Lavender creme brulee
Photography by David Loftus

Lavender creme brulee

Lavender has a clean fresh flavour and is surprisingly good in cooking, particularly with fish or tagines.

Preheat the oven to 140°C/275°F/gas 1. Score the vanilla pods lengthways and scrape out the vanilla seeds with a knife or a teaspoon. Place the seeds into a saucepan, add the pods, cream and milk and slowly bring to the boil. Remove from the heat.

Meanwhile, get yourself a large bowl that will fit over your pan and beat together the egg yolks and sugar until light and fluffy. Remove the vanilla pods from the pan and, little by little, add the milk and cream to the egg mixture in the bowl, whisking continuously. Add 2.5cm of hot water to your dirty pan, bring to a simmer and put the bowl on top of the pan. Cook the mixture for 5 minutes over the simmering water, stirring often, until it thickens and coats the back of a spoon. Stir in a small handful of lavender flowers, but the trick is to be delicate – you only need a hint of its distinctive, strong flavour.

Remove any bubbles or froth from the mixture before dividing it between your ramekins. Stand these in a high-sided roasting tray, and fill the tray with water halfway up the ramekins. Place carefully in the preheated oven and cook for around 30 to 45 minutes or until the mixture has set but is still slightly wobbly in the centre. Allow to cool at room temperature then place in the fridge until ready.

To serve, sprinkle each crème brûlée with a tablespoon of caster sugar and some more of the lavender flowers and caramelize under a very hot grill or using the chef’s torch.

Comments

kathryn [Visitor]
Tue 14 Aug 2007 @ 20:10
this sounds like a very nice recipie i'll have to try it.

Simon Wan [Visitor]
Thu 11 Oct 2007 @ 07:34
i can't get fresh lavender flowers the time i wanted to try this recipie.. so i've replaced it wih jasmine. it turns out really ok because cooked jasmine produce really fresh fragrant.

Alvaro [Visitor]
Sat 12 Jan 2008 @ 17:55
Jamie says this serves 4, but i ended up with 6 servings a 120 ml each. How much brulee is supposed to be served per person? Good recepie though, dont really get the simmering over a pot thing. I mean, doesnt the brulee get done in the same way in the oven?

Rebecca [Visitor]
Thu 07 Feb 2008 @ 21:47
love this recipe. in answer to alvaro's question, you do the simmering to slowly raise the temperature of the eggs to make the custard creamy. if you just stuck them in the oven you'd have little discs of scrambled eggs essentially.

Doireann [Visitor]
Mon 25 Feb 2008 @ 20:55
Ok I'm not sure about messing with a classic but it's quite difficult to get a really good brulee so I'll give it a go - if you weren't Jamie Oliver though...

Jolene [Visitor]
Mon 05 May 2008 @ 23:06
Looks bloody delicious!

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rate 
3 stars3 stars3 stars 1453 votes

serves 4

ingredients

• 2 vanilla pods
• 300ml double cream
• 200ml whole milk
• 8 large free-range or organic egg yolks
• 75g sugar
• a bunch of lavender, flowers picked
• 4 tablespoons caster sugar