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Creme eggs

Updated: Mon, 26 February, 2024

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Creme Eggs, disgustingly nice and sickly sweet - Easter wouldn't be right without them! Shall we make our own creme eggs at home, just like Cadbury's only better?

mini creme eggs cuisinefiend.com

The amount of sugar one Cadbury Creme Egg contains is truly terrifying; thankfully Easter only comes round once a year. I can smugly say a whole full-size Cadbury Egg defeats me so I only ever go for the mini ones. Okay – three at a time…

Making them at home sadly won’t reduce the sugar content much but it sure will be more fun for the little ones than going to the supermarket. Isn’t it a Good Way of spending Good Friday?

Creme egg filling, white and yolk

Starting with the filling, yeah, you guessed: it is basically icing sugar mixed with some butter but I got the idea of adding corn syrup for extra gooeyness from Instructables. As it's mainly sugar, it will keep for a long time and there's no need to store the eggs in the fridge.

filling for creme eggs cuisinefiend.com

Melting chocolate is no rocket science but it does look pleasing if it is shiny and glossy rather than dull. The secret to achieve that is tempering. And although it sounds like a seriously challenging industrial process, it is easy.

What is tempering chocolate about?

Tempering chocolate means melting it with heat and then adding some more solid chocolate to cool the whole thing down. The melting process is completed by stirring at room temperature.

A simple variation of that is melting chocolate with heat only partly, so that some solids remain and proceed as above. Either way, surprisingly, the liquid chocolate ready to work with and well-tempered will be not warmer than 30-33C. NB: that's for milk and dark chocolate, white is tempered at 28-29C.

Tempering chocolate: the proper way

Accordingly, the way to achieve that is by placing a bowl with about three-quarters of the whole amount of chocolate you need to melt, over a pan with barely simmering water so the bowl is not touching the water (contraption known as bain-marie).

Let the chocolate melt organically in the bowl without stirring. When almost all of it melts, take the bowl off the heat, add the remaining quarter and stir with a spoon for about 5 minutes, until smooth and cooled down to 30-33C; barely more than body temperature. Chocolate tempered like that needs to be used immediately.

Professional chocolatiers use a three-step process actually: as described but cooling the mix down another two or three degrees, to next warm it up gently again by those 2 or 3 degrees on bain-marie. I find the two steps work well enough for fancy truffles, and for creme eggs I'd actually recommend the quick hack, as follows.

tempered chocolate and buttercream filled creme eggs cuisinefiend.com

Tempering chocolate: the easy way

The simpler variation calls simply for a microwave. This time the whole quantity of chocolate is in a non-metallic bowl, microwaved in bursts of 15-20 seconds at full power, to be stopped and stirred after each burst. When only a few small chunks remain solid, stir it until smooth and wholly dissolved.

tempered chocolate cuisinefiend.com

All creme eggs in one basket!

The process of coating the egg moulds needs to be done in layers, chilling the mould in the fridge for ten minutes or so after each layer. The filling is easy but the tricky part is how to stick the halves together without melting the chocolate through touching and pressing.

Painting a thin layer of liquid chocolate with a small brush around the edge is one method, dipping a knife in boiling water to soften edges and stick them together is another. And when you get tired of the fiddly stuff, simply make some solid eggs or halves, decorated with sprinkles. Happy Easter!

filled creme eggs cuisinefiend.com

More chocolate confection recipes

Marzipan and shortbread biscuit chocolate coated bars, made from scratch. Like Twix, only better; like Ritter Sport’s all best bars combined into one.

Triple chocolate profiteroles, made with choux pastry filled with Chantilly and chocolate mousse, glazed with white and dark chocolate sauce.

White chocolate kladdkaka recipe - ‘sticky cake’ in literal translation. Kladdkaka is a Swedish sticky chocolate cake, made with white, dark or milk chocolate.

More Easter recipes

Best hot cross buns ever: wholemeal, with tons of raisins, piped crosses and delicious sticky honey glaze. There’s no better spring breakfast than a buttered hot cross bun.

Simnel cake with icing and a marzipan layer inside. Traditional English mothering Sunday Simnel cake, a sponge rich with fruit, it is also often baked for Easter.

Leg of lamb can be slow roasted but this is the recipe for a leg of lamb on the bone cooked medium. Roasting time: 15 minutes per pound on top of initial 10 at high temperature.

homemade creme eggs cuisinefiend.com



Creme eggs

Servings: a dozen mini eggsTime: 1 hour

INGREDIENTS

  • 300g (1½ cups) milk chocolate chips or broken up pieces
  • For the filling:
  • 20g (1 heaping tbsp) butter
  • 60g (4 tbsp) light corn syrup
  • ½ tsp vanilla extract
  • 100g (¾ cup) icing sugar
  • yellow food colouring


METHOD

1. You will need a plastic Easter egg mould for small/mini eggs. Chocolate should be tempered to make it smooth, shiny and snappy but for a quick and easy hack use a microwave.

2. How to temper chocolate: place most of the chips or broken chocolate pieces in a bowl over bain-marie or a saucepan with a little simmering water; make sure the bowl doesn’t touch the water. Keep it on minimum heat without stirring, until the chocolate is almost melted. Add the remaining chocolate and stir it in with a spoon; keep stirring for at least 5 minutes, or until the temperature of the chocolate goes down to 30 - 33C. Use immediately.

3. Quick hack for melting chocolate: place it in a bowl and microwave for 1 – 2 minutes at low power (600-450W) or until it visibly softens but does not melt entirely. Remove it from the microwave and stir with a spoon until smooth. Use immediately.

4. Make the chocolate shells by brushing chocolate in at least two layers over the moulds, refrigerating for 10 minutes after each layer. If the chocolate starts to set, zap it in the microwave for a few seconds or keep it on the bain-marie.

5. To make the filling, melt the butter with the corn syrup over the bain-marie or in a microwave. Add the vanilla and beat in the icing sugar until smooth. Remove a third into a separate bowl and stir in the yellow food colouring.

6. When the shells are set, spoon a blob of the white and a drop of the yellow filling into each half and refrigerate for 15 minutes. Pop the halves out of the mould when set.

7. Working quickly in order not to melt the eggs by touch, dot a little chocolate over the edges and meld the halves together. Alternatively press a knife heated in boiling water against the edges and join the halves.

8. You can make solid eggs in the same way by filling up the moulds. Add some sprinkles to the moulds for decoration.  

Originally published: Fri, 19 April, 2019


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Hello! I'm Anna Gaze, the Cuisine Fiend. Welcome to my recipe collection.

I have lots of recipes for you to choose from: healthy or indulgent, easy or more challenging, quick or involved - but always tasty.


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