Julia Child Crème Caramel is the dessert that looks like magic: silky vanilla custard unmolded onto a plate, surrounded by a pool of amber caramel that was once stuck to the bottom. It’s the French flan, the dessert that proves baking can be alchemy.
On pages 610-611 of Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Julia teaches this classic technique. Caramelize sugar in the mold, pour in vanilla custard, bake gently in a water bath, chill, and flip. The caramel that hardened on the bottom melts during baking and becomes the sauce when you unmold.
This is one of those desserts people think is difficult. It isn’t. Make the caramel. Make the custard. Bake low and slow. Wait. Unmold. Accept compliments.
I bring this to dinner parties. The moment you flip it onto the plate and the caramel pools around is pure theater.
What is crème caramel? A baked vanilla custard cooked in a caramel-lined mold. When unmolded, the caramel becomes a sauce. Also called flan in Spanish-speaking countries.
Jump to RecipeWhy You’ll Love This Recipe
- The unmolding moment: Pure kitchen drama.
- Self-saucing dessert: The caramel makes itself into sauce.
- Classic French technique: Elegant, timeless, universally loved.
- Easy to make ahead: Better after 24 hours in the fridge.
- Just six ingredients: Milk, eggs, sugar, vanilla. Simple.
Crème Caramel vs. Flan vs. Crème Brûlée
People confuse these. Here’s the difference:
| Dessert | Caramel | Serving |
|---|---|---|
| Crème Caramel | Caramel on bottom, becomes sauce | Unmolded |
| Flan | Same as crème caramel | Same (Spanish name) |
| Crème Brûlée | Sugar torched on top | Served in dish |
Crème caramel and flan are the same dessert. Crème brûlée is completely different.
Julia Child Crème Caramel Ingredients
From Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Vol. 1, Pages 610-611. Serves 8.
For the Caramel:
- 1 cup sugar
- ⅓ cup water
For the Custard:
- 2 cups whole milk
- 1 cup heavy cream
- ¾ cup sugar
- Pinch of salt
- 6 eggs (or 4 eggs plus 4 yolks for richer texture)
- 1 Tb vanilla extract
Equipment:
- 6-cup ring mold or 8 ramekins
- Heavy saucepan for caramel
- Roasting pan for water bath
- Oven mitts for hot mold

How To Make Julia Child Crème Caramel
Step 1: Make the Caramel
- Combine sugar and water: In heavy saucepan over medium-high heat.
- Swirl, don’t stir: Let it dissolve, then stop touching it.
- Cook to amber: Watch color change from clear to golden to dark amber. 5-8 minutes.
- Pour immediately into mold: Tilt to coat bottom and partway up sides. Work fast. Caramel hardens quickly.
- Set aside to cool and harden.
Step 2: Make the Custard
- Heat milk and cream: Until steaming. Don’t boil.
- Beat eggs, sugar, and salt: Just until combined. Don’t make it frothy.
- Temper the eggs: Slowly pour hot milk into eggs, whisking constantly.
- Add vanilla. Strain through fine sieve to remove any bits.
Step 3: Bake
- Preheat oven to 325°F.
- Pour custard into caramel-lined mold.
- Set in water bath: Place mold in roasting pan. Pour hot water around it, halfway up the sides.
- Bake 35-45 minutes: Until set at edges, slightly jiggly in center.
- Remove from water bath. Cool to room temperature.
Step 4: Chill and Unmold

- Refrigerate at least 4 hours. Overnight is better.
- To unmold: Run thin knife around edge. Place serving plate over mold, invert quickly. Caramel will pool around custard.
- Serve cold. The caramel is your sauce.
Recipe Tips
- Dry pan for caramel: Any water drops will cause splattering.
- Don’t stir caramel: Swirl pan instead. Stirring causes crystallization.
- Amber, not brown: Dark amber edges on bitter. Pull at right moment.
- Work fast with hot caramel: It hardens in seconds.
- Strain custard always: Removes chalazae and any cooked bits.
- Low oven temperature: 325°F prevents curdling and bubbles.
- Patience unmolding: If stuck, briefly dip bottom in hot water.
The Caramel Science
Why does hardened caramel become sauce?
During baking, moisture from the custard softens the caramel. When you unmold, it flows as liquid. This only works because the custard bakes right on top of the caramel.

Make-Ahead
This dessert improves with time:
- Best: Make 24-48 hours ahead. Flavors meld, caramel fully liquefies.
- Minimum: 4 hours chilling required.
- Unmold right before serving: Don’t unmold early or sauce runs off.
How To Store
- Refrigerator: Covered, in the mold, up to 4 days.
- After unmolding: Serve within 1 hour. Sauce runs and custard dries out.
- Cannot freeze: Texture becomes watery.
Nutrition Facts
Per serving (1/8 of recipe):
- Calories: 320 kcal
- Protein: 7g
- Total Fat: 14g
- Saturated Fat: 7g
- Carbohydrates: 42g
- Fiber: 0g
- Sugar: 40g
- Sodium: 95mg
- Cholesterol: 190mg
FAQs
Not enough baking time, or custard didn’t touch all the caramel. Bake longer next time.
Overbaked or oven too hot. Use 325°F and remove when center still jiggles.
Dark amber color, smells like caramel (not burnt). About 5-8 minutes after it starts bubbling.
Yes. Use ramekins, reduce bake time to 25-30 minutes.
Yes. Crème caramel is the French name. Flan is Spanish/Latin American.
Julia Child Crème Caramel Recipe
Course: DessertCuisine: American, FrenchDifficulty: Easy4
servings30
minutes45
minutes320
kcalThis silky Julia Child Crème Caramel is made with sugar, water, whole milk, heavy cream, fresh eggs, and vanilla extract. This recipe creates a smooth, melt-in-your-mouth custard topped with a rich, dark amber liquid caramel sauce. It is a perfect elegant dessert for a dinner party.
Ingredients
- For the Caramel:
1 cup sugar
⅓ cup water
- For the Custard:
2 cups whole milk
1 cup heavy cream
¾ cup sugar
Pinch of salt
6 eggs (or 4 eggs plus 4 yolks for richer texture)
1 Tb vanilla extract
Directions
- Step 1: Make the Caramel
- Combine sugar and water: In heavy saucepan over medium-high heat.
- Swirl, don’t stir: Let it dissolve, then stop touching it.
- Cook to amber: Watch color change from clear to golden to dark amber. 5-8 minutes.
- Pour immediately into mold: Tilt to coat bottom and partway up sides. Work fast. Caramel hardens quickly.
- Set aside to cool and harden.
- Step 2: Make the Custard
- Heat milk and cream: Until steaming. Don’t boil.
- Beat eggs, sugar, and salt: Just until combined. Don’t make it frothy.
- Temper the eggs: Slowly pour hot milk into eggs, whisking constantly.
- Add vanilla. Strain through fine sieve to remove any bits.
- Step 3: Bake
- Preheat oven to 325°F.
- Pour custard into caramel-lined mold.
- Set in water bath: Place mold in roasting pan. Pour hot water around it, halfway up the sides.
- Bake 35-45 minutes: Until set at edges, slightly jiggly in center.
- Step 4: Chill and Unmold
- Refrigerate at least 4 hours. Overnight is better.
- To unmold: Run thin knife around edge. Place serving plate over mold, invert quickly. Caramel will pool around custard.
- Serve cold. The caramel is your sauce.
Notes
- Dry pan for caramel: Any water drops will cause splattering.
- Don’t stir caramel: Swirl pan instead. Stirring causes crystallization.
- Amber, not brown: Dark amber edges on bitter. Pull at right moment.
- Work fast with hot caramel: It hardens in seconds.
- Strain custard always: Removes chalazae and any cooked bits.
- Low oven temperature: 325°F prevents curdling and bubbles.
- Patience unmolding: If stuck, briefly dip bottom in hot water.
Source: Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Vol. 1 by Julia Child, Pages 610-611
– Claire
Claire
