Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • Caramelized sugar lines the baking dish and sweetens the custard for a double dose of toasty caramel.
  • Adding the eggs in a blender makes tempering foolproof.
  • Baking the custard in a water bath with a foil ring lifting the dish off the bottom of the pan cooks it gently, preventing curdling and overcooking.

When you usually think of dessert for one, it’s something microwaved in a mug or a precious, portioned miniature. But I don’t want a sensible cupcake or tiny pie, I want something I can eat entirely, all on my own. This flan fits the bill. With deep, dark caramel to take the edge off, it’s never too rich or cloying. I even take it one step further bytoasting the dairyfor the added savory notes of nutty toffee and toast. Sure, youcouldshare—this baked custard can easily slice into sturdy wedges to feed a crowd. But on cloudy days when the husband’s away, I don’t even flip it out of its pan and dig right in with an extra large spoon.

Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (1)

What Is a Flan?

A flan is a baked custard often served in Latin America and Spain. Unlike crème brûlée orcrema Catalana, where sugar is sprinkled on top of a baked and cooled custard before getting torched into a crisp topping, here we start with the caramel. Caramelized sugar syrup is poured into a dish and dangerously swirled around to coat the bottom in a shimmering golden shell. A custard is then poured on top and, while baking in the oven, it dissolves the caramel shell into a sauce. The sauce waits patiently under the tender custard until you ultimately flip out the flan, or dig in with a spoon to find the glittering pool.

Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (2)

Making the Caramel Layer

Flan is really all about the caramel. Sure, when made right, the custard will be creamy and rich without being dense or heavy, with a little jiggle that melts in your mouth. But the sharp acidity and smokiness of burnt sugar are at the forefront, and I look at the custard as just a vehicle to put the maximum amount of caramel into my body.

I tested the recipe with sugar taken to various degrees of caramelization, from a light clover honey hue to the darkest shades of my heart. The majority of the tasters preferred the flan with the darkest, nearly burnt sugar for the contrast it provided the delicate cream. If you prefer a more subtle and sweet flavor, stop cooking the sugar at an earlier stage. The initial goal of testing the caramel was to provide a temperature guide, which would allow you to reproduce the caramel which most accurately represented my black soul, but unfortunately the amount of sugar used in the recipe creates a volume of caramel that is too shallow to register on a candy thermometer. Your best bet is to let color be your guide and find the caramel that best speaks to you.

Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (3)

There’s more than one way to make a caramel. Some methods melt sugar completely dry—a fast route for a skilled sugar master—while others give the sugar a little nudge in the right direction with a splash of water. I prefer the safety net a splash of water gives me, especially with such a small quantity of caramel, where the extra time is hardly a game changer.

To make the caramel, I add sugar and water to a pot over medium heat and cover with a lid for the first stage. The condensation from the water washes down the sides of the pan, preventing any annoying crystallization. Once the sugar has dissolved into a syrup, I uncover the pan and crank up the heat to watch the magic happen. It’s a quick transformation from a pure white pile to smoldering lava, so keep a close eye on it. I take my caramel to the edge: Once the syrup is well past golden, the room starts to get smoky, and I start to wonder if I’ve gone too far, I pour the caramel onto a dish and quickly swirl it around to coat the bottom and sides of the pan.

Making the Caramel Custard Base

Now, don’t wash that pot just yet—there’s still good flavor in there! To top out the caramel-ness of this dish, I also caramelize the sugarinthe custard. In the same pot I add some more sugar and cook, but this time to a more conservatively caramelized stage, so it’s sweet enough to flavor the custard. Once it’s fully taken on a sunset hue, I add toasted milk and cream—but the clean, cool flavor of fresh dairy will do just as well.

I bring the mixture up to a simmer to dissolve the caramel before tempering in the eggs and yolks. Typically, hot liquids are tempered into eggs by adding a ladleful at a time while whisking vigorously, but I don’t always trust myself. My lack of coordination has led me to witness many good custards go bad, so I prefer to temper eggs with the help of a blender. I pour the hot milk and cream into a blender and, while running on low, I add the eggs, yolks, salt, and vanilla. The blender leaves me with two free hands to pour in the eggsanddance around the kitchen with jazz hands—show me a whisk that’ll let you do that!

Covering and Baking the Flan

Once the custard is all blended together, I pour it into my caramel coated pan before covering everything loosely with foil or plastic wrap. The oven temperature isn’t high enough for the plastic wrap to melt and it gives you a clear view of the flan while baking. However, if plastic in the oven gives you the heebie-jeebies, foil can step up to the plate as well. Covering the custard not only prevents it from forming a skin, but also helps it cook faster. When testing flans baked covered versus uncovered, the covered flans baked in one-third less the time.

Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (4)

For a tender and supple flan, I bake the custard until it is just set and has reached an internal temperature of 175°F (80°C). Any higher and the flan will become dense and, at the extreme, curdled and grainy. To prevent overshooting our desired internal temp, the flan needs to be protected from the intense dry heat of the oven with a water bath. By cooking the flan in a roasting pan filled with hot water, we guarantee that the custard won’t heat past the boiling point, and we can slowly reach our ultimate temperature. The cooked flan will give you a boisterous wiggle when shaken, while still being set to the touch.

If you want a flan recipe that involves sous vide, our buddies atChef Stepshave got you covered. I love channeling my innerabuelaand enjoy mastering a traditional technique, but I also appreciate the opportunity to break out some fun toys.

Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (5)

Cool the flan fully before flipping it out of the pan, or not. This is your flan and you can do with it what you want. Share it with friends and loved ones, or eat it alone in your bathtub, we won’t judge.

February 2018

Recipe Details

Double-Caramel Flan Recipe

Active30 mins

Total3 hrs

Serves8to 10 servings

Ingredients

For the Caramel:

  • 3/4 cup (5 1/2 ounces; 150g) sugar

For the Custard:

  • 1/2 cup (3 1/2 ounces; 100g) sugar

  • 2 cups (17 ounces; 470g) heavy cream (for toasted cream version see note)

  • 1 cup (9 ounces; 250g) milk

  • 3 large eggs (about 5 3/4 ounces; 165g)

  • 3 egg yolks (about 1 1/2 ounces; 40g)

  • 1 teaspoon (4g) Diamond Crystal kosher salt; for iodized salt, use half as much by volume or the same weight

  • 1 teaspoon (5g)vanilla extract

  • Maldon salt to taste

Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 325°F (160°C) and adjust the rack to the middle position. Bring 3 quarts of water to a boil to use in a water bath during baking.

  2. For the Caramel: In a 3-quart saucepan or saucier, add 3/4 cup (5 1/2 ounces; 150g) sugar and 3 tablespoons (1 1/2 ounces; 45g) of water. Cover with a lid and bring to a simmer over medium heat, about 3 minutes. Once the sugar has dissolved, remove the lid and cook sugar until it caramelizes and reaches the shade of golden you prefer. Carefully pour the hot caramel into a 9-inch pie plate, 2-quart soufflé dish, or another oven-safe, 2-quart baking dish. Immediately pick up the dish to swirl the caramel and evenly coat the bottom and sides. Set aside.

    Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (6)

  3. For the Custard: In the same unwashed pot that the caramel was cooked in, add the remaining 1/2 cup (3 1/2 ounces; 100g) sugar and 2 tablespoons (1 ounce; 30g) water. Once again, cook the sugar until it caramelizes and reaches your preferred shade of golden. Add the cream and milk and bring to a simmer, stirring to dissolve the caramel.

    Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (7)

  4. Tempering With a Blender: Pour the caramel, cream, and milk mixture into the pitcher of a blender. Turn blender on to low and, while the blender is running, add whole eggs, yolk, salt, and vanilla.

    Tempering Eggs With a Whisk: In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the whole eggs, yolks, salt, and vanilla. Slowly whisk the hot cream mixture into the eggs one ladleful at a time until it is all fully incorporated. Pour into the prepared caramel-lined dish and cover lightly with plastic wrap or foil.

  5. Baking the Custard: Prepare a roasting pan, casserole dish, or another oven-safe pan large enough to accommodate the dish holding the custard by placing a ring of foil or a wire rack inside it to act as a booster seat. Rest custard dish on top and place in oven. Once in the oven, pour boiling water into the roasting dish until about halfway up the side of the custard dish. Bake until the custard is just set to the touch, with a slight jiggle in the center and an instant-read thermometer reads 175°F (80°C) in the center, about 45 minutes. Cool fully in the refrigerator at least 2 hours, preferably overnight. When ready to serve, run a paring knife or offset spatula along the edge to loosen the flan from the dish and flip over onto a rimmed plate to catch the caramel sauce. Sprinkle with Maldon salt to taste. Keep in the fridge covered for 3 to 5 days.

    Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (8)

Special Equipment

Blender, instant-read thermometer, pie dish, roasting pan or casserole dish

Notes

For an extra layer of savory and nutty flavor, toast the dairy for the flan. Combine the milk and cream with 1 teaspoon (5g) baking soda. For the pressure cooker method, pour the dairy and baking soda mixture into mason jars and gently screw on the lids until just finger-tight. Place the lids in a pressure cooker with a rack insert and 1 inch of water. Bring to full pressure and cook for 2 hours. For the sous vide method, transfer the dairy and baking soda mixture to vacuum-sealed bags and cook at 180°F (82°C) for 24 hours. Use the dairy as usual in the flan recipe.

Make-Ahead and Storage

The flan will keep for 3 to 5 days covered in the refrigerator.

Read More

  • Leche Flan (Filipino Baked Custard)
  • Flan Pâtissier (French Custard Tart)
  • Crème Brûlée
  • Mexican Chocolate Flan
Double-Caramel Flan Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What's the difference between caramel flan and flan? ›

Flavor: Flan recipes usually call for multiple types of dairy products, such as cream cheese, evaporated milk, and sweetened condensed milk. This gives a flan a tangier and sweeter flavor than that of a crème caramel, which uses only whole milk or cream, eggs, and sugar.

Why does my caramel harden when making flan? ›

It's normal. Caramel hardens when you pour it into a ramekin but gradually melts into syrup during cooking. If the layer of caramel poured into a ramekin is too thick, it will not have time to completely melt during cooking. This is why caramel will stick to the bottom.

Can I bake 2 flans at the same time? ›

You can remove the time from the equation by baking for internal temperature instead, but if the oven temp is too high, the sides may curdle while the middle is still too wet. If you need more flan, bake two flans sequentially. You can make the mix at once, but bake it in two batches.

What's the difference between crème brûlée and caramel flan? ›

When it comes to crème brûlée and flan, it's mostly the toppings that distinguishes the two, as well as the presentation. The former has that signature crackly sugar crust on top, and the latter has the gooey, soft caramel top.

Why is flan unhealthy? ›

Flan does contain high amount of calcium but the cholesterol and amount of sugar over powers the calcium benefits. One serving (3.5 oz / 100g) of flan has close to 36 grams sugar. It is and seem quite high until you compare it with a can of soda which contains about 44g of sugar.

Why does flan taste so good? ›

The science of perfect flan lies in the fact that, unlike most custard-based dishes, it contains both egg yolks and egg whites. Egg yolks are made up of fat, protein and about 50% water. The fat in the yolk gives desserts like crème brûlée, crème caramel and flan their creamy and smooth texture.

Do you flip the flan when it's hot or cold? ›

Once fully cooled, run a knife around the edges and then place a plate onto the flan. Flip quickly and give it a quick wiggle. Remove the pan and admire your flan. Pour any leftover caramel from the pan on top of it.

How does the caramel in flan stay liquid? ›

Sugar is hydophilic - it absorbs moisture. Some of the moisture in the custard is absorbed by the hard caramel, eventually dissolving it to the point it becomes a liquid. The process takes a while - it doesn't just happen when the flan is being baked - most of it happens during the cooling period, in the refrigerator.

How long do you let flan cool before flipping? ›

Cool fully in the refrigerator at least 2 hours, preferably overnight. When ready to serve, run a paring knife or offset spatula along the edge to loosen the flan from the dish and flip over onto a rimmed plate to catch the caramel sauce.

How jiggly should flan be out of the oven? ›

a perfectly cooked flan should be firm around the edge. and still have a little bit of a jiggle to it in the center, it'll finish setting as it cools.

Should flan be cooked covered or uncovered? ›

The water bath will give you more even cooking. Covering the flan with foil will also help with cooking. Put your dish on the center rack and let bake for 30-40 minutes, and then check every 10 minutes until the flan has a gentle jello-like movement in the center and the sides are set.

What is the American equivalent of flan? ›

Flan may refer to: Crème caramel, a custard dessert with clear caramel sauce, the most common US meaning.

Is Mexican flan the same as crème caramel? ›

In Spanish-speaking countries and often in the United States, crème caramel is known as flan. This was originally a Spanish-language usage, but the dish is now best known in North America in a Latin American context. Elsewhere, including in Britain, a flan is a type of tart somewhat like a quiche.

What is panna cotta vs flan? ›

Flan and crème brûlée use eggs, panna cotta uses gelatin and vanilla pudding and similar custards use eggs, cornstarch or flour.

What is a caramel flan called? ›

Crème caramel (French: [kʁɛm kaʁamɛl]), flan, caramel pudding, condensed milk pudding or caramel custard is a custard dessert with a layer of clear caramel sauce.

Why do Americans call crème caramel flan? ›

Flan is a popular dessert in Spain and Latin America, also known as creme caramel due to its indulgent custard base topped with delicious caramel. It's one of those delicacies that are irresistible and once you try it, you can't stop eating it.

What's the difference between caramel custard pudding and flan? ›

Caramel is also involved, but we'll get into that later. Both custard and pudding are sweet, goopy desserts made mostly from cream and then cooked. However, custard (and therefore flan) is made with eggs and sweetened milk alongside the cream, and flan itself includes caramel.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Catherine Tremblay

Last Updated:

Views: 6275

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Catherine Tremblay

Birthday: 1999-09-23

Address: Suite 461 73643 Sherril Loaf, Dickinsonland, AZ 47941-2379

Phone: +2678139151039

Job: International Administration Supervisor

Hobby: Dowsing, Snowboarding, Rowing, Beekeeping, Calligraphy, Shooting, Air sports

Introduction: My name is Catherine Tremblay, I am a precious, perfect, tasty, enthusiastic, inexpensive, vast, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.