Many years ago when I was a caregiver for a few different folks, I’d make baked custard for them. It was a hit. Now I’m old and my own caregiver who doesn’t like eggs most ways so I want to make some custard for myself. Thanks for this easy to follow reminder of how to make it.❤
My dad is not able to chew much right now and has also been in intense chronic pain for ages now. He needs some comfort food and this will be perfect because it's tasty, nostalgic, and easy to swallow. Custard's on the menu tonight!
Ohhhh. So this is what my mother made that she called egg custard. I recognize it because of the grated nutmeg on top and I truly loved it and I’m so glad I now can make it myself. Thanks so much.❤❤❤
Oh. Egg custard. I was looking at it like I thought I knew my bakes but I've never heard of vanilla custard. My old fashioned similar recipe - that we've always done in my family - is crème caramel: same recipe with caramel at the bottom.
Thank you for a simple, comforting dessert Chef John. This brings back childhood memories of times when I was recovering from a little illness and Mom would make baked egg custard. Just slightly sweet, not too rich, served warm and fragrant with that touch of nutmeg on top. One of those special 'mom' touches that made you feel loved.
5:46 Your comparison to silken tofu is very apt! Chef John, you probably aren't aware, but there's a dish that in Chinese is called douhua (essentially bean flower), which is the most silken tofu. It can be used for both savoury and sweet applications, and it's an absolute joy to eat.
I've gradually reduced baking temp on custards lower and lower specifically for that luscious texture. Classic dessert and great every time, very easy to adjust macros too
I just finished watching The Menu... is it just me or is Chef John like the Anti-Slowick? I always getting a warm fuzzy feeling when I watch these videos - like even though I can't eat what's onscreen it always feels like he's still making everything with love and humor.
This is an Event; I do love when Chef J. pulls something so common and, in a way, forgotten in relevancy; and makes it so much morw interesting and appealing. Chef J. is a real advocate for creativity and inspiration. Bringing back what is really important about cooking.
@@hiveimperious why’d I can come over for dinner and I can take a nap if I can get a chance and I’ll let you know when I get home from the house I have a few things I need for the next week Monday and Sunday for a few hours
I made Flan for my Spanish teacher once and she said it was better than her mother's Flan from when she was a child. College too. Pretty much the same recipe from a base concept. Totally different from a chef fingers perspective. I appreciate the delicate nature of this.
Thank you for all your recipes through all these years. I've been following you forever and our family favourites are the homemade icecream and broccoli gratin ☺️ I'll try this one for sure!
What memories you bring back! I have the taste in my mouth. Those were my favorite as a child. My mother considered it as a healthy nutritious dessert with not much sugar just a drizzle of maple syrup ( a lot less than yours ) and low fat dairy. She was right.
I know you keep saying you like your custard light and silky. But the best custard tart I've ever eaten the custard was like a sweet vanillary butter. In perfectly baked sweet pastry, I could feel my arteries clogging up but had a smile on my face the entire time.
That custard looks delicious and so refreshing. I'll try it with the raspberries. Of all your recipes I've tried, this was the closest I've come to dropping what I was doing, going to the kitchen, and trying the recipe. If it weren't for the overnight in the icebox, I would have. I know if I make it tonight for tomorrow, I'll eat it at around 0300. I'm already cooking one of your meatloaf recipes for tonight's supper. I was a line cook in a steak house many moons ago. My family learned all the lack of a potholder means is I'm not using a potholder. I'm like the waiter at ChiChi's: "Be careful, the plate is hot."
My mother makes something similar, but pours the custard into ramekins or a pan coated with very dark (almost burnt) caramel. Criminally underrated family of desserts
As a mother that hasn’t worked in a professional kitchen for about ten years, my fingers are still very much numb to pain. My children are astonished on how I can cook on the stove with no spatula. I tell them never to copy me so use one. Lol
I don't know why I thought this would be complicated 🤔.... It's really very easy!😀 I'm sure it will take a little practice for me, but this is a perfect example of 'simple elegance'✨👏 "And as always"..... Thank you, Chef John!👨🍳😄💕
My husband's favourite dessert is plain custard. I would very much like to try this baked version. I will probably do one big pie dish for him, though!
I'd love to see something like the egg custards baked in a wonton that a lot of chinese buffets seem to have...they're not the same kind of custard as this, but it's one that I enjoy a lot
Over the weekend I’m happy to announce I had several babies over the weekend. They were delicious. Chef John is the Baby Daddy of my delicious dutch children.
I swear you made this already maybe I'm just associate with one of your older recipes or it's similar but I'm not offended just been a long road happy to see anything you made! 😋
Dear Chef John. Thank you for another wonderful recipe! Question: if I used cream instead of milk in this recipe, added sugar on top of the custard after it had been baked in the oven and cooled down, and then torched it, wouldn't I then have a (sort of) crème brûlée? I ask, because your method would be way easier to make than the way I have been making crème brûlée the traditional way...? Thank you and culinary greetings from Amsterdam, The Netherlands!
Odd that we are both making a vanilla custard although they are not the same ones. I'm also baking a cinnamon one in order to enjoy today. Today's custard with lack the peaches and won't even have a lovely caramel but the bourbon vanilla sauce will make up for it. It's good that I'm not inclined to weight gain loving to cook and eat so much.
I do my custards, flans, and creme brulees in sous vide baths now. It's just so much less finicky IMO. Also, they keep for a good week in those sealed jars.
Chef John forgot to mention that you MUST use boiling water in the bain marie otherwise after an hour the water will still be tepid and the custards uncooked
Any thoughts on alternate extracts? Sub in Almond and Cinnamon. Or Rum with pineapple and Coconut. Any other combinations that would work in a custard?
Dang, I miss the egg pie in the old bakeries back in my childhood days in the Philippines. Most of the modern upscale ones are trying to copy the Chinese egg tart and it's just 🤮
A wonderful dessert, I just wish getting the ramekins out of the water bath wasn't such a pain 😁 If you want something with a little bit more depth, I can HIGHLY recommend replacing the sugar (or half of the sugar) with a mild honey (like acacia). I make basically all my creme brulee like that nowadays and it really makes the final result a lot more interesting.
Make Creme brulee and skip the final step. I like temp checking custard instead of toothpick/knife/wiggle tests. seems a lot more foolproof and im a fool. - 176F
As someone who grew up with fresh milk from a farm: Old-fashioned milk is closer to today's cream than even today's whole milk (much less 2% or, god forbid, Skim). So if you really want it to be "old fashioned" you should use cream or a mixture of whole milk and cream.
what temperature was the milk? just wondering as i'm used to having to temper the eggs and it's always a struggle for me! so if there is no tempering then that would be a dream come true 😍
You are the Colonel Mustard of your Vanilla Custard.
and you can enjoy this in the conservatory with a billiard stick
Many years ago when I was a caregiver for a few different folks, I’d make baked custard for them. It was a hit. Now I’m old and my own caregiver who doesn’t like eggs most ways so I want to make some custard for myself. Thanks for this easy to follow reminder of how to make it.❤
My dad is not able to chew much right now and has also been in intense chronic pain for ages now. He needs some comfort food and this will be perfect because it's tasty, nostalgic, and easy to swallow. Custard's on the menu tonight!
Ohhhh. So this is what my mother made that she called egg custard. I recognize it because of the grated nutmeg on top and I truly loved it and I’m so glad I now can make it myself. Thanks so much.❤❤❤
Oh. Egg custard.
I was looking at it like I thought I knew my bakes but I've never heard of vanilla custard.
My old fashioned similar recipe - that we've always done in my family - is crème caramel: same recipe with caramel at the bottom.
My favorite recurring gag on this channel is the “touch of sugar” that appears in so many recipes 0:37 😂 love you Chef John
Also he’s pinch of salt, Chef John must have paws the size of dinner plates!
...followed by a literal spoonful portion of brown sugar
Probably something to do with the molecules
The camera always adds 10 pounds. 😂
@@jo-anne8462 That's true!
Chef John's humor never disappoints
Thank you for a simple, comforting dessert Chef John. This brings back childhood memories of times when I was recovering from a little illness and Mom would make baked egg custard. Just slightly sweet, not too rich, served warm and fragrant with that touch of nutmeg on top. One of those special 'mom' touches that made you feel loved.
5:46 Your comparison to silken tofu is very apt! Chef John, you probably aren't aware, but there's a dish that in Chinese is called douhua (essentially bean flower), which is the most silken tofu. It can be used for both savoury and sweet applications, and it's an absolute joy to eat.
I've gradually reduced baking temp on custards lower and lower specifically for that luscious texture. Classic dessert and great every time, very easy to adjust macros too
I don't know what it is about this channel that I always feel comforted when a new video is up. Love it.
I just finished watching The Menu... is it just me or is Chef John like the Anti-Slowick? I always getting a warm fuzzy feeling when I watch these videos - like even though I can't eat what's onscreen it always feels like he's still making everything with love and humor.
This is an Event; I do love when Chef J. pulls something so common and, in a way, forgotten in relevancy; and makes it so much morw interesting and appealing. Chef J. is a real advocate for creativity and inspiration. Bringing back what is really important about cooking.
I love baked custard. It was one of the first desserts I learned how to make. Grandma taught me and now I've passed it on to my granddaughter! 😁
That's so sweet! How do you do yours?
Rip
@@hiveimperious why’d I can come over for dinner and I can take a nap if I can get a chance and I’ll let you know when I get home from the house I have a few things I need for the next week Monday and Sunday for a few hours
Some form of cake with warm custard, over it, is heaven. Just ask a Brit.
Apple tart with warm custard for me, thank you.
We Can Tell Chef Liked His Desert, He Aparrentky Licked the Bowl Clean 😊
300ml milk, 30 grams sugar (some brown sugar), 2 eggs, 1.25 tsp vanilla, 0.25 tsp salt, nutmeg. 165 C 45 - 60min
I made Flan for my Spanish teacher once and she said it was better than her mother's Flan from when she was a child. College too. Pretty much the same recipe from a base concept. Totally different from a chef fingers perspective. I appreciate the delicate nature of this.
Oh, I love love love vanilla custard.
Looks delicious. I think I'll make me some o-o-old-fashioned vanilla custard... with milk and brown sugar.
That looks so good! My husband is an auto mechanic for the past 40+ years. He has absolutely no feeling in his fingers (nor can he hear)!
I firmly believe that you absolutely would NEVER do me like that. Appreciate it.
I've been thinking about custard a lot lately. You must have read my mind. Looks good.
Great recipe as always. I make mine the same way as my Grandmother and my Mother, with a little dark rum and a touch of cinnamon for added flavour
I was thinking: where’s the booze!? It should have something 😂
@@DutchAlaskagirl 😁
THe OOOOOOLD fashion custard :). me and my dad have been watching your for 5 years
I'm pretty sure every last one of your videos has me smiling the whole way through... Thank you!
Thank you for all your recipes through all these years. I've been following you forever and our family favourites are the homemade icecream and broccoli gratin ☺️ I'll try this one for sure!
Also if you like and have lemons to hand, his state fair lemonade is the only one worth making. It’s life changing!
What memories you bring back! I have the taste in my mouth. Those were my favorite as a child. My mother considered it as a healthy nutritious dessert with not much sugar just a drizzle of maple syrup ( a lot less than yours ) and low fat dairy. She was right.
I know you keep saying you like your custard light and silky. But the best custard tart I've ever eaten the custard was like a sweet vanillary butter. In perfectly baked sweet pastry, I could feel my arteries clogging up but had a smile on my face the entire time.
His pastry cream recipe works incredibly well and the best part is the ability to keep stirring until it's exactly the texture you want.
His Pasteis di nata custard is unbelievable.
Chef John is such a gem
That custard looks delicious and so refreshing. I'll try it with the raspberries. Of all your recipes I've tried, this was the closest I've come to dropping what I was doing, going to the kitchen, and trying the recipe. If it weren't for the overnight in the icebox, I would have. I know if I make it tonight for tomorrow, I'll eat it at around 0300. I'm already cooking one of your meatloaf recipes for tonight's supper.
I was a line cook in a steak house many moons ago. My family learned all the lack of a potholder means is I'm not using a potholder. I'm like the waiter at ChiChi's: "Be careful, the plate is hot."
Made it and yes it is the way. Thank you Chef John, I loved the smooth texture.
Chef John thanks for sharing this recipe with us
My mother makes something similar, but pours the custard into ramekins or a pan coated with very dark (almost burnt) caramel. Criminally underrated family of desserts
Inb4 this man finds out about creme caramel
Uhm thats called creme brulee
@@Klingenschmied read it again, it must be Australian creme brulé lol
I think that's flan. And yes, it is very good!
Or flan 🍮
As a mother that hasn’t worked in a professional kitchen for about ten years, my fingers are still very much numb to pain. My children are astonished on how I can cook on the stove with no spatula. I tell them never to copy me so use one. Lol
Oh I just can feel the taste of it by looking! Awesome
I don't know why I thought this would be complicated 🤔.... It's really very easy!😀 I'm sure it will take a little practice for me, but this is a perfect example of 'simple elegance'✨👏 "And as always"..... Thank you, Chef John!👨🍳😄💕
Looks very YUM! Can't wait to give it a try. Thanks for sharing!!
One of my favorite desserts!!!
Thanks for the sugar and milk measurements!
My husband's favourite dessert is plain custard. I would very much like to try this baked version. I will probably do one big pie dish for him, though!
I just made this tonight! It’s so good I’m eating it hot 😅
I made this recipe for the family - it was everything you said it would be. A comfort food for sure.
Looks good l,thx for sharing 🙏
I'd love to see something like the egg custards baked in a wonton that a lot of chinese buffets seem to have...they're not the same kind of custard as this, but it's one that I enjoy a lot
Over the weekend I’m happy to announce I had several babies over the weekend. They were delicious. Chef John is the Baby Daddy of my delicious dutch children.
Thanks for the reminder.
I'm going to garnish with a little bit of my homeade blueberry jelly. 😊
I swear you made this already maybe I'm just associate with one of your older recipes or it's similar but I'm not offended just been a long road happy to see anything you made! 😋
I love how he says "oooohhhld fashioned custard" every single time 🤣🤣
Fabulous! 🥰
I love you, Food Wishes!
Chef John please add temperatures in Celcius and measurements in metric for us non-Americans.
Love,
An international fan :)
Making these tonight for a work party. Wish me luck!
Turned out great! They were a huge hit. :) Thanks Chef John.
If I chilled mine overnight, I would be eating them for breakfast!
😂
Looks delicious thank you
Just made it. Came out fantastic except I didn't follow your nutmeg advice very well. Now cooling on the rack, then overnight in the refrigerator.
Looks delicious going to try it
Dear Chef John. Thank you for another wonderful recipe! Question: if I used cream instead of milk in this recipe, added sugar on top of the custard after it had been baked in the oven and cooled down, and then torched it, wouldn't I then have a (sort of) crème brûlée? I ask, because your method would be way easier to make than the way I have been making crème brûlée the traditional way...? Thank you and culinary greetings from Amsterdam, The Netherlands!
Looks so delicious 😋 Thank you chef!
Just made this. Delicious!
Odd that we are both making a vanilla custard although they are not the same ones. I'm also baking a cinnamon one in order to enjoy today. Today's custard with lack the peaches and won't even have a lovely caramel but the bourbon vanilla sauce will make up for it. It's good that I'm not inclined to weight gain loving to cook and eat so much.
I could eat a whole big bowl of that! It looks amazing 👏 😍 👌
I do my custards, flans, and creme brulees in sous vide baths now. It's just so much less finicky IMO. Also, they keep for a good week in those sealed jars.
Anyone else think that this was the “old fashioned” drink flavored custard ???? Chef John !!!! please make that a reality
I've had 2 other chefs tell me the same baking temperature as you. Even if it was for creme brulee. Just to add a 180° turn in the middle of cooking.
🥣 So scrumptious 🥛🥄☕
Looks so good.
So like créeme brûlée without the sugar crust
or ice cream but in the owen.
Nowthat looks delicious!! ❣️
Ramekins we can get at the local restaurant, it’s that metal roasting pan in want.
This looks SO good ... I can see the extra heaviness of cream being too 'creme brûlée' but what about half and half instead of milk?
Another perfect dessert Colonel Mustard 😉
Incredibly delicious!!!!!!!
man, you make it look easy. and it probably is. I'm gonna go make some o-o-old fashioned custard.
I guess I'm a freak of nature. I do love warm custard or at room temperature. 😋
Flantastic!
these are great frozen, too
Hahaha the whole time I’m like “what about the nutmeg?!?!?!” 😂
It looks gorgeous Chef! Love your videos ❤
Oh that looks good!
What about half and half for something in between?
Could I use this method for a cream custard pie?
Sure. I'd dock and partially bake the crust first then add your custard and bake.
Chef John forgot to mention that you MUST use boiling water in the bain marie otherwise after an hour the water will still be tepid and the custards uncooked
How about picnic foods? Spring's around the corner.
I don't even like custard but this is looking exquisite
" But most importantly, nobody fights to get the bigger one" I like you sense of humour
This is my all time childhood Favorite dessert, except maybe floating island.
Yummy!
Any thoughts on alternate extracts? Sub in Almond and Cinnamon. Or Rum with pineapple and Coconut. Any other combinations that would work in a custard?
This fits the bill as I have been making Filipino Egg pie (custard pie) twice a week for about a month. Something new 😆
Dang, I miss the egg pie in the old bakeries back in my childhood days in the Philippines. Most of the modern upscale ones are trying to copy the Chinese egg tart and it's just 🤮
@@lipstickzombie4981 I have a really good recipe and it’s easy if you want?
Grandmother used to make something like this and it was nearly frozen and I mean ice cold custard on top of lettuce.
A wonderful dessert, I just wish getting the ramekins out of the water bath wasn't such a pain 😁
If you want something with a little bit more depth, I can HIGHLY recommend replacing the sugar (or half of the sugar) with a mild honey (like acacia). I make basically all my creme brulee like that nowadays and it really makes the final result a lot more interesting.
Very easy if you'll purchase a canning tool used to move hot jars in and out of the canner.
As an alternative to vanilla I sometimes dissolve a little bit white miso into the custard mix. It sounds strange but it works.
Could I use Bailey's Caramel flavored Irish Cream instead of milk?
Is this 325F with convection heat or non-convection?
Tried and true recipes.
I thought it was gonna be a vanilla custard with Whisky Orange and Cherry
Make Creme brulee and skip the final step.
I like temp checking custard instead of toothpick/knife/wiggle tests. seems a lot more foolproof and im a fool. - 176F
As someone who grew up with fresh milk from a farm: Old-fashioned milk is closer to today's cream than even today's whole milk (much less 2% or, god forbid, Skim). So if you really want it to be "old fashioned" you should use cream or a mixture of whole milk and cream.
If you add bourbon and some orange zest, would this be considered an old fashion old-fashioned vanilla custard?
what temperature was the milk? just wondering as i'm used to having to temper the eggs and it's always a struggle for me! so if there is no tempering then that would be a dream come true 😍
The milk was cold.