Stove Top Clotted Cream Recipe | Easy recipe! (2024)

What a fabulous recipe! I have done your low oven temp version several times. It works great but I was stuck with all that extra whey. This version is faster and no extra liquid- and just as tasty! Thank you! I am having two friends over for a high tea and I can’t wait to serve this with my scones. ~Ingrid

Stove Top Clotted Cream Recipe | Easy recipe! (1)

this homemade clotted cream recipe is made in a saucepan!

Once you’ve tasted clotted cream you can never go back, nothing will ever match its rich luxurious mouthfeel and you won’t want anything else on your scones ever again. Normally you have to buy it in absurdly small, absurdly pricy little jars imported from the UK. But I’ve spent literally years experimenting and perfecting the art of making homemade clotted cream.

How to Make Clotted Cream in the Oven

First, way back in 2015 I made my first batch, and that was in a very low (180F) oven. It takes quite a while at that temperature, overnight, in fact. It turned out lovely and many of you have made it that way since. The only problem is some ovens don’t go down as low as 180F, so it was frustrating for some.

How to Make Clotted Cream in the Instant Pot

My next big innovation came in 2019 when I figured out that I could make clotted cream in my Instant Pot. It was a bit easier than the oven method, definitely faster, and resulted in perfectly silky clotted cream every time. Only problem there was that not everybody has an Instant Pot, and they keep changing their models so it can get confusing with different buttons and settings, etc.

A big leap forward to 2021 and this stove top clotted cream recipe that’s pretty much foolproof. This method requires a bit more hands on time, but the overall time is the least of all the methods.This requires no special equipment or tricky temperature control. You just need a heavy bottomed saucepan and a little patience.

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What you’ll need for this stove top clotted cream recipe

  • heavy cream
    • or whipping cream, with at least 30% milkfat content (more is fine.)
  • unsalted butter
    • butter is not in my previous clotted cream recipes. It’s here to replicate the higher fat content of British cream.
  • a heavy bottomed medium saucepan
    • you want a sturdy heavy pan so that the cream will not scorch on the bottom.
  • a silicone spoonula
    • or the equivalent for scraping the bottom and sides of the pan to prevent scorching. Silicone is perfect because the flexible edge easily scrapes everything cleanly.
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how the stove top clotted cream recipe works

  1. Put 3 cups of heavy cream and 2 tablespoons of butter into a medium sized heavy bottom sauce pan and bring to a gentle boil.
  2. Cook the mixture, stirring often, until it has reduced by about 1/3. This will take a while, about 30 minutes and resemble a thick custard sauce.
  3. Pour the mixture into a shallow baking dish and refrigerate for several hours or overnight.
  4. Transfer the clotted cream into a jar and keep refrigerated. It will last up to a week and a half.

is this clotted cream recipe authentic?

The do-it-yourself techniques for making clotted cream don’t replicate the exact way it’s made in England, but the concept is the same and the end result is incredibly close to what you get in the little jars. In fact to me it’s practically indistinguishable.

This cream has the same thick texture and unctuous mouthfeel as the original, it spreads beautifully and has that subtle cooked cream flavor; in other words, it’s spot on.

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Clotted Cream faqs

It’s a British thing, basically a ‘cooked’ spreadable cream that’s spread on scones at tea time. Cornish clotted cream is now legally defined (like Parmesan and Brie) and themilk to make clotted cream must come from Cornwall with a minimum fat content of 55%.

Clotted cream isn’t sweet, and has no added flavoring, although people suggest it has a sweet ‘nutty’ or ‘cooked’ flavor. It’s really the amazing texture that is so tempting (imagine cream as thick as peanut butter.)

Authentic Cornish clotted cream has a yellowish tint due to carotene (yes, it’s in carrots, too) in the grass the cows graze on.

In America it’s not that well known, but you can sometimes spot it in better grocery stores in tiny little (very pricy) jars.

People who love it but aren’t living in the UK have had to resort to creative measures to get their clotted cream fix, and that’s where this diy method comes in.

Stove Top Clotted Cream Recipe | Easy recipe! (5)

How to serve clotted cream

Clotted cream is served first and foremost with scones. Serve it in a little jar or pot along with your favorite jam. Whether the jam or the cream goes on first is a matter of hot debate in the UK. But one thing for certain, you’ll need a good pot of tea to go along with. (When you serve your tea why not make some diy sugar cubes too!)

If you don’t have scones you might try it on biscuits, or English muffins.

If you’re planning a brunch this is a fabulous time to bake up a batch of scones and splurge on homemade clotted cream.

Other ways to use it include mixing it into scrambled eggs, risottos, mashed potatoes, etc. I love to bake with it, and I use it to make a deliciously rich clotted cream shortbread.

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Why this stove top clotted cream recipe works

The process of evaporation does all the work! As you simmer the cream in a saucepan the water content slowly evaporates in the form of steam. The cream slowly thickens as it cooks.

You have essentially no waste, or whey, leftover at the end: you’re left with pure thick clotted cream.

You’ll have a slightly higher yield than with other methods, for 3 cups of cream you’ll get approximately 1 1/2 cups clotted cream.

This method is quicker than the others, and your clotted cream will firm up within hours in the fridge, but can be left overnight.

There’s no guesswork with this clotted cream recipe ~ anyone can do it!

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The best scones to go with this clotted cream recipe

  • Classic Cream Scones Recipe
  • Raspberry Scones
  • Fresh Strawberry Scones
  • Darina Allen’s Irish Soda Scones
  • Light and Airy Oat Scones
  • Fresh Tangerine Scones
  • Maple Oat Nut Scones
  • Rhubarb Scones

Stove Top Clotted Cream Recipe

5 from 48 votes

My Stove Top Clotted Cream Recipe is the easiest way I've found to make homemade clotted cream ~ If you've always wanted to make this English tea time treat, start here!

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Cook Time:30 minutes minutes

Total Time:30 minutes minutes

Servings: 24

Equipment

  • Medium sized heavy bottomed saucepan

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Put the cream and butter into a medium sized heavy bottomed saucepan and heat to a gently boil, stirring often so the cream does not scorch. Gently boil the cream, stirring often, until it is reduced by at least 1/3. This may take up to 30 minutes, depending on your pan, and the heat of your burner. Note: I like to mark the depth at the start so I can judge when it has reduced enough. I dip a toothpick or popsicle stick into the cream and mark the measurement with a pen. Then I have a good reference point to check the progress of the cream.

  • As the cream cooks down it will thicken, almost like a custard, and will coat the back of a spoon. Pour the cream into a shallow baking pan to cool. Put it in the refrigerator for several hours or overnight.

  • Scrape the clotted cream out of the pan and into a small jar for storage. This recipe will make somewhere around 2 cups, and the clotted cream will last up to 10 days.

Video

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Course: Breakfast

Cuisine: English

Author: Sue Moran

Keyword: breakfast, British, brunch, buttercream, English, High tea, scones

Nutrition

Serving: 1 Tbsp · Calories: 110 kcal · Carbohydrates: 1 g · Protein: 1 g · Fat: 12 g · Saturated Fat: 7 g · Polyunsaturated Fat: 1 g · Monounsaturated Fat: 3 g · Trans Fat: 0.04 g · Cholesterol: 36 mg · Sodium: 8 mg · Potassium: 29 mg · Sugar: 1 g · Vitamin A: 466 IU · Vitamin C: 0.2 mg · Calcium: 20 mg · Iron: 0.03 mg

Nutritional information is provided as a courtesy and is an estimate only. This information comes from online calculators. Although The View from Great Island attempts to provide accurate nutritional information, these figures are only estimates.

Did You Make This?We love seeing what you’ve made! Tag us on social media at @theviewfromgreatisland for a chance to be featured.

Stove Top Clotted Cream Recipe | Easy recipe! (2024)

FAQs

What is a substitute for clotted cream? ›

If clotted cream is unavailable for tea scones, is there any acceptable alternative that can be fabricated at home from regular groceries? The next best thing would be any other thick cream. Get some double cream (heavy cream to Americans) and whip it until stiff, and you'll have about the right consistency.

Is clotted cream the same as heavy whipping cream? ›

Clotted cream and whipped cream are both made with heavy cream, but while whipped cream is whipped into airy peaks, clotted cream is heated and separated, for a far denser texture. With its ultra-thick consistency, clotted cream can even be mistaken for butter.

How is traditional clotted cream made? ›

Clotted cream (Cornish: dehen molys, sometimes called scalded, clouted, Devonshire or Cornish cream) is a thick cream made by heating full-cream cow's milk using steam or a water bath and then leaving it in shallow pans to cool slowly.

How long does it take for heavy cream to thicken on the stove? ›

Cream sauces can take anywhere from 10 to 30 minutes to reduce to the consistency desired by the chef. Make sure you test the thickness of your sauce by tasting it every 10 minutes. This can help you prevent overcooking it.

Why is clotted cream illegal in us? ›

Its exclusivity extends beyond England, however, as clotted cream is technically illegal in America. Why? True clotted cream is made with unpasteurized milk, and the FDA officially banned the distribution of any milk or milk products that haven't been pasteurized in America in 1987.

What do the British call clotted cream? ›

It is also called Devonshire, Devon clotted cream, or Cornish clotted cream, depending on where it was made. The dish is traditionally made with full-fat unpasteurized cow's milk, although many recipes today feature heavy cream.

Why cant you get clotted cream in america? ›

Most technically it's unpasteurized, unhom*ogenized milk, but for sake of easy argument let's call it unpasteurized. Pasteurizing milk heats it to kill off bacteria and other disease causing microbes. Pasteurizing milk became a federal requirement in 1924, aka The Year Clotted Cream Died.

What cream is closest to clotted cream? ›

Crème fraîche can be used as a clotted cream substitute as a topping for fruit and baked goods as it has a similar thickness and creaminess to that of clotted cream.

What is clotted cream in America? ›

Clotted cream is simply full-fat cream that's been heated low and slow for many hours and then cooled slowly so the cream rises to the surface and forms "clots." This thickened cream is scooped off the top and into a jar or small container.

What is the difference between Devonshire cream and clotted cream? ›

Clotted cream originated in southwest England and has become a traditional British topping for baked goods at afternoon teas. Depending on which county the product was made in, it's also sometimes called Devonshire/Devon cream or Cornish cream.

Can you get clotted cream in the US? ›

That doesn't mean that you're totally out of luck when it comes to clotted cream here in the U.S. It might not be authentic, but versions of the cream are for sale on Amazon and at stores like Whole Foods.

Is clotted cream illegal in Canada? ›

Importing Clotted Cream from the United Kingdom requires a permit to import. "The Canadian Government" has not allowed companies the quota to import Clotted Cream from England.

How long does clotted cream last in the fridge? ›

An average rule of thumb is Clotted cream can be kept in a sealed container in the refrigerator for up to two weeks. Once opened it lasts for approximately 4 days, depending on how you refrigerate it. Unopened clotted cream will keep for longer, up to 14 days.

Can you make heavy cream from milk at home? ›

Combine 1/4 cup (57 grams) of melted butter with 3/4 cup (178 mL) of milk and mix thoroughly to make 1 cup (237 ml) of heavy cream. You can also add a tablespoon (8 grams) of flour to thicken the liquid, especially if you're using low fat milk.

How to make heavy cream without heavy cream? ›

If you have butter and milk (whole milk or even half-and-half work best), you can make your own heavy cream substitute. To make 1 cup of heavy cream, melt 1/4 cup of butter and slowly whisk in 3/4 cup milk. This works for most baking or cooking recipes that require heavy cream, but it will not whisk into stiff peaks.

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