Cookwithus#8- Crème brûlée Milktart

in #cookwithus7 years ago (edited)

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Dear eSTEEMed humans of the interwebs, happy friday!

First things first, thank you so much to @chefsteve , @pandamama and @offoodandart from the @cookwithus team for hosting this awesome weekly competition. If any of you foodies are stuck for inspiration, this is the place to go: A weekly theme to get the creative juices flowing and a community of amazing cooks offering support and helpful tips. I've said it before, it's the friendliest competition on earth!

Secondly, thanks so much for taking my suggestion for a recipe from your home country! What an honour!


Now, to business: I've had the crisp crackle of brûlée topping the silkiest custard locked and loaded for this week's indulgence theme, but i can't pass up the opportunity to showcase a South African recipe!
So I figured, since my first name is Cheré, I can keep the brûlée to celebrate my French heritage and combine it with my ultimate South African indulgence, but more on that later...


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First, a little backstory.

South Africa has had a rocky history, but we've grown into a melting pot of cultures and languages (11 official languages, and it still doesn't nearly represent all the cultures who call Mzanzi home!) As a result, our 'cuisine' has countless different origins and the mish-mash of dishes as easily grace road-side stalls as high-end restaurants. From sticky, gelatinous 'Walkie Talkies' (chicken heads and feet) that really walk the talk, to warm aromatic Bunny Chows stuffed with real Durban Curry (our resident Durbanite @lizelle can back me up here) , we have something to suit every palate and level of adventure.

The point is, We're blessed to have an array of wonderful, world-class ingredients at our disposal, and while we can easily whip up filet mignon, drizzle lemon and tabasco over plump wild oysters harvested from our waters or even have a go at making sushi, what makes South African cuisine amazing is that we can extract incredible flavour from the cheapest ingredients, and proudly call them our own.

While I can harp on about your modest-in-price but rich-in-flavour cuisine for ages, I'd rather nibble on a chunk of moist Biltong and tell you about this dish.

While cookies and ice-cream are my go to snacks, my ultimate indulgence and feel-good food has always been custard. Not to brag, but we have this canary yellow stuff in a box called Ultramel and it rivals the work of any French pâtissier.

I always refer to its incredible silkiness when making custards of my own, and while mine isn't bright yellow- I think the texture is as close as it gets.

It also takes only minutes to whip up without the finickiness of a Bain-Marie or temperamental oven temperatures.
Incidentally, it's also the base I use for a South African favourite: Milk Tart.

Traditionally, the tart is a simple custard filling in a crisp tart shell, liberally sprinkled with ground cinnamon.
It uses humble ingredients found in everyone's pantry, and has been a staple for meets with grannies or visits from the pastor for generations.

Being a custard-based tart, I figured I could combine this South African classic with the pièce de résistance of a crème brûlée: The brilliantly bitter, brittle brûlée ( Try saying that 3 times fast!)


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And folks, it worked!

Without further ado, the recipe:

##Ingredients:

Makes 1 large or 6 individual Brûlée MilkTarts

###Biscuit Base:

( While I'd usually make a shortbread crust, the texture competes with the Brûlée, so I opted for the crumblier, and much less labour intensive, crushed biscuit crust. )

  • 300 grams biscuits of choice. (Ginger is amazing for winter, but I used coconut to hold on to the last days of summer.)
  • 100 grams Salted Butter, melted

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Method:

  1. Pulse biscuits or crush in a Ziplock baggie with a rolling pin.
  2. Stir in melted butter and press gently into greased spring form cake pan/or pans
  3. Place in fridge to set while making custard

Custard Filling.

  • 700ml/ 3 Cups Full-Cream Milk
  • 200 ml/1 Cup Whipping Cream
  • 1 Tbsp Salted Butter
  • 2 Whole Eggs and 1 yolk
  • 2 Tbsp Corn Starch
  • 3 Tbsp Plain Flour
  • 1 Tsp Vanilla Extract (or 2 Tsp Moirs Vanilla Essence for authenticity- South Africans only got the real stuff a few years ago)

###Toppings:

  • 150 Grams Castor Sugar
  • 6 Tsps Ground Cinnamon

####Method:

  1. Whisk eggs, sugar, corn starch and flour until frothy
  2. Heat milk and cream in a heavy-based pot until just simmering
  3. Add milk mixture into the egg mix a ladle at a time and whisk thoroughly to temper the eggs and keep them from scrambling.
  4. Once all the milk is added to the egg mixture, return to the pot and stir over low heat until thickened to the texture of soft-whipped cream.
  5. Remove from heat and whisk in butter and vanilla until smooth and glossy.
  6. Pour onto biscuit base (or bases) and tap the cake pans gently to even out the custard.
  7. Cover with clingfilm and leave to cool at room temperature before placing in the fridge to set. (This takes about an hour, but can be left overnight.) * This is the one time you want a skin to form, it helps protect the custard from scrambling under the blowtorch, so try not to let the clingfilm touch the custard.
  8. Remove from spring form pans and sprinkle with castor sugar evenly, making sure no custard is peeking out.
  9. Blowtorch sugar in small circles until bubbly and brown, or heat oven broiler to hottest setting before placing tart/s on the highest shelf to broil. Keep a close eye if using this method, it burns more quickly than you think!
  10. Finally, once sugar topping is cooled, sprinkle with cinnamon and, if so moved, decorate with grapes- an homage to the beautiful wine country I call home, and fresh plump figs- because they're delicious.

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Now crack that sugar topping and serve with strong black coffee and good company.

Sort:  

'Pièce de résistance of a crème brûlée'!!! And, with coconut crust-- No doubt 😁 Perhaps my favourite dessert --- but so hard to pick favourites!! You got my attention right off the hop with this one. That's for sure!! And, an exceptional blog post to go along with it! Awesome contribution! Congratulations on being chosen by @goldendawne ti be highlighted in her The Kitchen Table Edition 8: Saturday's Recipes, Cooking & Food Curation Day!!! That's a great accomplishment! I hope you feel happy about that. Nice to meet you @whattheduck! Have a wonderful weekend.

Yes, this was really a wonderful contribution to our contest. How about an entry from you @yogajill

Hi @cookwithus!! How do I find out the specifics of the contest? I might just enter! 🤔 It would be a first fir me to do a cooking contest 🍳

Would love to see your entry @yogajill! Please click here for the weekly Cook with Us rules and calendar.

Really good! I will take a look. Thank-you for sharing those details ❤

Thanks so much for commenting and look forward to your entries! Lovely meeting you!

Wow @whattheduck, a Crème brûlée milktart, French & South African flavours, I can just imagine it, brilliant!
You're so right, Saffa's can make something special from nothing!
I did a Bunny Chow Sandwich on Steemit Sandwich Contest a while back & it actually won first prize, so some steemians have seen this Durban specialty :):)
Love your story around this!

Congratulations @lizelle on your win with the Bunny Chow - wow the South Africans are really doing so well in this contest as well

Thank you @pandamama.
This is my Bunny Chow, a hollowed out half loaf of bread filled with a spicy curry, just so you know what it looks like :):)
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Thanks for your always kind words @lizelle, I always say this but the bunny chow makes me more homesick than ever! I can almost smell it!

This looks amazing @lizelle - would remind my son of his university days. I can just taste it - and now I'm craving curry

Oooh, I have to try this! As a fellow Saffa, baker and serious creme brulee fan, this is definitely on my list of things to make...and seeing as it's a long weekend, this is as good a time as any :) Thanks for the inspiration.

Add a "myturn" tag and acknowledge @whattheduck - and how about entering our contest yourself @bretonstripes - we'd love to see something from you

I'm on it, guys! Some recipe posts coming up this week.

So wonderful! The rules and calendar can be found here.

Looking forward to your entries @bretonstripes!

Thanks for commenting! Would love to see how your version turns out! Great to meet another Saffa,hope you've had a chilled long weekend!

It's been great, thanks, and yours? I cooked so much this weekend thanks to all the Steemit inspiration...my waistband and wallet are begging for mercy...

Same here! I made @lizelle's lemon bars from last week's challenge yesterday. OH.MY.WORD, amazing!

CONGRATULATIONS!
Your post has been featured in my The Kitchen Table Edition 8: Saturday's Recipes, Cooking & Food Curation Day!

Thanks so much for the feature @goldendawne! Lovely meeting you too!

What a joy it was walking along with you through your stories about South Africa and food. Plump oysters ... I can just picture them and feel that pleasure of popping one in the mouth ... ahhhhh! Truly, the community has a lot more to learn from each other, precisely one of the main goals of Cook with Us. You have certainly enlightened us but also left us (me, definitely) hanging and wanting for more stories.

Your creativity is just amazing! Thank you for going 'out of the box' to create something new from something that has been around. Your 'guilty pleasure' is true to its name. The textures are lovely ... creamy, crunchy ... just pure delight. I so love a nice brulée layer!

Love that last photo. It says it all! Merci beaucoup Cheré!

Thank you @offoodandart! Love the weekly inspiration and all the awesome foodies I've met so far!

Can a milk tart really get better? Wow, @whattheduck - this looks unbelievably good

Thank you @pandamama! It turned out pretty good! (It's also a good back up plan for regular Crème brûlée without the fuss of baking custard, it's so smooth no one will even know it's a cheat recipe!)

This looks sooooo delicious @whattheduck!
I thought this would be a typical creme brulee recipe (which I love) but again you surprise with a beautiful interesting recipe! Thanks for sharing🤗 I love your entries!
Have a great week! And nice to meet you chere 😉 (lovely name!)

Thank you @cooknbake! Love your entries! And everyone else's! At this rate we could compile a recipe book with all the entries!

Once again I’m in awe by the quality of your pictures. This milk tart looks amazing and I’m sure it taste just as amazing. I can’t wait to give it a try in the coming weeks under #myturn. You mentioned the melting pot of cultures that’s South Africa and was wondering when you or @lizelle will showcase the South Africa Bunny Chow. Ever since I’ve seen it on an Australian cooking show been wanting to have someone provide a proper recipe for it. Again it’s great we get to showcase what we like best in each of our culture.

Thanks so much @foodforsoul! I sooo look forward to seeing your version! Check higher up on this feed, @lizelle has us all drooling over her bunny chow picture, and as she has real Durban spices at her disposal, I think it best she share the recipe with us! What cooking show did you see it on? Doesn't happen to be Masterchef Australia? I recall old Saffa Amy Shields making a Durban Curry of sorts in Season 6 or 7! (I'm shamelessly obsessed with the show...I just want Matt Preston to adopt me!...if Maggie Beer says no, that is. )

Actually it was on Food Safari which is shown on SBS in Australia. They choose a culture and have the show around what they cook etc. they had one on South Africa a while back and even one on Mauritius where my husband is from.

The filling looks luscious, the crust is buttery and the crackly brûlée top adds a textural contrast to the tart. Looks delicious! Great photos!

Incredible dessert! It looks so guilt laden! Well done! I really need to make a milk tart ASAP. I feel that I have been missing one of the best desserts in the world, my whole life! Thanks for sharing your creative take on the milk tart! Good luck!

Thank you! It absolutely is guilty (you can even up the cream to milk ratio to make it more indulgent.) I highly recommend you try it still warm with a gingerbread crust or ice cold from the fridge with a coconut crumb or shortbread crust. It's like 2 different desserts. Some regions add nutmeg or all spice to the cinnamon topping. My gran has even made a saffa version of tiramisu with the custard instead of mascarpone mixture, and ginger biscuits soaked in coffee, all topped with cinnamon and dark chocolate shavings. The stuff will ruin any diet!

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