Hojicha Crème Brûlée is a fantastic twist on a classic vanilla crème brûlée. Hojicha is a Japanese roasted green tea that has an almost coffee-like taste. I love using it in desserts due to its unique rich flavor, especially in this 5-ingredient dessert.

A silver spoon with custard and creme brulee sugar topping leaning against a ramekin.

I love enjoying unsweetened, simple hojicha tea and discovered it on our trip to Japan. I’ve been infusing it in desserts ever since. Hojicha Gelato is hubby’s favorite ice cream flavor, and I even made a dairy-free Hojicha Coconut Ice Cream because we love it so much.

This Hojicha Crème Brûlée is spectacular, and I can’t wait for you to try it!

How to Make This Recipe

You will need the following ingredients: heavy cream, egg yolks, hojicha teavanilla or vanilla extract, and caster sugar. (Affiliate links open in a new tab.)

Tea, yolks, vanilla, cream, and sugar on a white countertop.

You will also need the following equipment (links open in new tab):

Heat the oven to 320°F.

Slice the vanilla pod lengthwise, scrape out the seeds, and put the seeds and bean in a saucepan with the cream, OR add 1 tsp of vanilla extract. Also add the tea.

Bring to a simmer. DO NOT BOIL. Remove from heat and remove the vanilla pod. Cover and let the tea steep for 15 minutes.

A pot with a rubber spatula filled with tea and cream.

Beat the egg yolks and sugar until light and fluffy in a bowl you can use in a bain-marie (glass bowl that fits over a sauce pan filled with simmering water without shattering).

Egg yolks whisked until pale yellow with sugar.

Strain the tea out of the cream and add it to the egg yolk and sugar mixture.

Over a bain-marie, heat the cream mixture stirring constantly until it coats the back of a spoon (170°F), ~8 minutes.

A hand pouring tea and cream from a pot into a strainer lined with cheesecloth.

Then, divide the mixture between 4 ramekins. Place the ramekins in a deep roasting tin. Fill the tin half-full with boiling water. Place it in the oven and cook for 20 minutes.

Next, remove from the oven. Remove from the water to stop them from continuing to cook. Let cool to room temperature, then transfer to the refrigerator and cool overnight.

Two ramekins in a roasting pan with hot water next to four cooked creme brulee ramekins.

Before serving allow the crème to come to room temperature for 20 minutes before you brûlée the tops. This helps the sugar melt evenly as you torch the tops. 

If you have a brûlée torch, add a covered layer of fine caster sugar and shake off the excess into the next ramekin. Gently move the flame around to evenly melt the sugar.

If you do not have a torch, heat the broiler to high. Add a covered layer of icing sugar and shake off the excess into the next ramekin. Then, place under the grill. WATCH CAREFULLY! Let cool before serving.

Close up inside a ramekin filled with cracked sugar and creme brulee.

Note: Caster sugar is the sugar of choice for crème brûlée because it is fine and will melt more evenly than coarse sugar. If you do not have caster sugar, you can run granulated sugar in a food processor to break it down.

A twisted silver spoon with a bite of creme brulee and sugar leaning on a ramekin.

More Tea Infused Desserts

Tea is a wonderfully versatile dessert ingredient and works like magic in these recipes.

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Top view of creme brulee on a spoon resting on a ramekin.

Hojicha Crème Brûlée

5 from 3 votes
Print Recipe Save
Hojicha is a Japanese Roasted Green Tea that almost coffee-like in taste. I love using it in desserts, especially this Hojicha Crème Brûlée.
Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time20 minutes
Resting Time4 hours
Total Time4 hours 35 minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American, French, Japanese
Servings: 4
Calories: 424kcal

Equipment

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Slice the vanilla pod lengthwise, scrape out the seeds, and put the seeds and bean in a saucepan with the cream, OR add 1 tsp of vanilla extract. Also add the tea.
  • Bring to a simmer. DO NOT BOIL. Remove from heat and remove the vanilla pod. Cover and let the tea steep for 15 minutes.
  • Heat the oven to 320°F.
  • Beat the egg yolks and sugar until light and fluffy in a bowl you can use in a bain-marie (glass bowl that fits over a sauce pan filled with simmering water).
  • Strain the tea out of the cream and add it to the egg yolk and sugar mixture.
  • Over a bain-marie, heat the cream mixture stirring constantly until it coats the back of a spoon (170°F), ~8 minutes.
  • Divide the mixture between 4 ramekins.
  • Place the ramekins in a deep roasting tin. Fill the tin half-full with boiling water. Place it in the oven and cook 20 minutes.
  • Remove from the oven. Remove from the water to stop them from continuing to cook. Let cool to room temperature, then transfer to the refrigerator and cool a minimum of 4 hours, or overnight.
  • When ready to serve, take them out of the refrigerator 20 minutes before serving so they come to room temperature.
  • BRULEE: If you have a brûlée torch, add a covered layer of fine caster sugar and shake off the excess into the next ramekin. Gently move the flame around to evenly melt the sugar. If you do not have a torch, heat the broiler to high. Add a covered layer of icing sugar and shake off the excess into the next ramekin. Then, place under the grill. WATCH CAREFULLY! Let cool before serving.

Notes

Before serving allow the crème to come to room temperature for 20 minutes before you brûlée the tops. This helps the sugar melt evenly as you torch the tops. 
Caster sugar is the sugar of choice for crème brûlée because it is fine and will melt more evenly than coarse sugar. If you do not have caster sugar, you can run granulated sugar in a food processor to break it down.

Nutrition

Calories: 424kcal | Carbohydrates: 10g | Protein: 6g | Fat: 41g | Saturated Fat: 24g | Cholesterol: 373mg | Sodium: 46mg | Potassium: 95mg | Sugar: 6g | Vitamin A: 1703IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 93mg | Iron: 1mg
Did you try this recipe?I’d love to hear what you think! Leave a Review to let us know how it came out, if you have a successful substitution or variation, or anything else.

2 Comments

5 from 3 votes (2 ratings without comment)

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