Sunday, March 12, 2006

Blood Orange Pots de Crème

Experimentalism

Pots de Crème

Usually I have no qualms about experimenting on family, friends, students, or even clients. I'll try out new recipes on all of them with few qualms. But then, I'm usually 90 percent sure of what things will taste like provided I know all the ingredients and the cooking method. A taste and a tweak or two on the seasonings and whatever it is comes out fine. I'm sure this true of most experienced cooks.

But I've got a dinner party coming up and I wanted to do something a bit unusual for dessert. Something I could make the day before. Something citrussy. Something a bit elegant.

I was at the grocer's Saturday doing my weekly shopping and some blood oranges caught my eye -- they're not common here. At the time I had some egg yolks and cream back at the house, left over from a cooking class, that I'd been wondering what to do with. Standing there, holding the orange I thought, "Pots de Crème."

I didn't know if citrus would work in pots de crème, so this clearly called for an experiment. I found some recipes on the web calling for lemon, I adapted, and came up with this recipe. The flavor is surprising. Citrus, yes. Orange, yes. But the both milder and oddly richer than I expected. At any rate, it should be a hit next weekend.

Blood Orange Pots de Crème

1/3 cups sugar
1 whole egg
4 egg yolks
1 1/4 c. heavy cream
1/2 cup blood orange juice
1 tsp lemon juice
1 teaspoon grated blood orange rind

Heat oven to 325F. Bring a pot of water to a lazy boil.

Whisk together orange juice, egg yolks, egg, and sugar. Add cream and whisk until the sugar dissolves. Pass the mixture through a strainer; stir in the orange rind.

Place 4 ramekins or pots de crème cups in a large roasting pan. Divide the mixture evenly into the cups. Pour enough boiling water in the pan to come halfway up the sides of the dishes and cover with aluminum foil. Place on a middle rack in the oven and bake until the custard is just set around the edges -- approximately 40 minutes.

Remove the ramekins from the pan and allow them to cool. Then, cover and chill in refrigerator at least 2 hours and as long as overnight. Serve garnished with orange supremes. Serves 4.

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8 Comments:

Blogger cindym said...

this looks divine. i am all over anything involving blood oranges. or pots de creme, for that matter. what a good idea!

3/12/2006 09:36:00 PM  
Blogger Kevin said...

Cindy,

It really is a surprising flavor.

3/13/2006 04:39:00 PM  
Blogger Stephanie said...

Mmmmm...looking forward to it!

Then again, hope my appetite returns by then...I've been sick (the 'I ate something that didn't sit well kind, as opposed to something contagious) since Friday night!

3/13/2006 11:38:00 PM  
Blogger Kevin said...

Stephanie,

I hope you get to feeling better. What could you have eaten that didn't sit well?

3/14/2006 08:48:00 AM  
Blogger cookiecrumb said...

Well, Stephanie didn't eat Bean Sprout. He sits well!
Kevin, wow, cream and orange juice. I'd have been frightened (curdling)... But then my ingredients would know, and misbehave.

3/14/2006 07:16:00 PM  
Blogger Stephanie said...

I think it may have been the potato biscuits with asiago and (fake) bacon; I say this becase today, the first day I've felt I could eat real food again, I ate the left-overs. And now, I'm all 'bleach' again.

I don't even think it's because there was anything wrong with the biscuits...but somehow, they K-O'd me.

3/14/2006 07:39:00 PM  
Blogger Kevin said...

CC,

He's hardly a mouthful, anyway.

My theory is the sugar prevented curdling -- and apparently my theory gave me the confidence I needed to avoid that problem.

3/14/2006 07:46:00 PM  
Blogger MM said...

Intriguing. Must save this to Must Try list.

3/16/2006 01:04:00 PM  

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