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Eggless Crème Brûlée

Eggless Crème Brûlée

eggless creme brulee

Firstly, I’d like to apologise to the French for this recipe. I can only imagine the kind of chaos an eggless banana and cardamom crème brûlée would cause. It’s not even the cool sort of chaos.

I’ve been working on this recipe for eggless crème brûlée for a while now and I think it’s about time I unveiled it before your hungry eyes. You’re probably thinking that this dish is notorious for being laced with eggs and that I’m a total nutcase for thinking otherwise. But trust me… It can be made beautifully without. Otherwise I wouldn’t be typing this right now.

eggless creme brulee 3

Eggs add a certain richness to crème brûlée which I reinterpreted as ‘banana’. Cute. I mean that I replaced the eggs with pureed banana which adds a velvety texture to the custard, along with a subtle banana flavour. I added cornflour to act as a setting agent just as eggs help set the custard in a usual crème brûlée. So you don’t have to worry about your custard turning into scrambled eggs when making the custard for this dessert, due to the lack of… uhh… eggs.

Oh and surprise! Guess what? This is a 2 in 1 dessert, meaning you can make two desserts with the exact same custard base. Gripping, I know. So the ‘little extra’ refers to an alternative destiny for the creamy banana and cardamom custard. That is a recipe for Eggless Banana and Cardamom Ice Cream. Warning: This ice cream is immensely creamy. Are you sure your tastebuds can handle this kinda creamy? I’m not sure they can.

Eggless Banana and Cardamom Crème Brûlée
(makes 5-6)

Ingredients

600ml double cream
200ml whole milk
2½-3½ tbsps cornflour
250g banana, peeled and sliced
1 vanilla pod, scraped of its seeds (keep the pod)
1 tsp vanilla extract
150g caster sugar (plus more for caramelising)
¼ tsp cardamom powder
Yellow food colour (optional)

Method

1. Preheat your oven to 120 degrees Celsius.

2. Place the milk, cornflour and banana slices in a blender and pulse until pureed.

3. In a large saucepan heat on a very low flame the double cream, banana puree, sugar, vanilla extract and the vanilla seeds along with the whole pod. Gently whisk this from time to time.

4. Once the mixture begins to thicken, whisk it more often to ensure it doesn’t settle at the bottom. Simmer gently until it is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.

5. Remove from the heat and add take out the whole vanilla pod (wash it and dry it and add it to a jar of sugar, et voila… Vanilla sugar!) Add the cardamom powder and food colouring if using and mix thoroughly.

6. Boil the kettle. Not for a cuppa chai. For the bain marie (water bath).

7. Pour the mixture into ramekins about 2/3 of the way up.

8. Put the ramekins in a large roasting tray with high sides and place the tray in an oven. Pull the oven rack out and pour the boiled water into the tray (not into the ramekins) until it reaches halfway up the sides of the ramekins.

9. Bake for around 45 minutes until the custards are just set but a little wobbly in the middle. Did I just say ‘wobbly’?

eggless creme brulee uncaramelised

Set custards pre-caramelisation 

10. Remove the ramekins from the oven and take them out of the roasting tray (be very careful because they will be hot). If you’re making these ahead of time, at this point you can cover these and refrigerate them (and follow step 11 when you’re ready to serve). If you want to eat them straight away then follow step 11 now.

11. Top the custards with 1 level tsp of caster sugar and place them under the grill until they caramelise. If you’ve got a blowtorch, use it. Sadly I’m not equipped with one. Lame.

12. Carefully remove from the grill and serve hot.

eggless creme brulee 4

Recipe 2: Eggless Banana and Cardamom Ice Cream

banana and cardamom ice cream

Ingredients

600ml double cream
200ml whole milk
3 ½ tbsp cornflour
250g banana, peeled and sliced
1 vanilla pod, scraped of its seeds (keep the pod)
1 tsp vanilla extract
150g caster sugar (plus more for caramelising)
¼ tsp cardamom powder
Yellow food colour (optional)

Method

1. Place the milk, cornflour and banana slices in a blender and pulse until pureed.

2. In a large saucepan heat on a very low flame the double cream, banana puree, sugar, vanilla extract and the vanilla seeds along with the whole pod. Gently whisk this from time to time.

3. Once the mixture begins to thicken, whisk it more often to ensure it doesn’t settle at the bottom. Simmer gently until it is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.

4. Remove from the heat and add take out the whole vanilla pod (wash it and dry it and add it to a jar of sugar, et voila… Vanilla sugar!) Add the cardamom powder and food colouring if using and mix thoroughly.

5. Allow the mixture to cool and place it in a freezer-friendly container. Cover this with a lid and place in the freezer.

6. Every 30 minutes for the first two hours, remove the container from the freezer and whisk to break up any ice crystals that may have formed. After two hours leave the ice cream for around 3-4 hours for it to freeze completely.

banana and cardamom ice cream 2

Okay everyone, I give you permission to go bananas and have two desserts today!

Share this recipe

Neeti

Saturday 14th of September 2013

I saw this recipe sometime in 2010 and always wanted to try it. I finally tried it & made both the ice cream & crème brûlée. Just loved it! The flavours are so intense and yet so subtly sweet at the same time. This recipe is a keeper. Thank you for sharing.

egglessQueen

Friday 26th of October 2012

Sanjana, Can these be made ahead of time and caramelize the top just before serving. If yes, then how far in advance can these be made.

Sanjana

Wednesday 31st of October 2012

Yes they can. You can make them a day ahead of time.

Sanjana

Wednesday 20th of July 2011

Thanks for the great comments, everyone!

Hey Anonymous, thanks for the lovely feedback! Indeed that is a typo and should read 3.5! I'm so sorry about that. I hope next time is even more delicious!

Anonymous

Saturday 16th of July 2011

I made this recently and followed your recipe exactly, and -- while it is O-M-G delicious -- it did not set. It was more a "thick sauce" consistency instead of the custard of a real creme brulee. What would you suggest I change to make next time set more firmly? (And oh yes, there WILL be a next time!) I did notice that your Creme Brulee recipe asked for 1.5 tbsp corn starch, while the Ice Cream recipe asked for 3.5 tbsp. Should they be the same amounts?

Sanjana

Monday 27th of June 2011

Thank you for the great comments everyone.

Minticetea- Lovely to hear from you- so sorry it was a chore for you to find me. I will definitely add a link to my flickr stream. You are indeed correct, I am Bardai Brahmin. Where abouts are you from? Yes- please do visit again!