Sunday, April 11, 2010

Creme brulee

I'm so glad that Baby Martini might have grown out of the egg allergy. Creme brulee! soufflé! tira misu (ok, not this one yet)! Mama is going to show you what Mama is capable of!!

It has been a long time since I last made creme brulee. The recipe I use is from Michael Smith's "Chef At Home", one of my favorite cooking shows on Food Network Canada.

Use the best ingredients available to you when you make the original flavor of creme brulee. There are only few ingredients: cream and/or milk, egg yolks, sugar, vanilla and a pinch of salt. Any mediocre component will greatly impede quality of the end result. In Chef Smith's recipe he uses vanilla extract; however, he demonstrated more than once in his show on preparing home-made vanilla extract. This leads me to believe the flavor should be just as pungent.

Ingredients:
Please refer to this recipe. I used 1:1 in cream:milk ratio. Also, I used a vanilla pod instead of 1 tbsp vanilla extract.

Notes: (lots of notes!)
Armed with scribble of instructions quickly copied to a scrap paper and my memory of all the creme brulee making I've seen/read, my process actually deviated from the instruction.
  • I didn't remember that Michael clearly specified that "the caramel will harden" after you pour the milk and cream in it. When I poured caramel into the milk/vanilla mixture (yes, I got it wrong, too), I heard caramel turning into hard sugar lump, like lava cooled down in the water. My brain just went blank. "How can I make freaking mistake like this?" I told myself. So I quickly scooped out sugar with a slotted spatula then started again. This time I kept the milk mixture in low heat while preparing caramel, then poured caramel in the milk mixture. I think I'll do so from now on unless someone convinces me not to.
  • The end result yields more than 6 ramekins. Do I happen to have smaller ramekins or is it because the water in caramel wasn't reduced enough? (I did use less water than recommended to begin with, in case there was too much liquid)
  • "Preheat oven to 325 degrees"...is this for a normal oven or a convection oven? I used "auto" setting on our convection oven so the temperature was automatically adjusted to 275F. My theory is it's better to use lower temperature for a creamier, more smooth texture. Still, I want to know.
  • I covered the custard with foil during the cooking process. Combined with the low cooking temperature, it took about 50 minutes in the oven for the custard to set properly. And the texture was still on the soft side (a bit too runny).
  • Last but not the least, I am getting unsatisfied with the mini torch but still don't feel comfortable to use a "regular" torch (from hardware store) in the house. I tried broil once and it didn't turn out well. Tough choice.


Verdict:
Really creamy and delicious. Too sweet if we finish one serving at once. I will need to reduce the sugar/caramel next time.
After knowing how simple to make creme brulee taste good (really, it's all about ingredients and patience), I don't think we'll order it when we dine out.

No comments: