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CalgaryFOOD AND THE CITY

Burnt to Order: Jesse King's 3-day process for an 'outstanding' creme brle

Many chefs have a specialty they do really, really well. For Jesse King, that thing is creme brle.

King's single-servings in custom flavours now a popular alternative to traditional wedding cakes

Jesse King now makes 80 creme brles at a time in her small space at the Crossroads Market, where her company, Burnt to Order, just celebrated its 1 year anniversary. (Julie Van Rosendaal and Burnt to Order/Facebook)

Many chefs have a specialty they do really, really well. For Jesse King, that thing is cremebrle.

King grew up on Cape Breton Island, went to school in Halifax and came to Calgary in 1997 to work in community rehabilitation.

It was a high stress job, with many high-needs clients.

When she wasn't at work, she was often at home cooking.

"My husband is a musician, and we'd always have these big dinner parties," King said. "People would contact me after about making things for their events, but I never really thought it was something I could do as a job."

The Vanilla Mi Bella features drunken B.C. peaches from Chongo's Produce Market with house made Frangelico on classic crme. (Burnt to Order/Facebook)

When the stress level at work made her realize that burnout wouldn't benefit her or her clients, Kingtook a few months to travel around Central America and think about what she wanted to do next.

Her thoughts kept going back to the kitchen, and so she came home and started a personal chef service, primarily for people with complicated dietary requirements.

She then did a stint in the kitchen at Heartland Cafe in Okotoks before returning to school, taking the culinary arts program at SAIT.

"When I went I decided to just be a sponge, and go with the intention of learning everything I could possibly learn," Kingsaid.

She graduated with the Dean's Award of Excellence and became chef Roy Oh's sous chef at Anju, and then a private chef for an oil company.

When she was laid off, King took her severance package and decided to do her own thing. She was 40, and knew first hand how many hours were required in a restaurant kitchen.

"I didn't really have any money.I literally had $6,000," she said, "so I pitched a few ideas to a couple of markets, where you don't need much start-up capital, and this was the idea people were most interested in."

This vanilla bean crme is topped with macerated strawberries, micro basil and 10-year-old balsamic. (Long Trn)

100s of variations

Her idea?To focus solely on creme brle.

Although she knew how to make it, and had learned the technique at culinary school, she didn't get know how to make the creme brle she wanted to build a business on.

So Kingspent sixweeks just making creme brle, tweaking the formula to make the very best custard she could.

"I made hundreds of iterations of just the classic formula," she said. "I played with ratios of sugar, egg yolk and cream, temperatures and fat content of various creams, until I found a recipe I thought was outstanding."

In her rented commercial kitchen, it took eight conventional ovens to make 96 creme brles.

"Because I was spread out all over the kitchen, I could only go when no one else was there," she says, "so I was doing most of my cooking at 3 or 4in the morning."

King has had custom tiered platters made, and will come to torch them onsite to add an interactive, visual element as well. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

Nearly burnt through

After a few months, she realized her method wasn't scalableshe would never be able to sustainably grow her business.

"I got the chef at Smuggler's on Macleod Trail, where they have eight different types of ovens, to let me come in at the crack of dawn and test on all their ovens to see if I could get away from the traditional type of dead heat oven."

Her testing didn't work, and she thought her business was done.

And then one day she was chatting with a chef friend as he poached eggs in an immersion circulator (also known as sous vide a machine that keeps water at an even temperature to gently cook food in their own juices), and had an aha moment, realizing it may be possible to cook creme brles the same way, using it as a giant water bath with the custards sealed in their own jars.

"I borrowed his machine and made some," she said.

"It was a fail, but it was enough of a success that I realized it had potential."

She bought a couple of immersion circulators from Germany, and after working out the kinks with her 26-year-old son, Chance, figured out a consistent way for their creme brles to turn out perfectly.

The Oh Mai Mai is made with pandan coconut sweet rice "pudding", Ataulfo mango and salted coconut caramel. (Burnt to Order/Facebook)

A 3-day process

King now makes 80 creme brles at a time in her small space at the Crossroads Market, where her company, Burnt to Order just celebrated its oneyear anniversary.

It takes threedays to make her creme brles.After making the batter, she ages it for 24 hours, which makes the custard more sophisticated and complex.

They then need to becooked and cooled in such a way that a milk skin forms on top to help them get torched properly, for a perfectly crackly surface.

Kinghas seven notebooks full of flavour ideas, ranging from traditional to unique dessert combinations to cocktails, which she always finds interesting.

"Creme brle can be ruined like that," she said, snapping her fingers.

"It doesn't want fruit in it, it doesn't want acidity in it, but booze you can add liberally. When you work as a chef for a long time, there are lots of flavour combinations you're exposed to."

This week's feature at Burnt to Order is the Cake and Custard - brown butter crme, vanilla custard filled brown butter cake, white wine and crme de cassis summer fruit compote. (Burnt to Order/Facebook)

Vegan brle too

She taught herself to make suspensionsfruit compotes that are thickened in such a way that they'll support the delicate custard on top.

She can even make a vegan brle, making one out of coconut milk, coconut yogurt, and Ataulfo mango pure.

King's creme brles have become popular with couples looking for an alternative to traditional wedding cakes; many are ordering single-serving brles in custom flavours reflecting the seasons or their personal stories.

Kinghas had custom tiered platters made, and will come to torch them onsite to add an interactive, visual element as well.

"I'm lucky.I have a really loyal customer base," Kingsaid.

"Many businesses have customers;we have fans. People come in and try the brle and they see that it's something special."