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Heavy cream Recipes

42 recipes with heavy cream for weeknights, meal prep, and quick ingredient searches. Choose by time, cuisine, and what is in your kitchen.

Strawberry Matchamisu
🇯🇵JapanMedium
Sweet Dishes

Strawberry Matchamisu

A no-bake layered dessert that swaps the espresso in tiramisu for a bowl of whisked matcha and replaces the cocoa dusting with more matcha on top. Fresh strawberries go in the cream and between the layers. It sets overnight into something silky and cool with a faint bitterness from the green tea that keeps the sweetness in check. The name is a portmanteau, and the dessert earns it.

30 min315 kcal8 serves
🌿VegetarianQuick🌾Gluten-free
4.6
Homemade Strasbourg-style Pâté en Croûte
🇫🇷FranceAdvanced
Meat Dishes

Homemade Strasbourg-style Pâté en Croûte

A home kitchen adaptation of the classic Strasbourg pâté — no foie gras, but the same principle: spiced, cognac-scented forcemeat baked inside a golden pastry crust and sliced cold.

120 min365 kcal8 serves
💪High protein
4.4
Homemade Eggnog
🇺🇸USAEasy
Beverages

Homemade Eggnog

Egg yolks cooked into a thin custard with milk, cream, nutmeg, and vanilla, then chilled until thick. Store-bought eggnog is sweet and shelf-stable; this is something different — rich from real eggs, fragrant from freshly grated nutmeg, and thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. The technique is exactly the same as making crème anglaise. If you've made that before, you already know how to make eggnog.

25 min320 kcal6 serves
🌾Gluten-free💪High proteinQuick
4.7
French Oeufs en Cocotte (Classic Baked Eggs in Ramekins)
🇫🇷FranceMedium
Breakfast and Brunch

French Oeufs en Cocotte (Classic Baked Eggs in Ramekins)

Oeufs en cocotte (literally 'eggs in a little pot' in French) is the classic French dish of eggs baked individually in ceramic ramekins on a water bath (bain-marie) with cream, often topped with cheese, herbs, or other add-ins. The result: delicately set whites and runny custardy yolks, perfect for dipping thin strips of toasted baguette known as mouillettes or soldiers. Also called shirred eggs in English-language kitchens. The dish was codified by Julia Child in 'Mastering the Art of French Cooking' (Vol 1, 1961) as one of foundational French egg techniques. Not regional — it's a pan-French home and bistro classic, served as breakfast, brunch, or light dinner. Naturally gluten-free, keto-friendly, and quick to make. Active 20 minutes. Serves 4 (one ramekin per person). Cocotte means a small casserole / ramekin in French — also slang for 'hen' and 'sweetheart', an etymology fun fact.

20 min250 kcal4 serves
🌿Vegetarian🌾Gluten-freeQuick
4.6
French Pain Perdu (Classic French Toast — The Original Lost Bread)
🇫🇷FranceMedium
Breakfast and Brunch

French Pain Perdu (Classic French Toast — The Original Lost Bread)

Pain perdu — literally 'lost bread' in French — is the classic French dish that turns stale bread into a custardy, golden treat: thick slices of day-old brioche or country bread soaked in a rich custard of eggs, milk, cream, sugar, and vanilla, then pan-fried in butter to a crisp caramelized exterior with a soft jiggly interior. This is the French original behind what Americans know as French toast. Origins go back to Ancient Rome (Apicius's 'De re coquinaria', ~25 BC, known then as pain romain), with the modern French form codified by the 17th century under King Henry IV (1589-1610), a known fan who elevated the frugal peasant dish into aristocratic territory. In France today, pain perdu is typically served as dessert or afternoon snack (goûter), not breakfast — that's an American convention. Authentic toppings are powdered sugar, fresh berries, sautéed apples with Calvados, or crème anglaise. Cinnamon and maple syrup are American additions. Active 20 minutes. Serves 4 (two slices each).

20 min450 kcal4 serves
🌿VegetarianQuick
4.5
Vichyssoise (Cold Leek and Potato Cream Soup)
🇫🇷FranceMedium
Soups

Vichyssoise (Cold Leek and Potato Cream Soup)

Vichyssoise is a cold, velvety cream soup of leeks, potatoes, and cream, served ice-cold and garnished with chopped chives. It is essentially a chilled, cream-enriched version of the French classic potage parmentier (leek and potato soup). The paradox of its origin: despite the French name and French roots, the cold version was created in America. Vichyssoise was invented in 1917 by French chef Louis Diat for the guests of the Ritz-Carlton in New York. Diat drew on the leek and potato soup his mother and grandmother had made near the town of Vichy, a spa town in central France; as a boy he and his brother would cool the hot soup with cold milk. Building a summer menu, he recreated that memory, enriched it with cream, served it ice-cold, and named it creme vichyssoise glacee. It became his most famous dish, mentioned even in his 1957 New York Times obituary, and was Julia Child's favorite soup. Two things define quality: a pale, ivory color and a silky texture. The leeks are sweated, never browned, so the soup stays cream-white; only the white and pale-green parts are used; starchy potatoes give creaminess without any flour; and the soup is puréed until silky, classically passed through a fine sieve. Because cold dulls the palate, vichyssoise must be seasoned boldly. Serve it well chilled after at least four hours in the fridge, with chives on top. About 45 minutes of active work, then chilling.

45 min320 kcal6 serves
🌾Gluten-free🌶️Spicy
4.9
Ingredients

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