Custard
Grand Marnier Crème Brûlée
"As a kid, I'd accompany my mother to her job at the racetrack, where she would lead the horses out to the starting gate," writes Michael Hunter of Studio City, California. "Eventually I was helping out in the stalls, and when I got older, I became a jockey. My mother was also the person who, in a roundabout way, inspired my other passion: cooking. I'd come home from school, and she would have prepared something from a box or can. I didn't always like what was on the dinner table, so one day I asked her to buy me a cookbook. Pretty soon I was making dinner for us almost every night. Now, after seventeen years of racing horses and cooking for family and friends, I'm making the jump to professional cooking."
By Michael Hunter
Chocolate-Amaretti Custard with Fresh Fruit
(BONET)
This Piedmont specialty is made with two of the region's best-known products: chocolate and amaretti cookies. Begin preparing the dessert a day before serving. A slightly sparkling, floral and fruity Moscato d'Asti would complement it beautifully.
Tangelo Crème Brûlée
Tangelos are a cross between tangerines and grapefruits. This dessert could be made with tangerines in place of the tangelos.
We find using turbinado sugar (purified raw sugar) instead of granulated sugar on top of the custards results in a more evenly caramelized crust that shatters at the tap of a spoon.
Vanilla Crème Brûlée with Raspberries
Even though purists protested, a variety of ingredients were used to flavor the classic French custard. And in all its incarnations, it became the fin-de-siécle way to end a swanky restaurant meal.
White Pepper Crème Brûlée with Fig and Prune Compote
Raw sugar melts easily and makes a nice crunchy topping on the custards.
By Gale Gand
Iced Coffee Cream Custard
(Café Liègeois Onctueux)
Liège is a province of Belgium; café liègeois is usually coffee ice cream with whipped cream, but it can also be iced coffee with whipped cream. This thick drink—served elegantly in wineglasses—combines the two styles into one delicious dessert.
Sabayon with Strawberries
By Julia Child, Jacques Pépin, and David Nussbaum
Tangerine Sponge Custard
This old-fashioned dessert separates into two delicious layers while baking - a moist sponge cake and a light custard.