Spiced Crème Caramel

Updated June 6, 2024

Spiced Crème Caramel
Kelly Marshall for The New York Times. Food Stylist: César Ramón Pérez Medero. Prop Stylist: Melina Kemph.
Total Time
2 hours, plus chilling
Rating
4(111)
Comments
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This silky, gently set custard with the right amount of warmth from toasted spices and sharpness from caramelized sugar is a perfect way to welcome the cooling weather of fall. In this recipe, a fragrant combination of cinnamon, cloves, cardamom, ginger and nutmeg known as sweet hawaij adds an autumnal aroma. Sweet hawaij, which is found in cooking across North Africa and the Middle East, is commonly added to hot coffee, and is also used in desserts and sweets. Trusting your senses will give you the best results here: Notice the aroma of the spices as they gently toast; watch the sugar deepen to a golden amber as it caramelizes; and see how the custard slowly jiggles in its water bath once it is set. Pay attention! The reward is a treat to end a meal or a perfect bite to enjoy with a cup of black coffee.

Featured in: Want to Be a Better Cook? Trust Your Senses.

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Ingredients

Yield:8 to 10 servings
  • 2teaspoons ground sweet hawaij (see Tip)
  • cups/350 milliliters heavy cream
  • cups/300 grams granulated sugar
  • 10egg yolks, room temperature
  • ½teaspoon kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal)
  • cups/625 milliliters whole milk
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Place a small saucepan over medium heat. Add the sweet hawaij and toast, stirring often, until the spices become fragrant and darken slightly in color, about 30 seconds. Keep the heat on medium and pour in the heavy cream. Heat the cream, stirring occasionally, until steam begins to rise from the surface, 4 to 6 minutes. Remove from heat and allow the spices to steep, about 10 minutes.

  2. Step 2

    Set out a 9-inch round cake pan. Heat a separate small saucepan over medium until a drop of water sizzles on the surface. Reduce heat to medium-low. Make a dry caramel by adding ¾ cup/150 grams sugar to the pan in an even layer. The sugar will gradually begin melting into a syrup. If it browns immediately, your pan is too hot and the heat should be turned down to low. Allow the sugar to melt, stirring in any dry spots with a heat-safe spatula, about 2 minutes. As the crystals melt, the syrup will change color from light to golden brown, about another 4 minutes. Once the sugar has melted, continue to stir and cook the syrup until it’s a light amber color and smoke begins to rise from the surface of the caramel, 2 minutes more. Immediately pour the caramel into the bottom of the cake pan and swirl the pan to evenly coat it with caramel. Allow the caramel to cool completely.

  3. Step 3

    Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Prepare a water bath in a large roasting pan by filling it a third of the way up with room-temperature water. Place the roasting pan in the middle rack of the oven as it heats.

  4. Step 4

    In a medium bowl, use a whisk to gently combine the egg yolks and remaining ¾ cup/150 grams granulated sugar. Add the salt and pour in the steeped heavy cream while gently stirring. (You want to incorporate as little air as possible, so be careful not to whisk too hard.) Add the milk, then pass the mixture through a fine-mesh sieve. You can do this directly into the pan with the caramel, keeping the sieve just above the pan to minimize bubbles on the surface of the custard.

  5. Step 5

    Transfer the pan to the water bath and cover the entire pan and water bath with aluminum foil. Bake for 50 minutes. The edges of the custard will just be starting to set and the center will still jiggle loosely at this point when the pan is moved back and forth. Remove the foil and bake until the custard is set and the center jiggles only slightly when the pan is moved back and forth, 20 to 25 minutes more.

  6. Step 6

    Remove the pan from the water bath and let cool to room temperature. Move to the refrigerator and cool completely until the custard is set and firm, 8 to 12 hours. To serve, run a knife along the edges of the custard to loosen. To loosen the bottom, place the pan on a warm kitchen towel for about 30 seconds. Put a serving platter (large enough to hold the custard and caramel sauce) on top of the pan and invert: Be confident and do this action in one fluid motion without hesitating. The custard should slip easily onto the serving platter with the caramel sauce pooling nicely around it.

Tip
  • For the ground sweet hawaij blend, you can buy a pre mixed blend or make your own by combining 1 teaspoon ground ginger, ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon, ¼ teaspoon ground cardamom, ⅛ teaspoon ground nutmeg and ⅛ teaspoon ground clove.

Ratings

4 out of 5
111 user ratings
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Comments

The cream that you pour over the toasted spices. "Heat the cream, stirring occasionally, until steam begins to rise from the surface, 4 to 6 minutes. Remove from heat and allow the spices to steep, about 10 minutes."

So, in Step 5, one has to take a pan of hot water out of the oven, place a nearly full cake pan into it, cover the whole thing with foil, and then put the entire assemblage into the hot oven? What could possibly go wrong?

The spices “steep” in the heavy cream when it is warm or hot which allows the cream to be enhanced by their essence/flavor. Much the same as adding a tea bag or loose tea leaves to nearly boiling water to again “steep”! Hope this helps.

I just watched the GBBO version of this challenge, and they suggested that a normal creme caramel recipe features a combination of egg yolks and whole eggs, which it seemed like every baker did (except Saku, who used only whole eggs and came out with a too-stiff dessert). My only hesitation in making this is that it calls for 10 egg yolks. Some people might not be bothered but for me that is a serious flaw with this recipe, and one that could have been avoided if Prue Leith and Paul Hollywood know what they are talking about. I don’t like meringue that much and I don’t want to waste all those whites. And I can’t imagine I’m the only one. Anyone have any thoughts on using a combination of yolks and whole eggs, and what that ratio might be?

One of my guests called this dish “award winning” and I agree. It is delicious and I have made it several times now. However, you do need to adjust the recipe to increase the amount of caramel you make and decrease the amount of milk. Step 5 is all wrong. There is no way that works. Instead, place the roasting pan in the preheated oven. Place your cake pan into the roasting pan. Then pour boiling water from the kettle into the roasting pan. Then cover with foil. Also, you have to cook longer.

this is delicious! i made it exactly as written...the second time. cane sugar is not good enough for this. toasting the hawaij prior to cream, and then steeping, are crucial steps. even though yolks & milk room temp-ish..needs to be precise. putting hot water in pan, covering cake pan prior to putting in water pan, then a cover on the water pan, with an additional 5 mins works better than trying to fumble all of this lol. jiggly is good. let it SET. IT'S SOOO GOOD!!

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