Dulce de leche recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (2024)

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Sweet fritters with dulce de leche ice cream

  • Vegetarianv

Dulce de leche recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (2)

  • Vegetarianv

“Go on, take a mouthful, and just try not to say mmm… Dulce de leche never sets really hard – it’s smooth, creamy and complements the hot, crunchy fritters. This recipe makes 300ml of dulce de leche and 1 litre of ice cream – you can make these in advance. You won’t use all the dulce de leche so keep the leftovers. ”

Serves 8-10

Cooks In2 hours plus freezing

DifficultyShowing off

Jamie MagazineDinner PartyDesserts

Nutrition per serving
  • Calories 285 14%

  • Fat 14.4g 21%

  • Saturates 6.3g 32%

  • Sugars 20.9g 23%

  • Protein 5.7g 11%

  • Carbs 35.4g 14%

Of an adult's reference intake

Dulce de leche recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (3)

Recipe From

Jamie Magazine

By Cara Hobday

Tap For Method

Ingredients

  • DULCE DE LECHE
  • ¼ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
  • 500 ml goat's milk
  • 500 ml cow's milk
  • 200 g caster sugar
  • 1 stick of cinnamon
  • ICE CREAM
  • 1 vanilla pod
  • 500 ml single cream
  • 2 large free-range egg yolks
  • 50 g caster sugar
  • 200 g dulche de leche
  • SWEET FRITTERS
  • 3 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 50 g caster sugar
  • 20 g icing sugar
  • 1 large free-range egg
  • 150 g plain flour
  • 100 ml whole milk
  • 1 tesapoon baking powder
  • sunflower oil

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The cost per serving below is generated by Whisk.com and is based on costs in individual supermarkets. For more information about how we calculate costs per serving read our FAQS

Dulce de leche recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (4)

Recipe From

Jamie Magazine

By Cara Hobday

Tap For Ingredients

Method

  1. For the dulce de leche, dissolve the bicarbonate of soda in 2 teaspoons of water and set aside.
  2. In a large pan, combine both of the milks, the sugar and the cinnamon stick and place it over a medium heat. Simmer for 10 minutes, or until the surface is shimmering and the liquid is about to boil, stirring often.
  3. Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the bicarbonate of soda mixture. The milk will froth up, but return the pan to the heat and keep it briskly simmering, stirring often. This stage needs careful attention – stir to keep it from catching on the bottom, but do not reduce the heat too much.
  4. Keep it simmering for about 1 hour – put a timer on for every 10 minutes and keep checking it. Before long it will turn golden brown and thicken. From this point, check it every 5 minutes, stirring well as it can catch quickly. It will deepen in colour and form a syrupy consistency. Cook until it becomes a rich, deep coppery brown, syrupy thick and sweet.
  5. Let it cool a little, then pour into a sterilised jar. Store in the fridge and warm it a little when you want to use it.
  6. Make your ice cream. Have a basin of iced water standing by, then halve the vanilla pod lengthways and scrape out the seeds.
  7. Heat the cream and vanilla seeds in a pan over a medium heat until the surface just shimmers and the liquid is about to simmer, then remove from the heat.
  8. Meanwhile, in a bowl, whisk together the egg yolks and caster sugar, stir in a little of the vanilla cream, then add the remaining cream.
  9. Return the mixture to the pan and stir it over a low heat until thickened and the custard coats the back of a spoon.
  10. Remove from the heat and set over the iced water to cool. This mixture can be made a day ahead and stored in the fridge.
  11. Once the custard has cooled, fold in the dulce de leche and churn in an ice cream machine or freeze in a suitable container. If you are not using an ice cream machine, stir the ice cream after a couple of hours to break up any large ice crystals. Freeze and eat within one week.
  12. For the fritters, combine the cinnamon and caster sugar in a bowl and set aside.
  13. Sift the icing sugar into another bowl, then whisk together with the egg, flour, milk and baking powder and set aside.
  14. Fill a 10cm-deep wok or frying pan with the oil and place over a medium heat until the temperature reaches 180ºC. The oil is hot enough when a little of the batter sizzles and turns golden immediately. If it is too hot, the fritters will be too crunchy.
  15. Drop dessertspoonfuls of the mixture into the oil – they will rise and sizzle, making puffy, odd-shaped little fritters. Cook 2 to 3 at a time – don’t crowd the pan or the fritters will become soggy.
  16. Using a slotted spoon, constantly turn the fritters over in the hot oil to brown for 5 minutes. Remove and drain on kitchen paper.
  17. Roll the fritters in the cinnamon mix and serve piping hot with the dulce de leche ice cream on the side.

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Dulce de leche recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (8)

Recipe From

Jamie Magazine

By Cara Hobday

Related video

© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

Dulce de leche recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes (2024)

FAQs

Dulce de leche recipe | Jamie Oliver recipes? ›

You can make dulce de leche by cooking down milk and sugar in the stove top, with the addition of baking soda to help the reactions that occur in order to form a thick and rich dulce de leche. The results: A dark sauce, slightly gritty, thick but not pipeable.

Why add baking soda to dulce de leche? ›

You can make dulce de leche by cooking down milk and sugar in the stove top, with the addition of baking soda to help the reactions that occur in order to form a thick and rich dulce de leche. The results: A dark sauce, slightly gritty, thick but not pipeable.

How to make dulce de leche thicker? ›

Tip: To thicken stovetop dulce de leche, make a slurry of 1/2 tablespoon cornstarch with 1 1/4 teaspoons milk. Bring it to a very slow boil over medium heat, whisk this slurry into the dulce de leche, and continue to boil slowly for five minutes before removing from heat and cooling.

What's the difference between caramel and dulce de leche? ›

Caramel and dulce de leche might look and taste somewhat similar, but they are actually pretty different. While caramel is made from slowly simmering water and sugar until it caramelizes, dulce de leche is made from simmering milk and sugar super slowly until it turns into a creamy, caramelized substance.

Why isn't my dulce de leche thickening? ›

Thickness: in order to obtain a really thick dulce de leche, you have to bake it for a really long time. However, the longer you bake it, the more scorched it gets. Frosting use: if the dulce de leche is too lumpy it won't work well for frosting.

Does boiling a can of condensed milk turn into caramel? ›

Place the milk over the boiling water in the double boiler and cover with a lid. Bring it to a simmer over medium heat. Stirring occasionally, simmer for one-and-a-half to two hours, until the milk becomes thick and reaches the desired caramel color.

Is Nestle La Lechera the same as dulce de leche? ›

La Lechera Dulce de Leche Manjar (sweet milk delicacy) adds a caramelized version of classic La Lechera condensed milk. It's a beautiful thing, creamy liquid sweetness that mixes with milk or coffee and tops pancakes, ice cream, fresh fruit and pastries. Dulce contains only milk and sugar and a preservative.

Is it safe to boil a can of sweetened condensed milk? ›

Is it safe to boil my can of sweetened condensed milk to make caramel sauce? No. For safety reasons, we do not recommend heating a can of our condensed milk, opened or unopened. The current can is not designed to withstand high temperatures.

How to tell when dulce de leche is done? ›

Your dulce de leche is done when it is caramel-colored. Very carefully remove pans from the oven and cool until cool enough to handle or use tongs or a couple of spatulas to remove the smaller dish from the water so it cools more quickly. Once cool enough to handle, stir dulce de leche until smooth*. Serve and enjoy!

Why is my dulce de leche runny? ›

The longer you cook, the thicker and darker the dulce de leche will be. For a light and runny dulce de leche, cook for 2.5 hours, for a dulce de leche that is easy to pipe and holds its shape, cook for 3.5 to 4 hours.

Why is my dulce de leche foamy? ›

Note: There are several stages the milk goes through during the cooking process. When the milk first comes to a boil there is a lot of foam. Eventually the foam subsides and after about 15 minutes, you will notice that the milk turns a light beige color.

Is butterscotch and dulce de leche the same thing? ›

Butterscotch is made from cooking down brown sugar with butter, and its flavor is sweeter and softer than that of caramel. Dulce de leche is made from slowly cooking cow milk and sugar together. Dulce de leche made with goat milk is known as cajeta.

What is a fun fact about dulce de leche? ›

Its name translates from Spanish as “sweet from milk”, referring to the fact that it is made by heating sweetened milk slowly until it caramelizes. It is one of the most popular confections in South America, often spread over breakfast foods like toast or added to desserts like cakes.

Is dulce de leche Italian or Mexican? ›

Spanish dulce de leche and Portuguese doce de leite mean "sweet [made] of milk". Other names in Spanish include manjar ("delicacy"), arequipe and leche quemada ("burnt milk", a term popular in Mexico); also in Mexico and some Central American countries dulce de leche made with goat's milk is called 'cajeta'.

What does baking soda do in desserts? ›

Baking soda and baking powder are both leaveners made from a chemical called sodium bicarbonate. When sodium bicarbonate is combined with an acid, it produces a gas (carbon dioxide, C02, the same gas we exhale when we're breathing) that lifts cakes, cookies or other baked goodies while they're in the oven.

What can I use instead of baking soda in caramel? ›

Try one of these alternatives you may already have in your kitchen:
  1. The Best Baking Soda Substitute: Baking Powder.
  2. Baking Soda Substitute: Self-Rising Flour.
  3. Baking Soda Substitute: Egg Whites.
Nov 2, 2023

Why is my dulce de leche not smooth? ›

Help, my dulce de leche is lumpy!

It's not uncommon for it to seem lumpy at first, but as you whisk the lumps should disappear and it should be smooth. If you've whisked for 15 seconds and things are still lumpy, you might have burnt your dulce de leche, unfortunately (did the water level get too low?).

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