Ok, really, who doesn’t like crème brûlée? No one. You know what might be better than crème brûlée? Crème brûlée CAKE. Yes, you read that right. But what am I talking about? Read on.
I love to read. I try and read intelligent books- biographies, non-fiction, classic literature. However, sometimes I read crap. I don’t think it’s crap, but by objective literary standards, it’s not winning any awards. I don’t go so far as to read those with Fabio on the cover (I don’t judge if you do), but I do read the chick-lit. It’s fun, light, can be read in a few hours, and puts me in a good mind space to believe in my own happy ever after. The book that inspired this dessert creation is Always the Baker, Never the Bride by Sandra Bricker. I think you can get the gist of the story just by the title, but the cool thing about THIS novel in particular is that there were recipes scattered throughout the story, the protagonist sharing her most requested sweets- brownies, bars, cookies. Her signature piece was a crème brulee wedding cake. Sadly, this recipe she did not share, but she did give hints on how to recreate it. I took these hints and did my best, and this is what I fashioned.
I was nervous to make this cake for one reason- I’d never made a French buttercream and that’s what this required. I’ve been meaning to for years, and my candy thermometer has been sitting idly by waiting to be used for just such a treat, but I never had the occasion to go to the trouble. But now is the time. Now is the best time.
This cake had four components: caramel, cake, filling, frosting. Here we go.
First, make the custard
Second, make the caramel.
Third, make the cake.
Fourth, make the frosting.
Fifth, assemble.
Sixth, take a nap. You earned it.
Creme Brulee Cake
Equipment
- candy thermometer
Ingredients
For the custard
- 2 cups milk
- ½ cup sugar
- 2 tsp vanilla
- 2 TB corn starch
- 4 egg yolks
For the caramel
- ¾ cup brown sugar
- ¼ cup water
- 2 TB unsalted butter
For the Cake
- 3 cups flour
- 2 cups sugar
- 1 cup unsalted butter softened
- 1 cup sour cream
- 4 eggs
- ½ tsp baking soda
- ½ tsp baking powder
- ½ tsp salt
- 1 tsp vanilla
For the Buttercream
- 2 large eggs
- 2 large egg yolks
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- ½ cup water
- 1 ½ cups unsalted butter room temperature
- 1 tsp vanilla
Instructions
Make the Custard
- Bring the milk to a simmer over low heat.
- Whisk together the yolks, sugar and cornstarch in a large bowl. Slowly whisk the warm milk into the egg mixture, being careful not to scramble the eggs. Return the eggs to the pot over medium heat and bring to a boil, whisking constantly until thickened. This should not take long thanks to the cornstarch.
- Scrape the mixture into another bowl and add the vanilla. Let cool to room temperature, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate until cold, at least two hours.
Make the Caramel
- Mix all ingredients in a small saucepan on medium/medium-high heat.
- Let mixture cook, whisking gently for 9-10 minutes until the mixture thickens. Turn off heat and divide the mixture between two buttered, unlined 9” cake pans. Set aside.
Make the Cake
- Preheat the oven to 350F.
- Cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the eggs and vanilla and beat well.
- Mix together the dry ingredients in a separate bowl. Slowly add the dry to the egg/sugar mixture, alternating with the sour cream. Mix well.
- Divide into the prepared, caramelized cake pans, careful not to disturb the caramel too much.
- Bake 30-35 minutes until a cake tester comes out done. Let cool 15 minutes and then invert the cakes onto a cooling rack. The top should be all caramel-ly. Yum. Let cool the rest of the way.
Make the Frosting
- In the large bowl of an electric stand mixer fitted with a whisk (if you have one), combine the eggs and yolks. Whisk on medium high speed for 5-8 minutes until the eggs become thick and lemon colored.
- Meanwhile in a saucepan, combine the sugar and water. Heat over medium heat, stirring constantly with a rubber spatula until the sugar is completely dissolved. Be careful not to splash.
- When the syrup looks clear, clip on a candy thermometer and increase the heat, bringing to a boil. Without stirring, let the syrup reach 238F, soft ball stage. Immediately remove the pan from the heat and pour the sugar into a glass measuring cup to stop the cooking.
- As soon as the syrup is done cooking, slow the mixer and gently pour a small amount of syrup into the yolks and immediately increase the speed to high and beat about 10 seconds. Slow it down again, put in a larger amount of syrup and immediately turn the speed back to high. Repeat until all the syrup is gone. Work quickly since the sugar hardens quickly. Also, be careful to not add the syrup to the whisk because it will spin around the sides of the bowl.
- Once the sugar has been added, beat the eggs about 5 minutes longer until the mixture is cool. The side of the bowl should feel cool to the touch.
- If you have the paddle attachment, replace the whisk with that now. If not, just keep using the whisk. With the mixer on medium speed, add the butter, about 2 TB at a time, mixing 20-30 seconds after each addition (the eggs will deflate. Don't panic). Stop occasionally to scrape the sides. The buttercream may look curdled, but it will become smooth as you continue to beat it. Add the vanilla and beat until thick and smooth, about 5 minutes.
FINALLY, Assemble
- Now that the cake has cooled and the custard has set...
- Slice each cake layer lengthwise. On a large plate, place one layer, caramel side down. Put about 1/3 of the custard filling. Repeat with all the cake layers. You should have four cake layers and three custard layers.
Notes
Alternatively, you can use three 8" rounds.
See, it pays to read. Even chick lit.
**PS: Please note this post has been updated from its original post with new pictures and the cake was remade with a working mixer. Big difference.
this is one of those cakes like the blackout cake that takes a little time but is so worth it!
I’ve heard of the BB cake but never had it or tried it. Agree that despite all this work it was totally worth it!
Drool.
Do you use salted or unsalted butter?
Thanks.
Hi! Unsalted- thanks for the note- I’ll update the recipe, and thanks for stopping by! I hope it turns out for you.
the first paragraph on how to make the frosting ended with “Continue beating until the eggs are cooked.”. I’m assuming this was a typo?
Hi- thanks for your comment. It’s actually not- but I guess it’s unclear. In the 5-8 minutes, the eggs would be cooked. It doesn’t mean cooking until additionally scrambled or anything. I’ve edited it to make it more clear and thanks for stopping by!
My niece loves creme Brulee, her 30th birthday is coming up and she would like me to make this her one. I have to give it a go she will love it if I can do it. Wish me luck
You can do it! Just one step at a time, and don’t get overwhelmed. I made this twice, once with a mixer that broke halfway through and it still tasted good. Good luck! And let me know how it goes 🙂