Crème Brûlée may look fancy, but it’s incredibly easy to make! With a creamy custard filling and caramelized sugar topping, it’s a show-stopping dessert. Top with fresh berries for extra flair. This recipe comes from a pastry chef known for making the best Crème Brûlée!
Looking for other elegant yet effortlessly prepared desserts? Give our Cheesecake Bars, Cannoli Dip, or Tiramisu a try!
Crème Brûlée
During my years working in a fine dining restaurant, I was privileged to learn how to make Crème Brûlée from a pastry chef who was renowned for crafting the best Crème Brûlée there. He generously shared his “secrets” and to my surprise, showed how truly simple it is to prepare!
This dessert is among the easiest to create, requiring just 5 ingredients and minimal hands-on preparation time. Its association with sophistication might stem from the use of ramekins and a kitchen torch. But once you have those tools, you’ll be surprised at how easily this dessert comes together.
Also, Crème Brûlée is the ultimate make-ahead dessert. You can prepare the custard well in advance, store it in the fridge, and then add the signature caramelized sugar topping just before serving.
In this post, I’ll walk you through the process and share my top tips. Let’s get started!
Quick Tip
Here’s how to pronounce Crème Brûlée: krem broo-LAY.
Ingredients in Creme Brûlée
Create the most delicious Crème Brûlée with just five simple ingredients.
- Vanilla: You can use a vanilla bean, vanilla paste, or vanilla extract. Vanilla adds a really nice flavor.
- Salt: Just a pinch of sea salt for flavor and to balance the sweetness.
- Heavy Cream: This makes the custard creamy and rich.
- Egg Yolks: The yellow part of large eggs. They make the custard thick. Use leftover whites in our Meringue Cookies recipe; they pair wonderfully with this dessert!
- Sugar: You’ll need some sugar for sweetness and to create the caramelized top.
Quick Tip
Crème Brûlée is French for ‘burnt cream‘ due to its crispy, caramelized sugar topping on the custard. While the topping may appear browned, and even slightly blackened, take care not to burn it!
How To Make Creme Brulee
- Prepare Vanilla: Scrape seeds from the bean.
- Infuse Cream: Heat cream with the vanilla pod for flavor. Add in salt.
- Mix: Whisk vanilla seeds, egg yolks, and sugar. Slowly add the warm cream, stirring until smooth.
- Bake: Pour mixture into ramekins. Use a water bath (a larger pan with hot water) for baking. Bake until the custards are just set with a slight jiggle in the center.
- Chill: Cool and refrigerate Crème Brûlées for 6-8 hours.
- Caramelize: Before serving, sprinkle sugar atop each custard and torch until golden.
Quick Tip
Crème Brûlée Texture: Crème Brûlée should have a thick custard-like consistency similar to thick full-fat Greek yogurt. Its taste should be velvety, creamy, and melt-in-your-mouth rich.
Tips For Success
- Ramekin Size: You can use 4-ounce, 5-ounce, or 6-ounce ramekins based on your preference. Larger ramekins will yield thicker custards and take slightly longer to bake.
- Egg Yolks: Organic eggs with deep-colored yolks work best to give your Crème Brûlée custard a rich and vibrant color.
- Vanilla Bean vs. Extract: Using a real vanilla bean adds both visual appeal and an incredible flavor to your custard. However, high-quality vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste are good alternatives.
- Tempering Eggs: To avoid curdling when mixing the hot cream into the eggs, temper the eggs by adding the hot liquid slowly.
- Superfine Sugar: For the sugar topping, use superfine sugar as it caramelizes better and forms a delicious crispy layer.
- Water Bath: Baking the custards in a water bath ensures even cooking and prevents cracking. Be careful not to get any water into the custard cups. Read more about water baths here.
- Chilling Time: Allow the custards to chill for at least 6-8 hours (overnight is best!) in the fridge. This step is crucial for achieving the perfect texture.
Crème Brûlée FAQs
Crème Brûlée is served cool or at room temperature. The custard is chilled, and the sugar topping is caramelized just before serving, creating a warm, crispy layer. It’s not served hot.
Crème Brûlée is done when the edges are set but the center slightly jiggles; it will firm up when cooled and refrigerated.
To caramelize Crème Brûlée in the oven, position the rack at the top and broil on high. Place custards sprinkled with superfine sugar on a tray on the top shelf, and broil for 1-3 minutes, watching closely to avoid burning.
Créme Brûleé tools
Créme Brûleé does require a few specialty tools, and below are exactly what I use:
What To Serve With Créme Brûleé
Crème Brûlée is a decadent dessert on its own, but you can elevate it even more by pairing it with one or a couple of the following:
- Fresh berries and fresh mint or edible flowers
- Sprinkle of powdered sugar or sea salt flakes
- Thumbprint Cookies with a raspberry center
- Shortbread Cookies, Madeleines, or Biscotti
- Candied pecans or candied walnuts
- Sorbet or ice cream
The Best Crème Brûlée
Equipment
- ramekins see note 1
- Kitchen torch or oven, see note 1
- Medium pot
- Baking dish 9 x 13-inch
Ingredients
- 1 full vanilla bean or 1/2 tablespoon vanilla extract or 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 2 cups heavy cream
- 5 large egg yolks must be at room temperature, see note 2
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar divided, or superfine sugar if you have it!
- 6 cups water
- Fresh berries optional, for serving
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 325°F.
- If using a vanilla bean, slice it open and scrape out the seeds. Put the seeds in a large bowl. Place the empty pod in a pot and combine with salt and heavy cream.
- Heat the cream mixture on the stove until it simmers, without boiling (low heat for about 10 minutes). Remove from heat; discard the vanilla pod. Stir in vanilla extract or paste if you’re using those instead.
- Meanwhile, in your bowl with vanilla seeds, add egg yolks and 1/2 cup sugar. Whisk (by hand) until combined. Simultaneously, bring 6 cups of water to a boil.
- Do not whisk too briskly or you’ll end up with a custard that rises and falls or has lots of bubbles on the surface. While whisking at a slow and steady pace, gradually pour in 1/4 of the warmed cream mixture into the egg and sugar blend. Mix until combined, then continue to add remaining cream mixture, while whisking consistently.
- Position ramekins in a 9×13-inch pan. Pour the custard mixture into the ramekins, filling almost to the top. Carefully (using a glass liquid measuring cup) scoop boiling water into the pan until it’s halfway up the sides of the ramekins.
- Carefully transfer to oven and bake 30–35 minutes until the custards are set (with a slight jiggle in the center when you gently shake). Remove from water bath and allow to cool at room temperature, then chill in fridge for 6–8 hours (or up to 4–5 days).
- When ready to serve, sprinkle remaining 1/4 cup sugar evenly over the custards. Swirl the sugar for even coverage, tipping excess into the next ramekin. Caramelize the sugar using a kitchen torch until it’s golden or slightly charred. Garnish with fresh berries and serve immediately.
- Alternative Caramelization (no torch): Ensure brûlées are chilled for at least 24 hours. Adjust oven rack to topmost and set to high broil. Broil sugar-topped custards for 1–3 minutes, watching very closely. Then refrigerate for 10–20 minutes to re-firm custard.
Video
Recipe Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
I was delicious! Hardest part was waiting 4 hours to cool 😂 thanks for sharing!
Definitely the hardest part! Glad you enjoyed!
Hi, this recipe looks amazing. A couple of questions for you– I have various size ramekins but not enough of one size. Would it be okay to use various size ramekins? It looks like the baking time in the recipe is the same whether you do 4, 5, or 6 oz ramekins. I’m guessing perhaps the depth is more important to be consistent versus the amount of ounces it holds? Thanks and looking forward to making these!
I made the creme brulee last night. Unfortunately it never set. Any suggestions?
Did you change the recipe at all?
This is the BEST creme brûlée recipe! This dessert is a family favorite so I’ve made it quite a bit. Everyone agreed that this recipe was, by far, the best I’d ever made and better than any they’d had in a restaurant. Thank you!
I am seriously so happy to hear this! Thanks Sara! 🙂
My daughter made this for her cooking class and neither she or myself had made this before. It was super easy and was absolutely delicious!
I am so happy to hear this! Thanks for sharing! 🙂
AWESOME RECIPE. THANK YOU SO MUCH.
You’re so welcome! 🙂
I followed this recipe and it came out so good! Thanks so much
So happy to hear that! Thanks Anna!
It’s my girlfriend Birthday and this is her favorite. So I am going to make it today. Question: Most recipes but foil on the water bath I see you do not right?
I don’t do any foil on the water bath! Enjoy! And happy birthday to your friend 🙂
I am a classically trained chef, apprenticed in New Orleans, have worked in French Quarter restaurants as well as fine dining restaurants in Santa Cruz, Ca and Park City, Ut, but always shyed away from attempting to make creme brûlée’s, believing it was One of those things only an experienced pastry chef could properly prepare. Tried your recipe and was quite pleasantly proven wrong. I’m retired now, but enjoy cooking more now than when I used it as a means of making a living. I cook for friends and family now, and must admit that when they rave over my creme brûlées, I don’t let on how easily they were produced. Thanks for adding a great recipe to my repitaurie.
I am thrilled to hear this David! Thanks so much for your comment! 🙂
Creme brûlée is one of my favorite dessserts but like you said, so expensive in restaurants and most disappointing when you get one with not enough topping or worse, it tastes eggy. I made this last night and it was the BEST!! I finally opened up my vanilla beans (and then made 6 jars of vanilla) and it was the most delicious and perfect dessert!!!
I am so happy to hear this Kelly! Thanks so much for your comment! 🙂