Blackberry Crisp With Cardamom Custard Sauce

Published Aug. 4, 2021

Blackberry Crisp With Cardamom Custard Sauce
David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Total Time
1 hour 20 minutes
Rating
4(913)
Comments
Read comments

You could use a combination of berries (raspberries, blueberries and blackberries in equal parts) in this crisp, but it especially sings with just blackberries. (Wild blackberries, if you can find them, are even better.) Cardamom perfumes the accompanying rich custard sauce. The warm, musky spice adds a flavor that’s perfect with berries. The crisp needn’t be served piping hot straight from the oven; it’s delicious served at room temperature or just slightly warm.

Featured in: This Vegetarian Menu Brings Home the Best of the Market

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: Give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have 10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers. Learn more.

  • Share this recipe

  • Print this recipe

Advertisement


Ingredients

Yield:6 servings

    For the Topping

    • 1cup/128 grams all-purpose flour
    • ½cup/100 grams granulated sugar
    • ½cup/113 grams salted butter, cold and thinly sliced
    • Pinch of ground cardamom

    For the Crisp

    • 6cups/850 grams blackberries
    • ½cup/100 grams granulated sugar

    For the Sauce

    • 2cups/480 grams half-and-half
    • ½cup/100 grams granulated sugar
    • 1tablespoon cardamom seeds, or 6 green cardamom pods, smashed
    • 4egg yolks
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

604 calories; 28 grams fat; 16 grams saturated fat; 1 gram trans fat; 8 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 84 grams carbohydrates; 8 grams dietary fiber; 60 grams sugars; 8 grams protein; 177 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

Powered by

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Make the topping: Put flour, sugar, butter and ground cardamom in a medium bowl. Using your fingertips, work ingredients together until the mixture resembles wet sand with a few stray pebbles. (The topping can be made in advance and refrigerated for 1 week or frozen for up to 2 months.)

  2. Step 2

    Heat oven to 400 degrees. Toss the blackberries with ½ cup/100 grams sugar and transfer the mixture to an 8-inch square baking dish.

  3. Step 3

    Sprinkle topping over berries loosely, and transfer to the oven. Bake for 30 to 40 minutes, until the topping is well browned. Let cool for 10 minutes, or serve at room temperature.

  4. Step 4

    As the crisp bakes, make the custard sauce: Put half-and-half and sugar in a small saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the cardamom seeds and bring to just under a simmer, stirring. Put yolks in a bowl and whisk until smooth, then whisk in 1 cup of hot half-and-half mixture. Pour the contents of the bowl back into the saucepan and cook, whisking, on a very low flame until the mixture barely thickens, about 5 minutes. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve. Serve sauce hot, or let cool and refrigerate until ready to use. (Sauce can be made up to 2 days in advance.)

  5. Step 5

    To serve, scoop large spoonfuls of crisp into individual shallow bowls. Ladle the sauce around each serving or pass the sauce at the table.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Comment on this recipe and see it here.

Ratings

4 out of 5
913 user ratings
Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Comments

Tips for using cardamom: * It's the 3rd priciest spice after saffron & vanilla, but potent when used appropriately. * Instead of wastefully using 1 tb whole seeds and straining, powder 1 tsp with mortar/pestle or dry grinder (here, with some sugar to bulk up grinder's contents). * Intact seeds/pods keep for 1-2 yrs+. Powder turns into sawdust rapidly, so make just what you need. (Cardamom sugar, like vanilla bean kept in sugar, lasts longer than plain powder.)

Was delicious but more like fruit soup with a delicious, temporarily crunchy topping. Seriously, it needs some thickening agent in the fruit- cornstarch or flour or something. This recipe was great (made with blackberries and 1/4 raspberries) but the whole dish is a purple liquid. Next time I will toss some cornstarch or tapioca with the fruit.

I used 2tbs of cornstarch to thicken it up and it came out with beautiful consistency. The cardamom and cream is a divine combo. I also cut out roughly 25g of sugar at each stage and it was still perfectly sweet.

The farmers market didn’t have blackberries, so I used apricots. Quartered them, simmered them in the stove for about 5 minutes before tossing them in a few tablespoons of flour and adding the sugar. It was intoxicatingly delicious. If I had this at a restaurant, I would go out of my way to order this every time. Can’t wait to try with blackberries.

To keep it simple used oats instead of flour. Gave a better bite. Also used semi defrosted berries with a squeeze of a quarter lemon mixed in with the sugar

Has anyone here used frozen fruits instead of fresh ones? Looks like a perfect winter dessert but I cannot get fresh blackberries this time of year.

Private comments are only visible to you.

or to save this recipe.