Pizzeria Locale's Butterscotch Pudding With Chocolate Ganache

- Total Time
- 30 minutes plus chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 3cups heavy cream
- 1½cups milk
- 150grams dark brown sugar (¾ cup plus 1 tablespoon)
- 5grams fine sea salt (¾ teaspoon)
- 4large egg yolks
- 1large egg
- 12grams cornstarch (1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon)
- 4½tablespoons unsalted butter
- ¼cup heavy cream
- 70grams chopped milk chocolate (2½ ounces)
- Whipped cream, for serving
For the Pudding
For the Ganache
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the pudding: In a small pot, bring 3 cups cream and milk to a simmer. Cover to keep warm.
- Step 2
In a medium pot, bring brown sugar, ⅓ cup water and salt to a boil. Cook, stirring occasionally to keep mixture from scorching, until it reaches 240 degrees on a candy thermometer, about 10 minutes. The mixture should be a deep brown color and smell nutty and caramelized.
- Step 3
Immediately whisk cream mixture into brown sugar to stop the cooking. The mixture will seize. Bring to a boil, whisking constantly, and cook until smooth.
- Step 4
In a small bowl, whisk together egg yolks, egg and cornstarch. Pour a ladleful of hot cream mixture into the egg mixture, whisking constantly so the eggs don’t curdle. Pour egg mixture into the pot with the cream, whisking more. Cook for another 2 to 4 minutes, until thickened. It’s O.K. if the mixture comes to a simmer.
- Step 5
Strain mixture into a bowl or large glass measuring cup with a spout and whisk in butter until smooth. Divide among 8 serving dishes and chill for at least 4 hours until custards are set.
- Step 6
Make the ganache: In a small saucepan, heat cream until steaming. Add chocolate and stir constantly over very low heat until just melted. Strain into a glass measuring cup with a spout.
- Step 7
Pour a thin layer of ganache over the tops of the custards. You may not use all of the ganache depending on how wide your serving dishes are. Chill for at least 4 more hours to set the ganache. Serve with whipped cream on top.
Private Notes
Comments
This was a pretty terrible recipe. It just tasted like butter and scalded milk. Most other butterscotch recipes call for the ratio of 3 cups of milk/cream to 1 cup (or just shy of) sugar. This one has 5 cups of milk/cream. I was also surprised there was no vanilla to help it out. I feel bad I'm wasting so much by making a large batch, but this is definitely NOT a recipe I'd make again. I'll look closer at the ingredients ratio before I grab one by the picture.
I found that, in the proportions given, the butterscotch flavor was non-existent. I made a second batch of the caramel and added about half of that. Improved. Next time, I will try with two full batches of the caramel and a little more corn starch.
major hit at our dinner party last evening. used crumbled english toffee instead of the ganache with whipped cream. excellent!
I added 3/4 Tablespoon molasses to my light brown sugar to make it dark brown sugar.
I had spectacular success with this recipe! And take heart: I've very rarely attempted pudding, though I admit to being a well-seasoned home cook. I found Jellie Bean's comments very helpful. Accordingly, I had everything prepped beforehand, so I could follow the recipe's strict timing. I also advise that you never stop whisking once you begin combining mixtures--and don't leave the finished pudding on the burner for even a couple of seconds once you've turned off the heat--strain it right away.
Made this 2x now, definitely needs a full cup (not 3/4) cup sugar, to get to peak butterscotch notes. And drive the caramelization right up to the limit. Otherwise garnish with whatever, the sky is the limit. Delicious!