5 Ingredients or Fewer

Tartine Bakery's Lemon Cream

March  2, 2012
4.7
15 Ratings
Photo by James Ransom
  • Prep time 15 minutes
  • Cook time 15 minutes
  • Makes about 2 1/2 cups
Author Notes

This recipe takes the traditional lemon curd process and reverses it, not only saving time, but producing something better, smoother, and lighter in the end. Meet your new tart filling, scone spread, and trifle layer -- and the best lemon pudding you'll ever taste. Adapted very slightly from Tartine by Elisabeth Prueitt and Chad Robertson (Chronicle, 2006) —Genius Recipes

What You'll Need
Ingredients
  • 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons lemon juice (Meyer or regular)
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 large egg yolk
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1 pinch salt
  • 1 cup unsalted butter
Directions
  1. Pour water to a depth of about 2 inches into a saucepan, place over medium heat, and bring to a simmer.
  2. Combine the lemon juice, whole eggs, yolk, sugar, and salt in a stainless steel bowl that will rest securely in the rim of a saucepan over, not touching, the water. (Never let the egg yolks and sugar sit together for more than a moment without stirring; the sugar will cook the yolks and turn them granular.) Place the bowl over the saucepan and continue to whisk until the mixture becomes very thick and registers 180° F on a thermometer. This will take 10 to 12 minutes. If you don't have or trust your thermometer, don't worry. It should thicken to the point that your whisk leaves a trail through the curd.
  3. Remove the bowl from over the water and let cool to 140° F, stirring from time to time to release the heat.
  4. Meanwhile, cut butter into 1-tablespoon (15-ml) pieces. When the cream is ready, leave it in the bowl if using an immersion blender, or pour it into a countertop blender. With the blender running, add the butter 1 tablespoon at a time, blending after each addition until incorporated before adding the next piece. The cream will be pale yellow and opaque and quite thick.
  5. You can use the cream immediately, or pour it into a storage container with a tight-fitting lid and refrigerate for up to 5 days. To use after refrigeration, if necessary, gently heat in a stainless steel bowl set over simmering water until it has softened, whisking constantly.

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Bäckerin
    Bäckerin
  • Michael Rosenfeld
    Michael Rosenfeld
  • Nicole Cardoza
    Nicole Cardoza
  • J.B.
    J.B.
  • navahfrost
    navahfrost
Genius Recipes

Recipe by: Genius Recipes

52 Reviews

Heidi N. March 22, 2023
Does anyone know if this recipe would work using a sugar substitute?
 
Zoeb June 15, 2023
While I haven’t made this particular recipe, I have had great success substituting xylitol for sugar in a variety of recipes.
 
dawnlim January 21, 2022
Great recipe! Turned out delicious! Didn't have a blender of any sorts at hand, so continued using the hand whisk to manually fold the butter in. Worked fine! I kept the water simmering by the side - to use in case the butter wouldn't melt.
 
maggiesara August 6, 2021
I have made this many times, both as written and, for Passover, in a dairy-free version (using Earth Balance -- it works great). This year, for Rosh Hashanah, I'm planning to try to make an apple curd, using this recipe and subbing some wonderful apple cider vinegar, made from Gravensteins, for the lemon juice.

FWIW, in the Tarting book, this cream is a component of a lemon meringue cake that (using Alice Medrich's recipe for tiger nut-flour sponge cake, on this website) makes The Best Passover Dessert anyone has ever had.
 
Meilin L. August 14, 2020
I followed this recipe for little tarts I made and the lemon cream was AMAZING and deliciously tart. I had some leftover, which I kept in my freezer for a few months, and it defrost well. Definitely a keeper.
 
Bäckerin March 28, 2020
I made this lovely lemon cream yesterday to put in tartlets. One bit of advice if you don't have a blender on hand is to just keep the heated mixture in the stainless steel bowl & attach the bowl to a stand mixer & add the butter on about the 2nd or 4th speed. Too fast & you'll have lemon cream all over your kitchen...learn from me ;) be well & have fun.
 
Liz B. December 31, 2019
I made this with fresh orange juice and the flavor and texture were amazing (I used a couple of tablespoons less of butter but otherwise followed the recipe). Found out the hard way that cold butter is a little messy with the immersion blender, so a deeper bowl/pot is essential. It was almost enough for an 11 inch tart crust that had shrunk a bit, so I would say that you can safely fill a 9 inch tart with the amount in the recipe.
 
DC's P. December 6, 2018
This was delicious. I've made it several times serving it with raspberries. Everyone raves and there's a reason why - it's that delicious.
 
Michael R. April 6, 2017
Can you please tell me what size pie pan would fit the 2 1/2 c recipe. I plan to make this for Passover using an almond meal crust. Also can I freeze this? Please kindly address my 2 questions ASAP since the holiday is fast approaching. This sounds so unbelievably delicious! Thank you!
 
Pastraminator March 5, 2017
wow, that was fast and so easy! put a little lime juice in there, I like the extra kick, also was minus 5 tablespoons of sweet butter so used salted and forgo the salt addition. it's beautiful
 
Nicole C. August 9, 2016
This is such a great recipe. We make it often, and several batches at a time, then freeze it in small servings. Only takes a few minutes to thaw out. Thank you!
 
BJ June 18, 2016
I make a lot of Royal Icing and Gumpaste , so lots of yolks always available. Can I sub all of the whole eggs with yolk ? Should I reduce the butter ? Two Yolks = One Whole Egg ?
 
Emily January 8, 2017
I'd be interested in the answer to this, too. I always have a ton of yolks leftover from egg-white omelets.
 
J.B. February 6, 2016
Yikes - 3 years have gone by since I last posted on this subject. Each year I fashion another version of this recipe. I have the choice of using Meyer or Lisbon lemons. This year my Meyer lemons are on the wane, so to assusage that upcoming loss, I put together the Cream recipe again. Last year, I added 1 teaspoon of Neilsen & Massey Vanilla paste as an after-thought. I did it again this year. It was a nice addition, as vanilla, and lemons are some of my favorite flavors. Still Yummy!
 
Lauren February 6, 2016
I used passion fruit (lilikoi) to make this curd. It came out beautifully! I love was short on butter so improvised with half butter half coconut oil, and worked very well. I also reduced overall sugar since passion fruit is already a little sweeter than Meyer lemons.
 
navahfrost November 16, 2015
has anyone ever tried to freeze this in a prebaked tart shell? Would it thaw out in tact?
 
sevenfaces April 19, 2015
Like J.B. I made a lime version with 3 (extremely juicy) limes. It only took half an hour to come together, which I consider to be pretty much instant! I served with mascarpone cream and almond cinnamon thins. Limey and delicious.
 
Melissa R. April 13, 2015
Has anyone tried adding lavender to this??
 
Hayley March 12, 2016
YES and it's fantastic!
 
vanessaren March 2, 2021
I know this is from awhile ago, but I’d like to do the same. Did you infuse it or add the lavender directly?
 
vanessaren March 2, 2021
I know this is from awhile ago, but I’d like to do the same. Did you infuse it or add the lavender directly?
 
samanthaalison June 20, 2014
The first time I tried this, I was very tired and accidentally did 3 yolks and 1 whole egg - did NOT work. I tried it again today, though, and it was absolutely worth making twice. SOOOOO GOOD.
 
DessertByCandy February 26, 2014
Very happy with the result. I lightened it with 3/4 cup of heavy cream whipped to soft peak and used as filling for cream puffs.
 
Sherri June 10, 2014
Yum! What a great idea! I am so doing it ~ thanks for the idea!
 
KCPittsburgher November 30, 2013
Is this recipe safe for me to preserve in a jar?
 
Kristen M. December 1, 2013
With all the butter, unfortunately I don't think it would be safe.
 
KCPittsburgher December 1, 2013
i'd love to be able to give this away as a gift and make sure it could last in people's fridges for longer than five days... also need to be able to make batches before christmas, in that case, and store it until it's time to give it away. any suggestions for doing that?

i just tested it tonight, it tastes INCREDIBLE.
 
Phoebe July 11, 2013
I found that I liked it ALOT better w/out the butter...
 
Stephanie G. January 8, 2022
Me too.
 
Sheridan D. July 7, 2013
This technique is in an old Pierre Hermes pastry cookbook, (with Dorie Greenspan); you can also make orange, lime, or grapefruit curd using this method. Chef Hermes also gives the recipe for a killer crust in which to cradle the velvety curd mixture.
 
Thesebmama March 4, 2013
Topped this with sweetened creme fraiche + garnished with peppermint and violets from the garden. To die for. So good!
 
J.B. February 18, 2013
CR:
Ordinary supermarket butter contains (4 sticks). One (1) stick weighs 1/2 cup, (113 grams), (8) Tablespoons; so for the recipe as it is written, use (2) STICKS to equal ONE (1) CUP. The metric measurement in volume is 229.5 grams. Good luck!
 
ChezRocio February 18, 2013
What is the weight measurement for 1 cup of butter? Thanks.

 
Skinny B. January 24, 2013
Does anyone happen to know what size pie crust/ shell can fit this 2 1/2 cups of luscious, lemony filling?
 
debplusthree November 11, 2012
This is the most delicious, addictive, silky & lemony concoction ever... On a piece of homemade Tartine bread? Oh my. Thank you!
 
Miss_Karen November 17, 2019
What is tartine bread? Would you care to share that recipe?
 
debplusthree November 17, 2019
https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1016277-tartines-country-bread

Google Chad Robertson, Tartine Bakery, he has a phenomenal bakery and a beautiful cookbook as well. I have even found a video on YouTube showing him baking bread. It’s definitely worth the effort!
 
Megan G. May 19, 2012
Oh my! Amazing. I cut the butter to half, not so much because I am anti-fat, but because I am not a huge butter fan, and it is absolutely amazing and wonderful. I used regular lemons, and it's great. Can't wait to try meyer. I am serving with ginger snaps at a graduation party later today!
 
Melissa W. April 24, 2012
Absolute lemony perfection. I wish it weren't so good--I could happily eat the entire batch!
 
Melissa W. April 24, 2012
Absolute lemony perfection. I wish it weren't so good--I could happily eat the entire batch!
 
Can I. April 9, 2012
I made this for an Easter pie with a crumb crust made of Trader Joe's triple ginger snaps. So, so good. I will be making this cream often and dreaming about it when I'm not.
 
Kitchen B. March 25, 2012
Made this with a combination of lemon and orange juice - no Meyer lemons in Nigeria! Love it.....the ease and smoothness of the finished curd is wonderful
 
J.B. March 16, 2012
Attention Emma Quick - Oh yum! My version was constructed using an abundance of limes. The recipe used 4-1/2 limes. No pie for us; poured the custard into small custard cups right from the blender, and into the fridge, for serving with either strawberries or creme fraiche! Photo to come...
 
Helenegordon March 16, 2012
This was perfect in a graham cracker pie shell--big hit at neighborhood party last weekend.
 
Literary E. March 13, 2012
Oh, this is a dream of a recipe - easy, subtle, beautiful.
 
thehulk March 11, 2012
that was SO easy! unfortunately (for my waistline), i can't find the right size jar so i'm just eating it directly from the blender while i look around. thank you for this great recipe!
 
ejm March 10, 2012
oh boy - just made this and about to make the tart shell - hope the curd lasts long enough to make it into the tart - soooooo gooooood. Thanks for searching these great recipes out, I really look forward to making every one of them and am never disappointed!
 
soupandsong March 6, 2012
A few friends and I made this recipe together over the weekend, and it lives up to its genius accolade! Love love love it!!
 
Emmalator March 5, 2012
What about using another type of citrus fruit?
 
fitsxarts March 4, 2012
this is outstanding. regular curd doesn't even come close. thank you!
 
marieeve March 4, 2012
OMG! I had a bunch of meyer lemons left over and was looking for a way to use them up nicely...well, this is it! I just made this planning to serve it up as a pudding toped with a white chocolate cream. But after tasting this curd, I'm thinking forget the cream, this in itself is all a girl needs to finish Sunday dinner. I want to drink it! Thank you for sharing this simple yet delciously addictive recipe.
 
Michael R. April 6, 2017
Can you please tell me what size pie pan would fit the 2 1/2 c recipe. I plan to make this for Passover using an almond meal crust. Also can I freeze this? Please kindly address my 2 questions ASAP since the holiday is fast approaching. This sounds so unbelievably delicious! Thank you!