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Crème Anglaise

4.8

(44)

Creme Anglaise also known as pouring custard being poured onto a plate.
Photo by Elizabeth Coetzee, Food styling by Mira Evnine

Consider this classic crème anglaise recipe your go-to sauce for desserts. The traditional pourable French custard is the base for vanilla ice cream and just as tasty when it hasn’t been frozen. You can make it as fancy as you please with a vanilla bean (you’ll only need a 2" piece; about one third of a pod) or keep things easy with vanilla extract or paste.

Originally published in the February 1998 issue of Bon Appétit as an accompaniment to Thomas Keller’s Floating Islands With Chocolate Mousse, this sauce has range. Drizzle warm crème anglaise over lattice apple pie or a simple cocoa cake, or serve a slice of pumpkin pie on a cold pool of the vanilla custard sauce. It’s equally at home alongside bread pudding, a raspberry tart, or any dessert that benefits from a little pour of silky goodness.

Tips and FAQs for the best crème anglaise

Is crème anglaise the same as pastry cream? Or custard?
Crème anglaise is pourable and unstarched, while pastry cream (crème pâtissière in French) is typically thickened with cornstarch or flour. The latter is often used as a filling for doughnuts and cakes, like Boston Cream Pie. Both are considered custard, which simply means a mixture of dairy (milk or cream) and eggs that can be sweet or savory. Other examples of custards include crème brûlée, flan, quiche, and more.

How do you keep crème anglaise from curdling?
The trick is to warm the eggs slowly and to keep them moving. This is why the dairy is heated first, slowly poured into the eggs, and then the egg mixture is returned to the pot. Once the custard starts to thicken, it can curdle very quickly. Don’t rush it: Cook over low heat and stir constantly.

Can crème anglaise be made ahead?
Yes—make it up to 1 day ahead and chill with plastic wrap pressed directly on the surface to prevent a skin from forming.

Recipe information

  • Total Time

    30 minutes, plus cooling

  • Yield

    Makes 1 cup

Ingredients

½ cup whole milk
½ cup heavy cream
1 (2-inch) piece vanilla bean, split; or 1 tsp. vanilla bean paste or extract
3 large egg yolks
3 Tbsp. sugar
Kosher salt

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Combine ½ cup whole milk and ½ cup heavy cream in a heavy medium saucepan. Add the scraped seeds and pod from 1 (2-inch) piece vanilla bean, split; or 1 tsp. vanilla bean paste or extract. Bring milk mixture to simmer. Remove from heat.

    Step 2

    Meanwhile, whisk 3 large egg yolks, 3 Tbsp. sugar, and a pinch of kosher salt in medium bowl to blend. Gradually whisk hot milk mixture into yolk mixture. Pour mixture back into saucepan and stir over low heat until custard thickens and leaves trail on back of spoon when finger is drawn across, about 5 minutes (do not boil). Strain custard through a fine-mesh sieve into bowl; cover surface directly with plastic wrap or buttered parchment and chill.

    Do Ahead: Crème Anglaise can be made 1 day ahead; keep chilled.

    Slices of plum puddling on plates with creme anglaise.

    Serve your crème Anglaise with a traditional English plum pudding.

    Photo by Elizabeth Coetzee, Food styling by Mira Evnine

    Editor’s note: This crème Anglaise recipe was first printed in the February 1998 issue of Bon Appétit; it has been edited for style. Head this way for more of our favorite Christmas desserts

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