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How to make Creme Brûlée

March 22, 2014 By Talya Tate Boerner

Last weekend I attended a cooking class at Sur La Table—Four Desserts Everyone Should Know How To Make… I would have signed up for the creme brûlée alone. Can we agree, creme brûlée is heaven sent?

creme brûlée

I’m lucky to live smack dab between two great cooking schools (Sur La Table and Central Market), and I take advantage of this as often as possible. Here’s the thing about cooking classes—learning to make a dish hands-on with a chef is so much more educational than simply reading the recipe at home. Nuances and special tricks may not come across in print. Plus being surrounded by a chef kitchen and playing with all those cool utensils is a huge bonus.

Sur La Table, Dallas

Yesterday was my final exam as I attempted to recreate creme brûlée in my own kitchen with my (not so cool) utensils. I gave myself a solid B+.  (I would have made an A, but I got a bit carried away with the final sprinkle of sugar ascribing to the more is better theory.) Overall the taste was spot-on,  the texture creamy,  the molten caramel crisp. Yes, I’m patting myself on the back.

This recipe really is simple. I can’t believe I waited so long to learn. (Recipe courtesy of Sur La Table.) 

Creme Brûlée

Print Recipe
Ingredients Method Notes

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup whole milk
  • 1 cup heavy whipping cream
  • 8 egg yolks
  • 1/3 cup plus 2 extra tablespoons to top granulated sugar, divided
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla paste

Method
 

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Move oven rack to the center.
  2. Pour milk and cream into a small heavy saucepan and heat to scald over medium-high heat. To scald, heat until bubbles begin to form around the edge of the pan. Remove pan from heat.
  3. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together eggs, 1/3 cup sugar, salt and vanilla paste. While whisking, slowly pour hot milk mixture into the egg mixture. Do not stop whisking. Whisk until the mixture is smooth. (If you do this too quickly, the eggs will cook upon contact with the hot cream mixture.) Pour the mixture through a fine-mesh sieve into a large measuring cup with a spout to remove any overcooked egg pieces. (There will be a few tiny bits.) This will also help accelerate the cooling down process.
  4. Place 6 (4 ounce) ramekins inside a rectangular baking dish and fill the ramekins with the custard mixture.
  5. Using hot tap water, pour enough water into the baking dish to reach half-way up the side of the ramekins. This hot water bath will insulate the custard and keep the eggs from cooking too fast.
  6. Bake about 40 minutes until the custard trembles or wobbles when gently shaken. If the mixture doesn't appear to be set, continue baking a few minutes more while monitoring.
  7. Remove ramekins from the water bath, place on a cooling rack for 30 minutes, then transfer to the refrigerator to set.
  8. Before serving: Sprinkle the surface of each custard with 2 teaspoons of the remaining sugar. Shake the cup to gently distribute the sugar evenly—make sure it covers the custard completely. Any exposed custard will blacken under the torch's flame. Light the torch, move the flame over the sugar in a circular motion until most of the sugar has melted and looks like tiny water droplets. Continue heating until the sugar turns a deep golden brown. The molten caramel will bubble and smoke then solidify into a crisp surface as it cools. Refrigerate 10 minutes before serving.

Notes

If you don't have Vanilla Paste, buy it. The ratio is the same as Vanilla Extract, but Vanilla Paste leaves the vanilla bean flecks in whatever you are cooking.
If you don't have a torch for caramelizing, you can use a broiler. But a torch is fun.

how to make creme brûlée

how to make creme brûlée

Grace Grits and Gardening

P.S. Freeze all those egg whites you won’t need for this recipe and make angel food cake later…

“I think every woman should have a blowtorch.”
― Julia Child

Greenhouse Apartments- haute or not?

March 21, 2014 By Talya Tate Boerner

This week on  Six Blocks from my house…  The Greenhouse Apartments located at the corner of Gaston Avenue & Munger Boulevard.
Greenhouse apartments
55-unit apartment renovation
Blinged up outdoor balcony chandeliers
Silver Sculpture
Faux Hedge, Faux Topiary, Faux Grass…
LA Cool?

I say kudos to anyone who injects money into a derelict, unwanted property, but I wonder how the fake shrubbery will hold up after a couple of brutal Texas summers. Since I took the above picture, the faux hedge between the street and parking lot has been replaced with real plants. Definitely an improvement.

Greenhouse Apartments

What do you think of this design?

Grace Grits and Gardening

SIX BLOCKS FROM MY HOUSE

Dandelions. I kinda like them…

March 20, 2014 By Talya Tate Boerner

DandelionsWho decided dandelions were weeds? 

American poet Ella Wilcox said a weed is but an unloved flower.  This is so true.

Dandelions have popped up throughout our neighborhood, bright buttons of yellow growing in clumps near fences and sidewalks. I kinda like dandelions. To me, they are one of the first signs of Spring.

Dandelion

My sister and I couldn’t wait to be big enough to mow the yard. Once the day finally came, that John Deere riding mower became ours until we left for college. Of course the excitement quickly wore off as the summer sun baked our vast yard. The grass grew fast, probably because it was mostly weeds—dandelions, henbit and those pale pink flowers that look like lacy cups. Sometimes we left patches of dandelions in the side yard because they were so pretty. Daddy didn’t much like that…

If you look closely, dandelions are not that different from mums. Or asters. Or daisies. Only easier to grow…

Why not celebrate the hardy dandelion? Instead we make things difficult, wrestling with prissy flowers that may or may not survive.

dandelion

The happy go lucky dandelion asks for nothing except to be left alone to grow and spread. If we pay attention, they will even predict the weather—open and fluffy during a stretch of sunny days but shut tight when rain is coming. With leaves that can be used for tea and salad and wine, the dandelion is useful too.

But the very best part…

When the time is right, the flower head transforms into a light white feathery globe, a parachute ready to spread tiny seeds across the land. What other flower miraculously transforms a roadside or abandoned lot or ditch bank into a thousand wishes?

dandelion blowball

One Thousand Wishes
(morgueFile)

Grace Grits and Gardening

“When life is not coming up roses
Look to the weeds
and find the beauty hidden within them.”
― L.F.Young

dandelion

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Hi! I'm Talya Tate Boerner. Writer, Reader, Arkansas Master Naturalist / Master Gardener, Author of

THE ACCIDENTAL SALVATION OF GRACIE LEE (2016)

GENE, EVERYWHERE: a life-changing visit from my father-in-law (2020)

BERNICE RUNS AWAY (2022)

THE THIRD ACT OF THEO GRUENE (coming 2025)

Recent Ramblings:

  • Sunday Letter: 03.29.26
  • Sunday Letter: February 22, 2026
  • Our Garden Mission Statement
  • Goodbye, 2025. Hello, 2026.
  • Sunday Letter: 11.23.25

Novels:

Coloring Books:

Fiction-Themed Coloring Books

Backyard Phenology:

Children’s Nature Book:

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