Recipes>Oats Recipes

Baked Oatmeal with Caramelised Pears and Vanilla Cream

by Deb Perelman from Smitten Kitchen Every Day

Easy

makes 6 portions

A breakfast of sweet-toothed champions, Deb Perelman’s baked oats is like a fantastic cross between porridge and dessert, topped with caramelised pears and a vanilla cream.

Discover more delicious Porridge recipes

Inspired ideas for a breakfast of champions

From the book

Smitten Kitchen Every Day

Deb Perelman

Smitten Kitchen Every Day

Fuss-free recipes for delicious home cooking

Inspiration for quick midweek dinners

Stunning desserts and comforting bakes

Buy From

Introduction

This is my deep-into-winter escape from hot-cereal drudgery, a casserole-formatted, lightly luxurious baked oatmeal that I make at the start of a week and heat up one portion at a time. I really love fruit with my oatmeal, but it usually ends up falling to the convenience of dried fruit stirred in. This is better. You begin by roasting lemony pears in a bit (just a bit!) of butter, sugar, and vanilla bean seeds until the juices begin to release and self-caramelize in the pan. From here, you build a somewhat standard baked oatmeal on top, something we should thank the Amish for including in old cookbooks—but I’m actually going to thank Heidi Swanson of 101 Cookbooks for introducing this to the wider web audience. Eggs and a little bit of baking soda give the oats some cohesion and lift; the pear caramel makes it otherworldly. So does one other thing: the tiniest trickle of a sweetened vanilla cream on top. You could use milk, I suppose—but I don’t, because once I tried this at a restaurant there was no going back. It is, in one pour, a coolant, a sweetener, and something to loosen the whole bit up. If this sounds like work, keep in mind that you’re going to get six amazing breakfasts from it, a better return on investment than I get from most from scratch soups, dinners, or cakes, and—ahem, I’m just saying—none of them self-caramelize.

Tags

Ingredients

For the vanilla sugar:
125g (½ cup plus 2 tbsp)granulated sugar
½vanilla bean
For the pears:
30g (2 tbsp)unsalted butter
3pears (preferably D’Anjou or William)
For the oatmeal:
235ml (1 cup)milk
235ml (1 cup)water
30g (2 tbsp)unsalted butter
1lemon
2large eggs
1½ tspcoarse or sea salt
2 tspbaking powder
240g (3 cups)rolled oats
To finish:
235ml (1 cup)double or single cream

Method

Make the vanilla sugar

Place the sugar in a small bowl. Split the vanilla bean, scrape the seeds into the sugar, and use your fingertips to distribute the seeds throughout; the abrasion helps release more flavor. Save the pod: there’s tons more flavor to be had, and we’re going to use it.

Heat the oven to 200°C/gas 6. While it’s heating, place butter in a 9-by-13-inch or equivalent-sized baking dish in the oven to let it melt.

Prepare the pears

Finely grate the zest of half of your lemon and set it aside; you’ll use it later. Juice the whole lemon, you’ll use it now. Peel the pears, split them lengthwise, and remove cores and any thick-looking stems. Toss the pears with the lemon juice. Remove the baking dish with melted butter from the oven, and sprinkle 100 grams vanilla sugar into it. Arrange the pears, cut side down, over the sugar, and drizzle with any lemon juice left in bowl. Cover tightly with foil, and bake for 20 minutes. Then remove foil and bake another 10 minutes.

While pears are baking

Whisk the milk, water, butter, eggs, salt, and reserved zest together in a large bowl. Sprinkle the baking powder over these and stir to combine; add oats, and stir again.

Bake the oats

Use a thin spatula to turn the pears over carefully, spooning as much sauce from the pan over the pears as they will hold. Reduce heat to 180°C/gas 4. Dollop the oat mixture around the pears in the pan. Return the dish to the oven and bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until the pears are soft and the oatmeal edges are golden brown.

Meanwhile, make vanilla cream

Bring the cream, remaining vanilla sugar, and reserved empty vanilla bean pod to a simmer in a saucepan. Simmer 5 minutes, reducing to 175 ml. Chill the mixture if you prefer cold cream on your hot oatmeal (i.e., if you’re me).

To serve

Scoop one pear half and its surrounding oatmeal into a bowl, and drizzle with 1 to 2 tablespoons vanilla cream. Refrigerate leftovers until needed, up to one week, warming one portion at a time.

Reviews

Have you tried this recipe? Let us know how it went by leaving a comment below.

Cancel reply

Your review

Name *

Our team will respond to any queries as soon as we can - this may take longer over weekends. You do not need to resubmit your comment.

Please note: Moderation is enabled and may delay your comment being posted. There is no need to resubmit your comment. By posting a comment you are agreeing to the website Terms of Use .

Be the first to leave a review

Ingredients
Method

More Porridge Recipes

View all

Dr Rupy’s Overnight Protein Porridge with Cinnamon, Turmeric and Cacao

by Dr Rupy Aujla from The Doctor’s Kitchen: Healthy High Protein

by Eloise Head from Fitwaffle’s Easy Air Fryer

More Breakfast Recipes

View all

Jamie Oliver’s Pink Shredded Wheat

by Jamie Oliver from Eat Yourself Healthy

Jamie Oliver’s 5-minute Tasty Toppers

by Jamie Oliver from Eat Yourself Healthy

More Oats Recipes

View all

by Eloise Head from Fitwaffle’s Easy Air Fryer

Nadiya Hussain’s Cinnamon Bread Granola

by Nadiya Hussain from Cook Once, Eat Twice

Get our latest recipes, features, book news and ebook deals straight to your inbox every week