Clafoutis // noun, super French, [klah-foo-tee]: An almost breakfast-y tart kind of dessert thatโs eggy, custardy, fruit-studded, and somehow cake-like in structure and substance. Best enjoyed warm, with soft whipped cream, powdered sugar, and your third cup of coffee for the morning. Fruit is essential. Cherries are traditional. Cranberries are happening.
See also: firm but still really good flan. See also: really eggy cake. See also: Stop making poor comparisons when French breakfast dessert is what is, aka DELICIOUS.
Did that get weird? (Rhetorical.)
Weโre making a French, custardy, I-want-to-call-it-breakfast-cake with fresh cranberries because tis the season. Hereโs where we start!
First letโs flavor our sugar. Why not?
When recipes have just a few simple ingredients, itโs important to pull out a few of our baking tricks. This one: rubbing fresh orange zest into granulated sugar to maximize flavor and aroma.
Eggs are beaten into the orange sugar. Structure and custard. Thatโs where weโre going with this!
Flour into the sweet, eggy mixture.
Weโre not using baking soda or baking powder. Weโre relying on the power of eggs to give us body and lift.
Half-and-half is whisked into the mixture, creating a loose, pancake-like batter. Sweet and lovely and ready for baking.
Our pie dish is brushed generously with butter and filled with fresh cranberries (whole and chopped).
Our clafoutis batter is poured over the cranberries, and the tart is ready to bake!
After 30 minutes in the oven, weโve got a slightly puffed, just golden brown, cranberry-busting, eggy tart.
Thereโs no time to waste. This tart is best served warm!
Dusted with powdered sugar and served with sweetened whipped cream and coffee.
The texture of this tart is in between custard and cake. Some might call it rubbery, but thatโs unkind (though just slightly accurate). I love its unique texture, especially when warm and the tart cranberries add the perfect burst of Fall flavor.
PrintCranberry Orange and Cream Clafoutis
- Author: Joy the Baker
- Prep Time: 15
- Cook Time: 30
- Total Time: 45
- Yield: 1 1x
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
- 1 cup granulated sugar, divided
- 1 teaspoon fresh orange zest
- 2 large eggs
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- scant 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 1/4 cup half-and-half or whole milk
- 2 cups cranberries (1 cup whole, 1 cup coarsely chopped)
- powdered sugar and whipped cream for topping
Instructions
- Place a rack in the center of the oven and preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Grease a 9 or 10-inch pie plate with butter and add two tablespoons of sugar.
- Tilt the pie plate around so that the sugar coats all of the butter on the bottom and up the sides of the pie dish. Set aside.
- In a medium bowl, combine remaining sugar and orange zest. Use the back of a spoon to work the zest into the sugar, creating a fragrant, orange-tinted sugar.
- Whisk in the eggs until thoroughly combined and slightly thickened. Add the flour and salt and whisk to combine. Lastly, add the half-and-half (or milk, if using) and carefully whisk to combine.
- Add the cranberries (whole and chopped) to the prepared baking dish. Top with milky mixture. Bake for 30 minutes, or until puffed and just lightly golden brown.
- Remove from the oven and allow to cool for 10 minutes before serving warm dusted with powdered sugar and dolloped with whipped cream.
- I like this tart best, warm, the day it is made.
Nutrition
- Serving Size: 6
30 Responses
LOVED the flavour. Iโm a huge fan of cranberries, so I thought this was amazing. I think I over baked (doing too many things at once) and next time I might go back to Julia Childโs recipe and use just half a cup of flour.
I have made this several times and it is SO good! The christmas flavors are fantastic and it is very easy to make. Thanks Joy!
Joy, I made this this evening and it was amazing. Like a warm chocolate orange, the unsweetened whipped cream was the perfect addition to balance it out, thank you!!
I asked my fiance to make this for my birthday, and he totally rocked it! This was delicious.
I never had clatoufisโฆnever heard of it either but it looks absolutely amazing!! Maybe Iโll make this one for christmas :)
I made this last night when we had friends over for dinner. Everyone loved it! And I just had a piece for breakfast with coffee. SOOOOO GOOD! We live in Hawaii and one of my friends (who had never had clafoutis before) remarked that the texture is similar to mochi, a common dessert treat here in the Islands. I agree. Thanks for another winning recipe, Joy!
That looks gorgeous. I love sweets that are half-dessert, half-breakfast. That way you can eat it for dessert and feel virtuous, or eat it for breakfast and feel indulgent.
Looks super duper delicious!!!!!
-sara
https://almostpaleokitchen.blogspot.com/
I tried clafoutis last summer with cherries and it was complete stodge. Hoping for more success this year!
This is so dang dreamy. And creative. This is exactly how I want to eat all my cranberries!
This looks so pretty! I live for cranberries this time of year. Also the pronunciation guide was very useful, I realized Iโve been saying clafoutis wrong all this time, ha ha.
Hello. Can this be made with other than cranberries?
Iโm not sure, Iโve never tested it with cranberries. But if you do, let me know how it turns out!
Umm! Delicious!!
Joy, have you ever tried Julia Childโs recipe for clafoutis? It has some marked differences in preparation (use of blender) and baking (two stages). I wonder how the end products compare. https://www.food.com/recipe/julia-childs-cherry-clafouti-239454
Alissa, I make Julia Childโs recipeโฆworks every time. More eggs, less sugar and flour. I just have to make sure to get all the moisture out of any fruit that I use frozen or is particularly prone to juices baking out, otherwise the custard wonโt set properly. Just had a sour cherry one with yogurt for breakfastโฆwith only 1/3 cup of sugar in the whole thing, I donโt really feel like it was an unhealthy breakfast!
Oh my gosh, I love this!!! One of my favorite desserts growing up (and still is) is a blueberry clafoutis that my Mom makes. I didnโt even know cherries were the traditional fruit in a clafoutis until much, much later. This is going on the to bake right now list!
Have you tried Nantucket Cranbery Pie? Looks similar, but more cake-like, and fewer steps.
Since lots or loft isnโt the point here, wondering if another kind of flour (non-wheat) might work.
What do you think, Joy?
yum! Joy, do you think I could use frozen cranberries if I made this off-season?
Thanks!
I donโt even know how to pronounce clafoutis! So the help was very much appreciated. Itโs like when I try to pronounce gefilte fish and it just goes terribly wrong. Gotta get these words right! Those cranberries look yummy!
haha, I love your clafouti description and comparison!
I wish I had this for breakfast today, yesterday and could have it every day after.
yum! I love the use of cranberries. Have always wanted to make this but shied away from cherries! Thanks, Joy!
Thanks, Joy; the dish sounds delicious and the photos are gorgeous.
OMG, I love cranberries, I love clafoutis, and I love you!
Thanks!!!
I thought I had my Thanksgiving menu all planned out, then this came into my life. Thanks for messing up (a.k.a. improving) my holiday baking plans, Joy! :)
This looks amazing. I love clafoutis, Iโve made it with all kinds of fruits but I never considered the cranberry-orange variation. Iโm tempted to try this, maybe with fresh squeezed OJ added to whole milk instead of using cream.. (orange buttermilk? lol)
Fresh cranberries and orange is the first sign that winter is here for me. And itโs a welcome one at that! Beautiful creation.
First of all, it looks beautiful! I just have one question: could you put the degree in Celsius as well? It could be useful for us Europeans =)
anyway: congratulations!!!
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