A Warm, Sunny Earth Day Kind of Dessert: A Recipe for Lemon Curd

lemon-curd-stovetop

Happy Earth Day! (Though technically yesterday, most of Israel is celebrating today.) Celebrations require desserts, we’re quite convinced, and since the citrus season is winding down we thought we’d talk about our absolute favourite thing to do with a lemon. Not lemonade (though we’re fans of that too) but lemon curd: smooth, custardy, tangy, riding that fine, perfect line between sweet and tart.

Lemon curd can get spread over scones, smoothed over a cookie crust for lemon bars, dolloped on pancakes, or licked straight off a spoon when you’re feeling especially indulgent. It tastes, quite simply, like concentrated sunshine.

Making curd is one of those languorous kitchen tasks which gives you lots of scope for daydreaming: you need to be around, gently stirring for quite some time, but your mind is free to wander all the while. It’s also worth doing in bigger batches as it’ll keep for several weeks in the fridge, and all that stirring time will have a greater payoff if you double the recipe below. Break out a favourite batch of biscuits, and spread with some of your freshly made lemon curd for an Earth Day afternoon tea.

Lemon Curd

  • 6 large egg yolks (save the whites for egg-white omelettes, or make meringues and dip them in the curd)
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 c granulated sugar
  • 2/3 c fresh lemon juice (from about 5 lemons)
  • 1/4 c finely grated lemon zest
  • 1/2 stick (4 tbsp) unsalted butter, cut into pieces
    lemon-curd-jars

  1. In a medium-sized, scratch-proof saucepan (i.e. not teflon-coated), whisk egg yolks and eggs together until thoroughly combined. Whisk in sugar vigorously, then whisk in lemon juice and zest.
  2. Set saucepan over a medium-low heat and cook, whisking constantly but gently, for five minutes. (Make sure to scrape the sides and bottom of the pan.) Add in butter and whisk until blended, then continue whisking until the curd thickens so that it holds the marks of the whisk as you swirl it through the pan – this will take about twenty minutes total cooking time.
  3. Set a fine-mesh sieve over a large bowl and immediately pour the warm curd through the sieve, to remove all the zest and any lemon seeds or curdled egg bits. Transfer curd to small glass jars or other containers and store in the refrigerator.
Hamutal Dotan
Hamutal Dotanhttps://www.greenprophet.com/
Hamutal never planned to become obsessed with food, much less with sustainable food. It crept up on her when she wasn’t looking. At first it was pure self-defense: her parents, though well intentioned, had no idea what to do in a kitchen, and so she had to learn a bit about cooking, sheerly for the sake of her sanity. Chopping things, it turned out, was great for soothing the savage teenager. Skip ahead several years, and she’d figured out that making your own jam from local organic berries was even grander. Love of food led to love cooking, led to love of ingredients, led to love of markets, led to love of farmers, led to love of land. Hamutal is profoundly convinced that sustainability and pleasure are the best of friends, and tries to write about both of these in equal measure. She can be reached at hamutal (at) green prophet (dot) com.
13 COMMENTS
  1. This is an even simpler recipe for an excellent lemon curd. My Mother z”l made it every Pesach for many years.
    2 eggs
    2 oz butter [or margarine]
    2 oz sugar
    2 small lemons or 1 large one.
    Grate lemon rind and put into saucepan together with lemon juice, sugar and butter. Heat gently until sugar is dissolved.
    Beat the 2 eggs. Take pan off heat and quickly stir in the beaten eggs.
    Put pan back on a very low heat and keep stirring [preferably with wooden spoon] until you see a few white streaks. This means the albumin [egg white] is cooked. Immediately remove from the heat.
    Wait until it cools slightly and then pour into suitable containers.

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