Recipes: Clafoutis and Sally Lunn (2024)

This is prime recipe sharing season! It’s probably when we’re thinking about cooking and baking more than any other time of the year. I really appreciate that Thanksgiving is one holiday where commercialism seems to have less of an impact. Tradition has it that lots of people are doing their own cooking and making family recipes, and with food as the focus of this occasion there is less purchasing of other “stuff.” No gifts, costumes, or elaborate paraphernalia. Decorations are minimal. Perhaps the pilgrim salt and pepper shakers from Grandma, or the turkey placemats the kids made in school, but for most, it seems, Thanksgiving is about the food–and I, for one, appreciate that about this holiday.

Most of us will have some of our own traditional dishes to prepare–or maybe the entire meal is prescribed by precedent. My mother’s Thanksgiving meal was the same every year, item by item–from the broccoli casserole and her cornmeal stuffing and the Ocean Spray cranberry sauce, to the sweet potato souffle, placed in orange rinds that were cut with pinking shears, and topped with marshmallows broiled to golden brown perfection. And let me tell you that every one of those dishes was anticipated with delight, and every bite cherished for its place in the tableau of the family holiday. God forbid that any one of those recipes was varied or changed in the slightest.

The Thanksgiving recipe I’m sharing with you this month, however, is one from the family I married into 40 years ago. This Sally Lunn Bread is a favorite at Thanksgiving, and this one is straight from the recipe box gifted to us years ago by my mother-in-law, Dorothy. It’s a yeast bread, very slightly sweet and eggy, something like a brioche–just right for a holiday meal. The family tradition is to bake it in a bundt pan, so it’s a lovely addition to the table as well.

And because I’m celebrating a good year for my pear tree, I’m sharing another recipe that comes from our friend Kate Hill, the American chef who has lived in the Gascony region of France for the past thirty years. You can hear her story on Episode #55 of The Good Dirt (add link) –and you might remember that I shared her tomato tart in August. Anyway, this recipe is a clafoutis, or a French custard cake with fruit. You can make it with all different kinds of fruits, but the pears were SO good this year, such a nice texture and SO juicy, that I wanted to do something a little bit special with them.

Sally Lunn Bread

Ingredients

  • 1 pkg active dry yeast
  • ¼ cup sugar
  • ¼ cup warm water (not hot)
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 cup warm milk
  • 4-⅓ cups sifted flour
  • ½ cup shortening
  • 1-¼ tsp salt

Instructions

  1. Dissolve yeast in warm water; add warm milk and set aside.
  2. Cream shortening and sugar.
  3. Add eggs and mix well.
  4. Sift flour and salt and add to shortening mixture alternately with yeast mixture.
  5. Knead lightly and let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk.
  6. Punch down, knead lightly again and put into a well greased bundt cake pan.
  7. Let rise for about 1 hour. Bake at 300 degrees for 1 hour.

Note: a 9-inch angel food pan or a 10-inch ring mold work as well

Recipes: Clafoutis and Sally Lunn (1)

Clafoutis aux Fruits: custard-cake with fruit

From Kate Hill

Subscribe to The Camont Journals with Kate Hill here

Both custard and cake, this eggy dessert is a favorite in France, especially throughout the Gascon countryside. In the north of France, clafoutis is made with cherries in season, pears, or other fruit. But in Gascony, where succulent preserved plums abound year-round, the jam-like texture of slow-baked prunes steeped in Armagnac adds a chewy richness to this homey dessert. In mid-summer, I’ll choose ripe apricots over prunes.

Ingredients

Serves 4-6

  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 1/2 lb (225 g) soft pitted prunes, or other ripe fruit (plums, cherries, figs, peaches, apricots)
  • 1/4 cup (2 fl oz/60 ml) Armagnac, rum or brandy
  • 5 tablespoons flour
  • 5 tablespoons sugar
  • 5 eggs
  • 3 cups (24 fl oz/720 ml) milk

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Butter a shallow one and a 1/2-quart baking dish and powder with sugar or flour.
  2. Prepare fruit—halve, remove pits, peel as necessary, and sprinkle with the armagnac, brandy, or rum.
  3. In a large bowl, mix the flour and sugar. Beat the eggs in another bowl. Pour the beaten eggs into the flour and sugar and, with a whisk, add the milk little by little until all is well mixed.
  4. Arrange the ripe fruit in the pan in an even layer. Pour any leftover Armagnac into the batter and mix.
  5. Pour the batter carefully around and over the fruit without disturbing them.
  6. Bake for 35-45 minutes or until just set. A knife inserted in the center of the pan comes out clean. Cool completely and serve from the pan or unmold on a serving platter. This will be just as delicious served the next day as the fruit continues to perfume the “cake.”
Recipes: Clafoutis and Sally Lunn (2024)

FAQs

Should clafoutis be served hot or cold? ›

Serving: The clafoutis can be served warm, at room temperature, or cold. It's traditionally not served with any accompaniment. Storage: The Clafoutis can be made up to one day in advance, and refrigerated overnight.

How do you know when clafoutis is cooked? ›

How Do I Know When My Clafoutis Is Done Baking? Once your clafoutis has turned golden brown on the top, you can test for its doneness. Insert a toothpick in the middle of the clafoutis, avoiding any cherries. If it comes out clean, you can take it out of the oven.

How do you eat clafoutis? ›

Clafoutis is not traditionally served with any accompaniment, but a dollop of vanilla ice cream, lightly sweetened whipped cream, or crème fraîche certainly wouldn't hurt.

What does clafoutis taste like? ›

How does clafoutis taste? Clafoutis has the texture of an oven-baked pancaked. It is sweet, but not terribly so, and the chunks of fresh fruit are enjoyable to the palate.

Why is clafoutis rubbery? ›

The eggs give the clafouti its lift as well as adding richness in both the ure and flavor. I tested two, three and four eggs and settled on three large. If I used fewer eggs the clafouti was limp and wet and more eggs made it rubbery.

What is Julia Child's best dessert? ›

Julia Child's timeless desserts - Charlotte Malakoff, Crêpes Suzette, and Chocolate Mousse - are a testament to the elegance and sophistication of French cuisine. Each dessert offers a unique and delightful experience, combining classic techniques with high-quality ingredients to create memorable flavors.

What is the difference between clafoutis and cobbler? ›

Clafoutis Offers A Different Texture Than Cobbler

Such a distinct balance creates a uniquely textured dessert, somewhere between cake and crème brûlée. And while the fruit filling is generous, it's not the majority of the texture, like in a cobbler.

Why is it called clafoutis? ›

Clafoutis originated in a region in south-central France called Limousin. Its name comes from the Occitan word “clafir,” meaning “to fill.” So popular was it “to fill” a dish with fruit and batter, that by the 19th century, clafoutis' renown had spread from Limousin to other regions of France and bordering countries.

When should I eat clafoutis? ›

A cherry clafoutis is never served hot, straight out of the oven. First leave to cool and either serve slightly warmed, at room temperature or chilled. Serve slices directly from the dish. Although served for dessert or teatime, we also love this chilled for breakfast or brunch on the weekends.

What is a clafoutis in English? ›

: a dessert consisting of a layer of fruit (such as cherries) topped with batter and baked.

What is clafoutis in French? ›

One reported derivation of dish's name is from Occitan clafotís, from the verb clafir, meaning "to fill" (implied: "the batter with cherries"). Another reported derivation is that clafir comes from old French claufir, meaning "to fix with nails," explained as the cherries having the appearance of nail heads.

Why is my clafoutis runny? ›

It'll be moist, but the center shouldn't be liquid or runny. Too much fruit can cause runny clafoutis, so if the center of your clafoutis is uncooked after baking, you may want to use less fruit in the future.

What is Yorkshire pudding taste like? ›

The upper rims may be persuasively airy, light and crisp, but the bottoms of these Yorkies are so thick and galumphing (around 0.5cm), so sweet and eggy that it is more like biting into a brioche or a croissant than a Yorkshire pudding. They taste like something you should fill with egg custard, rather than gravy.

What desserts can be served both hot or cold? ›

Tag Archives: Hot & cold desserts
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Should Yorkshire pudding be served hot? ›

Yorkshire Pudding are best served straight from the oven, as they will start to deflate as they cool.

Is flan best served cold or warm? ›

It's great served warm or cold and has a delicate creamy texture like custard. Slice the flan and spoon a little of the melted sugar onto the top of each slice.

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