Hojicha Purin
Hojicha Purin is a silky, gently set Japanese pudding infused with the warm, roasted aroma of hojicha tea. Topped with glossy brown sugar syrup and a little cream, it tastes mellow, nutty, and lightly caramelized with an elegant finish.
Ingredients
Hojicha custard base
- 160 mlwhole milk
- 120 mlheavy cream
- 8 ghojicha leaves
- 2 largeegg yolks
- 35 gcaster sugar
- 4 gpowdered gelatin
- 20 mlcold water
- 1 pinchfine sea salt
Brown sugar syrup
- 30 gdark brown sugar
- 20 mlwater
- 10 mlhot water
To finish
- 30 glightly whipped cream
- 1 ghojicha powder or finely crushed hojicha leaves
Instructions
- 1
Prepare 2 serving cups or ramekins, each about 150-180 ml capacity. Put the powdered gelatin in a small bowl with the cold water and let it bloom for 5 minutes while you start the custard. This ensures it dissolves smoothly without graininess.
- 2
In a small saucepan, combine the whole milk, heavy cream, hojicha leaves, and a pinch of fine sea salt. Heat over medium-low just until steaming, about 75-80 C; do not boil or the tea can turn harsh. Turn off the heat, cover, and steep for 5 minutes for a deep roasted flavor.
- 3
Meanwhile, whisk the egg yolks and caster sugar in a heatproof bowl until the sugar is mostly dissolved and the mixture looks slightly lighter. You do not need to whip in much air; too much foam can spoil the silky texture.
- 4
Strain the hot hojicha cream mixture through a fine sieve into a jug, pressing lightly on the leaves, then gradually whisk it into the yolk mixture. Return everything to the saucepan and cook over low heat, stirring constantly with a spatula, until the custard lightly thickens and reaches about 80-82 C. It should coat the back of the spatula; do not let it boil or the yolks may scramble.
- 5
Remove the custard from the heat. Add the bloomed gelatin and stir until fully dissolved, then strain once more for the smoothest finish. Divide the mixture between the 2 cups. Let stand 10 minutes at room temperature so steam can escape, then chill until set, about 2 hours. The pudding should wobble gently but hold its shape.
- 6
For the brown sugar syrup, place the dark brown sugar and water in a very small saucepan. Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat and cook for 1-2 minutes until slightly thickened and glossy. Stir in the hot water to loosen it to a pourable consistency, then cool to room temperature.
- 7
Just before serving, spoon or drizzle the brown sugar syrup over each chilled pudding. Finish with lightly whipped cream and a light dusting of hojicha powder or finely crushed hojicha leaves. Serve well chilled.
Nutrition per serving
Notes
- •For the cleanest hojicha flavor, use loose-leaf hojicha rather than tea bags.
- •If you want a firmer, unmoldable purin, increase powdered gelatin to 5 g.
- •A quick chill in an ice bath for 10-15 minutes before refrigerating helps reduce total setting time.
- •This dessert is best eaten the day it is made, though it keeps covered in the refrigerator for up to 2 days.
Background
Purin in Japan developed from Western-style custards and puddings, then evolved into many local cafe and kissaten variations. Hojicha, a roasted green tea prized for its nutty, toasty aroma, is a modern favorite in Japanese desserts because its low bitterness pairs especially well with dairy and caramel-like sugars.
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