the custard (porcelain ramekins are best; they should be about 6-7 oz.), clean kitchen towel, crème brûlée torch or oven broiler

Ingredients 
  • 2 cups heavy cream
  • 1/4 cup sugar 
  • 4 egg yolks
  • 1 tsp. vanilla extract (I used Nielsen-Massey Madagascar Bourbon Vanilla extract and highly recommend it)
  • Approx. 8-12 tsp. fine raw sugar or granulated sugar for caramelizing on top

Directions
Preheat the oven to 300*F and bring a small pot of water to a boil (I filled an electric tea kettle and boiled water that way). In a medium pot over medium heat, combine the heavy cream and 1/4 cup sugar and cook, stirring occasionally, until the mixture is steaming hot (but not simmering or boiling; about 5 minutes). Meanwhile, in a small bowl, whisk together the egg yolks and vanilla until well-blended. Once the cream and sugar mixture is heated through, gradually pour it into the egg yolk and vanilla, stirring or whisking the mixture constantly. Strain the custard mixture through a fine-mesh strainer/sieve, or a strainer lined with cheesecloth (I actually used a loose tea strainer, because I didn't have anything else that would work, and it worked out well). Divide the custard mixture between four ramekins. Line a large, shallow, oven-safe dish with a clean kitchen towel, place the ramekins in the dish, and carefully pour the water you heated up earlier into the pan (avoid splashing the custard) until it comes halfway up the sides of the ramekins. Cover the dish loosely with foil and place in the oven. Bake for 30-35 minutes, until the custard is cooked through and gently wiggles when the ramekins are shaken. Allow the pan to sit out and cool, then remove the ramekins and allow them to cool to room temperature, then place them in the fridge and cool for at least 3 hours. Before serving, sprinkle the tops with 2-3 tsp. sugar and caramelize the topping with a crème brûlée torch or place the ramekins in the oven under the broiler (3-5 inches from the heat source) for 3-5 minutes until the top is golden brown (watch carefully so it doesn't burn). The sugar will harden within seconds and then they're read to serve. 
The custard can be made in advance and kept in the fridge for 2 or 3 days, but always caramelize sugar on top immediately before serving. If you caramelize the sugar and then place the whole thing back in the fridge, the sugar will soften and get slimy, which is no good.

Beautiful golden-brown top

 These dishes of crème brûlée turned out beautifully! The custard was rich, creamy, and oh-so-soft—really and truly heavenly. There's nothing quite like tapping that hardened golden-brown sugar with a spoon and hearing that delicate crack as you break into the silky custard beneath. Crème brûlée is a delicious, elegant dessert, perfect for a dinner party or date night, but as something so easy to make, it works well as a regular weeknight dessert as well. You can easily play around with flavors, making anything from chocolate to mint to raspberry flavored custard—the possibilities are endless!


Update (5/31/12): Tried out lavender crème brûlée the other day and it was absolutely delicious! Here's how to make it (short and sweet version): When you're heating the heavy cream, add 1-2 tbsp. dried lavender to it and let it cook. Once the creme starts to bubble, turn off the heat and let the lavender steep in it for at least an hour. Reheat the creme mixture before adding it to the eggs, then strain the completed mixture to remove the lavender. (The recipe I followed for this version made 8 servings and had you add the vanilla to the heavy cream and whisk the sugar into the egg, which is the opposite of the above recipe, but I think either way would work. If only making 4 servings, 1 tbsp. of dried lavender should be enough).


Lavender, steeping in the heavy cream and vanilla mixture

Monday, January 2, 2012

A Very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year


My recent holiday activities were food-and-cooking-centric, much to my delight, and offered a lot of fun times with family and some very excited cats (really though, our cats love Christmas—hiding under/climbing the Christmas tree, shredding up wrapping paper, jumping in empty present boxes...). Despite having a wicked sinus infection during the Christmas weekend which then led to the discovery of a particularly unpleasant antibiotic allergy, and the need for a new antibiotic, a steroid shot at the doctor, and prednisone (I'm oh so very tired of being sick, but I think everything is good to go now), I still enjoyed Christmas and New Year's.
Christmas was a blur of cakes, cookies, family, and sleep, and my favorite part of the weekend was the time we spent at my cousins' family home. Lots of dessert, some fantastic cooking-themed presents (pictured later in this post) from my cousins Katie and Jess, and the nostalgia that comes with spending time in a home I used to visit regularly every summer till high school (and where so many games of dress-up and Sailor Moon-themed Parcheesi were played).

Now, New Year's Eve and Day are a little different with my immediate family because, ever since I was a little girl, we've always celebrated our own Christmas, just the four of us, on New Year's Day (which I loved as a kid, because that meant I had three Christmases as a child—one at my paternal grandmother's home, one at my maternal grandmother's home, and one at my own home). We have a huge tree we put up and more ornaments than we can count (thankfully, we cut back this year), and there's always a tempting pile of presents tucked in all around the tree (usually, with a sleeping cat curled up behind them).


Gracie's enjoying a nap under the tree

Those tempting presents under the tree (combined with the gifts from my cousins) yielded some fantastic items, many of which will keep me busy in the kitchen every day. From my cousins, I got Ratio (this book will seriously help me in the kitchen), a new whisk, some fancy chocolate, and a bottle of famed Madagascar vanilla. From my parents, I got the most amazing-fantastic-beautiful-fancy-bestthingever: a pasta roller, with more attachments than I can ever imagine. There's also a small deep-fryer on backorder on it's way to me. Beyond those two big gifts, I got ramekins for my own kitchen (which I hope to have soon...along with a job...), a small and large plain white plate to use for plating dishes for photos for my blog, and some beautiful wooden spatulas, plus a few non-kitchen gifts. They also helped my grandma pick out a pasta cookbook, a small tripod for my camera (working my way to better blog pictures), a creme brulee torch, and oval ramekins for creme brulee for me. I am an incredibly lucky girl and I am so thankful for these gifts and for my wonderful family (and I'm SO excited to get in the kitchen this week and try out everything!).

Love the pasta maker!
Vanilla creme brulee, anyone?

I hope you all had a wonderful holiday season and a fantastic New Year's Eve and Day. :D