MEN WHO LIKE TO COOK: A Custard Easier to Make Than Crème Brûlée
One
of the delights of living in the Pacific Palisades is being able to
take daily walks along the beach. The walks are great for exercise but
also to enjoy the way the beach, ocean, and sky look in the early
morning. I have to admit that I would never have discovered the
pleasures of walking on the beach had it not been for my wife. For
Michelle taking a walk is as necessary as breathing. I think she
learned the benefits of walking from her mom, Helen. Whenever we visit
her parents in New Jersey, she and her mom head to the boardwalk to
take a long walk. This is their way of catching up and clearing their
minds
before the day begins.
This
morning we walked with our friends Janet, Kelly, and Annette. We hadn't
seen Kelly for a month because she and her family had been in Europe.
She told us that one of the high points of the trip was a crème brûlée
she'd eaten in Paris. That dessert was so delicious she couldn't stop
thinking about it's perfect crust and flavorful custard.
The
walk was a short one because we had early meetings but there was enough
time to catch up about kids going off to college in the fall (UC Davis
and Cooper's Union) and trips everyone had taken (Japan, Europe, and
Sundance). Before we left the beach to head back to our cars, Kelly
wanted me to tell her how to make crème brûlée.
I told her that, personally I thought that a traditional crème brûlée takes too much work and uses too many egg yolks. If she wanted a recipe
she could Google it but I could offer her a custard recipe that is
easier to make and less artery-clogging.
Custard with Baked Plums
Any
stone fruit--peaches, nectarines, cherries, apricots--will work as
well. Cherries would be pitted and halved. Peaches and nectarines cut
into eighths.
Yield 4-6 servings
Time 90 minutes
Ingredients
2 eggs
1 cup heavy cream
1/2 cup + 1 tablespoon white sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla (optional)
4 ripe plums (washed, pitted, quartered)
1 tablespoon raw sugar
1 teaspoon sweet butter
Method
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Place the plum quarters on a Silpat sheet or piece of tin foil on a cookie sheet. Sprinkle the tops with
raw sugar, then bake 30 minutes. Remove and let cool. Spatula up any
liquid that accumulated on the Silpat and reserve to drizzle over the
finished custard.
Beat together the eggs and 1/2 cup white
sugar. Add the cream and (optional) vanilla and stir well. Butter a
large 8" round oven-proof baking dish or 6 porcelain ramekins. Pour in
the custard and put in the baked plum quarters. Add 1" of water to a
large roasting pan. Put the custard into the water bath and bake for
30-60 minutes. Every 15 minutes rotate the baking dish and ramekins so
they cook evenly. If the custard is browning too quickly, lay a piece
of tin foil over the top The custard is done when it doesn't jiggle
when lightly shaken.
Remove to cool on a wire rack. Drizzle with
plum liquid. Refrigerate until just before serving. To make the sugar
crust, dust with the tablespoon of white sugar, then heat with a kitchen torch until lightly browned. Serve immediately.



Comments (2)
Got something to say? Comment on this blog post:
I haven’t used agave syrup but I would think it wouldn’t work. Every custard I’ve ever made required a dry (sugar) and a wet (eggs) component. If you try it, let me know how it goes. Thanks.
(posted about 1 months ago)
Would agave syrup work ok instead of sugar?
(posted about 1 months ago)