First I wanted to thank everyone for the wonderful response and feedback to my four-course family meal post, I'm so happy if it can be useful to families. We're all in the same boat of wanting our kids (and ourselves while we're at it) to eat well and healthy!
I started a little herb garden of my own last year and it has been such a pleasure to go pick our fresh herbs for cooking. It's also so much easier to be able to use just the quantity you need and have it always handy (the herbs I buy at the store always seem to go bad before I can use them all...) The herb garden has been a wonderful way to get Pablo involved. He helps water them, he smells their different fragrances, even takes a bite sometimes. (I'm thinking of devising a "scent guessing game" when Pablo is a bit older, with different herbs, to get him to recognize the smells.)
The idea is to make herbs fun, interesting and familiar as early as possible. Well, this custard is certainly one way to do just that. We made it twice in one week it was so good, and so easy to make.
I hope you give it a try, and tell me what you think! And it would definitely be fun to make the same custard experimenting with different herbs.
Savory Herb Custard
Recipe inspired from the Best Of edition of the French magazine Gourmand.
For 4 custards
Prep time - 10 minutes
Cook time - 40 minutes + cooling time
Age for babies: 10 months and above, because of the whole eggs. This is a great way to expose baby to the subtle flavor of herbs.
1/2 bunch of Italian parsley
A good handful of chives
1 clove of garlic, peeled and minced
3 eggs
2/3 cup of milk
2/3 cup of heavy cream
Salt & pepper
Preheat the oven at 300° F.
Peel and mince the garlic clove. In a saucepan, pour the milk and cream, and add the garlic. Bring to a boil and remove from heat.
Wash, dry and chop finely the parsley and chives (I used a small Cuisinart to do the chopping for me).
In a bowl, beat the eggs lightly. Slowly pour the milk/cream/garlic mixture into the eggs, while whisking. Add the herbs, a pinch of salt & a dash of pepper.
Pour the custard into oven-safe ramekins or jars. Place the ramekins in a deep baking pan, and place the pan on the oven rack. Add enough hot water to the pan to come halfway up the sides of the ramekins, to cook in a water bath.
Bake about 40 minutes until center is set (see if a knife comes out clean).
Remove from the water bath, let cool and serve lukewarm or at room temperature.