Vanilla cake with custard baked into it, studded with bursting blueberries. Rustic. Easy. Dreamy.
The custard layer especially is something else! It’s melt-in-your-mouth creamy but set enough to cut into neat slices. If the photo below has you drooling, read on …
Custard cake with blueberries
This cake came about as one of those “wouldn’t it be awesome if…….” ideas that suddenly materialise in my mind and I need to blurt out to anybody within earshot. I gestured enthusiastically as I described my vision of a cake and how I thought I could make it work. My excitement built as I started imagining how it was going to taste, until it bubbled over and I had to give it a go.
So I made it. And the reality turned out even better than I imagined!
It goes like this. Take a vanilla sponge base, perfumed with a subtle whisper of lemon. Smear a serious layer of custard on top. And I mean serious – as in equal in volume to the cake; we want lots. Finally, stud said custard generously with plump, juicy blueberries. Now bake that puppy!
A mouthful of tender vanilla cake, creamy custard and a blueberry bursting in your mouth is one of the best things you will ever experience in your life.
The thing that’s lovely about the custard layer is it’s set enough with cooking that you can cut perfect, neat slices like a cake. But the moment you eat it, the custard melts and floods your mouth with lush, creamy richness. And it is rich, but not overly so. It’s also definitely not too sweet with only 1/3 cup (60g) sugar in the whole custard layer.
In case you doubt me, here’s proof of creaminess:
Anatomy of this Blueberry Custard Cake
Vanilla sponge cake base – I chose to use my yogurt-based cake batter for this cake because it’s designed to rise well even when weighed down with heavy toppings (example: this Strawberry cake with 500g / 1lb of fresh strawberries!). My signature Vanilla Cake batter, while more plush, would get squished into a pancake with such a thick layer of custard on top.
Custard layer – The custard is a crème pâtissière, a type of French custard. It’s luxurious in mouthfeel but not overly sweet or rich, a fine balancing act our Gallic friends have mastered with so many of their desserts. It’s the same custard used in the famous Flan Pâtisseier, a giant French custard tart!
Blueberries – I suppose cake and custard alone would have been enough already to make a great cake. But I couldn’t resist adding blueberries. It’s partially for visuals – love those explosions of purple dotted through the cake. But it’s also because a mouthful of tender vanilla cake, creamy custard with fresh blueberry bursting in your mouth is one of the best things you will ever experience in your life.
What you need to make Blueberry Custard Cake
I think you’re also going to love that there’s nothing unusual or gourmet called for in this recipe!
1. Custard layer
Here’s what you need for the custard layer:
Milk – full fat dairy please. Low fat will work but you will lack that rich mouthfeel. I’ve never tried non-cow milk, either.
Egg yolks – I’ve pictured 4 eggs because that’s what you’ll probably need for the yolks called for in this recipe. Egg yolks give custard the silkiness, yellow colour, as well as thickening power. In this cake it also sets the custard so it doesn’t run everywhere when you cut a slice.
Leftover egg whites – Here’s my list of what I do with them and all my egg white recipes can be found in this recipe collection.
Vanilla bean paste – I use the paste because I like the little vanilla seed specks in my custard. However I choose paste over real vanilla beans in this and other custard recipes I make (such as Creme Brûlée, Flan Patissier, Creme Anglaise) because it doesn’t use up a whole bean. I I know it would personally irritate me to see a recipe calling for “half a vanilla bean” so I won’t do it to you either.
Substitute with vanilla extract (no specks, but that’s cool). For a recipe like this, I think it would be a shame to resort to artificial vanilla essence, so avoid.
Sugar – caster sugar / superfine sugar with finer granules is better as it dissolves more easily. However, regular / granulated sugar will be fine too.
Cornflour / cornstarch – This thickens the custard along with the eggs. Similarly it also set the custard so it’s sliceable.
Butter – This enriches the custard. You know butter is never an unwelcome guest, and this recipe is no exception!
2. Cake layer
And here’s what you need for the cake:
Yogurt – Yogurt is a little baking trick that make cakes with a tender, never-dry crumb. It adds moisture to your batter without thinning it out like, say, milk. Which means you don’t need to use as much flour. And less flour means a more moist cake!
Acidity in yogurt also reacts with and activates baking soda. However this is not applicable to this recipe as we are using baking powder rather than baking soda. I found baking powder made my yogurt batter rise more evenly (baking soda results in an unsightly hump!).
Oil – Another cake moisture-improvement trick. While butter adds flavour, oil will gives you a moister result than butter. We really need good moistness in this cake, to be sure the cake stays tender even after the 45 minute bake time required to set the custard.
Sugar – As above, superfine / caster sugar is preferred but regular / granulated will work fine.
Lemon zest – Combined with the yogurt, the zest gives the sponge layer a hint of freshness. This distinguishes the cake component from the vanilla custard so the dessert is not so one-dimensional in flavour. This was a late addition and I really liked what it brought to the cake!
Vanilla – I use vanilla extract here, not vanilla bean paste which I think is wasted because you can’t see the specks. Try to give artificial essence a miss because it tastes, well, artificial.
Blueberries – Fresh or frozen. If using frozen, don’t thaw else it will bleed terribly when you mix it through the custard!
Flour – Just plain / all-purpose flour.
Baking powder – The rising agent in this cake. As mentioned above, I’ve used baking soda in the past for this batter but I found the cake got an unsightly hump in the middle. Baking powder gives it a much more even rise.
Egg – Just one egg is all you need.
Salt – Just a pinch. It’s good baking practice to add a little salt as it brings out the other flavours.
How to make Blueberry Custard Cake
There’s a few parts to this cake (custard, cake batter, layering), but I promise it is straightforward. Remember, it’s a rustic cake, so relax. We aren’t seeking perfect layers and placement of blueberries here!
1. Custard
Custard is so much more straightforward than most people realise. Custard is just milk thickened with cornflour/cornstarch and egg yolks, then baked in the oven to finish setting it.
The only thing to watch out for is to avoid scrambling the eggs with the hot milk, but the recipe steps are designed to avoid this risk.
Heat the milk with vanilla and half the sugar, just until it is steaming. Watch to make sure it doesn’t boil over – it can happen in a blink of an eye!
Whisk yolks – Meanwhile, using a handheld whisk, whisk the egg yolks with sugar until incorporated (5 seconds). Then whisk in the cornflour until you can no longer see white. It’s easier to do it in this order to avoid a storm of cornflour erupting in your face. Just trust me on this.
1/2 cup hot milk – While still whisking, slowly pour in about 1/2 cup of hot milk. Once incorporated, pour in the remaining hot milk while whisking continuously.
This method of gradually combining the hot milk with the egg yolks (tempering) is to make sure the hot milk doesn’t accidentally scramble the eggs.
Return to stove – Pour the mixture back into the same saucepan and over medium (or medium high, for pros), whisk constantly for 2 to 3 minutes. (The exact time depends on how hot your milk was, residual heat in saucepan etc.) At first, the custard will be watery but as it heats up, it will thicken and you will instantly feel it. See photo in step 5 below.
If at any point you feel like it’s thickening too fast, just take it off the stove and keep whisking. And if it starts to look lumpy as it is thickening, don’t fret, it does that sometimes! Just keep whisking and it will smooth out.
Bubbles → 30 second whisk – Once the custard becomes thick and hot, you will see big lazy bubbles appearing on the surface and bursting (pause whisking to check). At the sight of the first bubble, with the stove on low, whisk for a further 30 seconds then remove the saucepan from heat.
The appearance of a lazy bubble is the signal that tells you when the custard is cooked enough. How much longer you cook it for after the bubble appears is determined by the volume of custard you’re making and the thickness you are aiming for. In our case, 30 secs whisking is right.
Enrich with butter – With the pot off the stove, whisk in the cold butter cubes until fully incorporated.
Pour custard into the same bowl you used to whisk the egg yolks, to save dirtying a new bowl.
Cover with cling wrap pressed against the custard surface to avoid a skin forming. Set aside on the countertop while you prepare the cake batter. The custard can still be warm when we layer it onto the cake but we don’t want it piping hot.
Making ahead – The custard can be made the day before and refrigerated after it fully cools. In fact, the flavour of the custard improves overnight. It will solidify into a rubbery mass but don’t stress. Just use a handheld beater to beat it and watch as it magically turns into a creamy, dollop-able custard again!
2. The simple cake batter
Oh this magic yogurt cake batter, used in so countless cakes on this website that many of you love so much!
Whisk wet – Place all the wet ingredients in a bowl and whisk until combined. That’s the yogurt, sugar, oil, egg, vanilla and lemon zest.
Add dry – Add the dry ingredients (flour, baking powder and salt), and whisk until smooth.
Pour into a lined 8″/20cm springform pan.
Smooth the surface.
3. Custard layering
The specific layering technique I use is all about achieving a straight and level line where the cake and custard interface, and an even distribution of blueberries throughout the custard. Fussy, who me? 😳
Half custard – Dollop half the custard around the edges of the tin on the surface of the batter then spread inwards to spread it across the surface of the cake. This method creates a straight, even line where the cake meets the custard. If you dollop it in the middle, you sort of end up with a cake crater filled with custard. Not a bad thing, mind you.
Half blueberries – Scatter over half the blueberries.
Mix blueberries with custard – Then mix the remaining blueberries with the remaining custard.
Top the cake with this blueberry and custard mixture.
Smooth the surface, pressing in the blueberries as best you can.
Bake for 45 minutes at 180°C/350°F (160°C fan).
4. Optional blueberry burstage encouragement (& custard setting)
Blueberry burstage (OPTIONAL) – With the number of times you’ve already read the “blueberry burstage” and “bursting blueberries”, you’ve probably figured out that this particular feature appeals to me!
So much so that I like to encourage blueberry burstage by pulling the cake out of the oven 10 minutes before it’s done to deliberately burst some blueberries using a small knife.
You don’t have to do this step. It’s entirely optional. (*She says, unconvincingly*)
Cool on counter – The cake is done when the custard surface is set (ie. you can touch it and your finger stays clean) but there’s still a bit of a wobble underneath. You want some wobble. No wobble means the custard is overcooked and consequently will become firmer in texture than ideal once cooled.
By the way, I’m sure you’ve figured it out by now but this recipe is specifically designed so the cake and custard both bake to perfection in the same time. To this end, there should be no browning on the surface of the custard. It should just be yellow with (hopefully) lots of blueberry guts seeping out and through it (are you counting how many times I use those kind of graphic descriptions??!😂)
Fridge 12 hours – This step is to fully set the custard so you can cut neat slices of the cake. Do not skip or shortcut the refrigeration time! Having done this myself cutting into the cake to early to find the custard is not fully set, I can tell you that 6 hours is not enough and 8 hours is still high risk.
Overnight, and minimum 12 hours, is a safe bet!
PS. If the custard is not fully set, while visually it may not present quite the same as what you see in the photos, let me assure it is still a heavenly eating experience. Some might even say a better one because you get big dollops of creamy custard.
Voilà! Here’s your (rustic, fabulous) masterpiece!
If you’re a little fussy like me, you can trim along the edges of the cake to make the edges smooth just using scissors. Don’t toss the trimmings, eat as you go. Think – blueberry fruit leathers (in scrappy, mini form.)
Serving, storing
I topped the cake with extra blueberries for photograph purposes only. You really don’t need to for serving, there’s plenty going on in the cake as it is.
As for serving, cut like a cake and serve like cake.
The one thing I will really encourage though is to eat it at room temperature instead of fridge-cold. Chilled custard is nice. But room temperature custard is better. It’s creamier and tastier. Same goes for cake.
So take the cake out of the fridge at least 30 minutes prior to serving, preferably 1 hour. If you can, slice fridge-cold then let the slices come to room temperature. The reason is you will get neater slices with sharper edges when the cake is cut cold, as the custard smears less on the knife. The cake is at room temperature in all the photos in this post, and when I cut the cake in the video below.
I’d love to know if you try this cake. And if you do, tell me if where you sit on blueberry burstage! Did you take the extra step to encourage burstage? *Do it! Do it! Do it!* – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
Note: In this video I do not spread the custard on the cake properly! The better way to do it is as per the recipe card below – put big dollops around the edges of the cake and spread inwards. I will update the video after I make the cake again!
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Blueberry Custard Cake
Ingredients
Custard:
- 1 1/2 cups milk , full fat
- 1 tsp vanilla bean paste (or extract)
- 1/3 cup superfine/caster sugar (Note 1)
- 1/4 cup / 60 g egg yolks (~4 large eggs) (Note 2)
- 3 1/2 tbsp cornflour / cornstarch
- 30 g / 2 tbsp unsalted butter , cold, cut into 1 cm / 1/2″ cubes
Cake – wet:
- 1/2 cup superfine/caster sugar (Note 1)
- 1/4 cup canola oil (or other neutral oil)
- 1 large egg (Note 3)
- 1/2 cup plain yogurt (Note 4)
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 2 tsp lemon zest , finely grated (1 large lemon)
Cake – Dry:
- 1 cup flour , plain / all-purpose
- 2 tsp baking powder (if old, check it's still active)
- Pinch of salt
Blueberries:
- 250 g / 8 oz blueberries , fresh or frozen (do not thaw)
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan) with the shelf in the middle of the oven.
- Grease a 20 cm / 8" springform pan with butter. Line the base and sides with paper.
Custard:
- Heat milk: Heat the milk with vanilla and half the sugar in a medium saucepan over medium heat until hot.
- Whisk egg: Whisk yolks with remaining sugar, then whisk in the cornflour.
- Milk into egg: Slowly pour about 1/2 cup hot milk into the eggs while whisking. Once incorporated, pour in remaining milk and whisk to combine.
- Thicken: Pour the mixture back into the saucepan. Cook on medium, whisking constantly until you feel it starting to thicken then immediately turn down to low (2 – 3 minutes). Keep whisking then when you see a lazy bubble appear and burst on the surface, whisk for 30 seconds longer.
- Enrichen with butter: Take off the stove. Whisk in butter until smooth. Scrape into a bowl then cover with cling wrap touching surface. Leave to cool while making the batter (Note 5 for custard tips)
Cake:
- Batter: Whisk Wet ingredients in a large bowl. Add the Dry ingredients then whisk until smooth. Remove 1/3 cup of the batter (Note 5) then pour the remaining batter into the prepared pan and smooth the surface. (Bake the 1/3 cup batter in a separate greased ramekin for 25 minutes).
- Custard topping: Whisk custard until smooth. Dollop half around the edges of the cake surface then spread inwards with offset knife. Smooth the surface, then scatter with half the blueberries. Mix remaining blueberries into remaining custard, then spread across the cake surface, pressing blueberries in to flatten the surface.
- Bake 45 minutes: Place the cake in the oven and bake for 35 minutes. Remove, then use 2 small paring knives to burst some of the blueberries on the surface (1 knife to stop blueberry spinning, the other to burst). Limit bursting time to 1 minute, no longer! Then bake for a further 10 minutes.
- Cool: Remove cake from the oven. Fully cool in the cake pan (around 3 hours). Then refrigerate for 12 hours, still in the pan.
- Serve! Remove cake from the pan then cut into slices. Best served at room temperature rather than fridge cold!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
A face that’s successfully scored many cake samples over his lifetime.
Melody says
I’m making this lovely cake for Thanksgiving dinner, hopefully I can get your advice on short notice. My to cake pans is 7″ and 10″ should I go for 7″ and take out 1 cup of batter or use the 10″ and put it all in? Also suggestion on cooking time.
Can’t wait to try it. I’m not a baker so I hope it works.
Happy Thanksgiving and sharing this beautiful cake recipe 😋
Nagi says
10″ and put it all in! N xx
Dianne says
Hello Brian, Since I made the first blueberry custard cake I have made it 3 more times making changes for a better result;
1) I made 1/2 the recipe as described but used one large whole egg and the full 1/2 of the cake ingredients.
2) I cooked it in a buttered 8″ cast iron pan at 350x 30 minutes. ( I make all my upside-down cakes in cast iron yielding much better results)
3) I squeezed in as many blueberries as possible and used plenty of lemon zest.
4) The smaller cake was plenty for 4-6 people and I shared it liberally with friends and family. It got rave reviews Thanks for asking. I just love nagi’s style and often direct my friends to her web site. PS recently I have been making seed crackers that are to die for. Glutin free and soooo healthy. If Nagy likes, I will share that with her. Dianne A
Deborah Ann says
Hey Nagy, Please help me get that gluten-free seed cracker recipe from Dianne, if you please! I’m now a huge fan of yours btw….everything you make is inspired and delicious. Hugs from the Canadian Maritimes. 🇨🇦
Deborah Ann says
Did you say seed crackers to die for? Would you mind sharing with moi? (even if Nagy isn’t interested!) 😉 😁
Brian says
Brilliant. Thanks much!
Mina says
This is soooo delicious! I made it last night and ate a piece of cake for breakfast – I just couldn’t wait any longer! My daughter said it’s the best blueberry cake she ever had.
I followed the recipe and did the extra step to encourage burstage – effort is worth the result! Thank you Nagi for sharing. Hugs from Sweden!
Liz H says
Breakfast of champions right there 😊
John Brown says
This recipe was a major HIT of the dinner party that i attended !! The cake was finished in minutes!!
Ann L says
Nagi I love your recipes and have made several from your website. So excited for your book!!! Love the look of this cake BUT I’m personally not a huge fan of blueberries (I know, I know) so could I sub out with other berries?? Strawberries perhaps??
Deborah Ann says
I say go for it Ann! Personally I would cut larger strawberries or blackberries in half. I’m going to make it with plump raspberries, then with Haskaps! Yum, yum!
anne says
made the blueberry custard cake for my husbands bday,thought it sounded weird, but no it was beautiful. Used frozen blueberries. Fabulous thnx
Lesley Jacksch says
I am going to make this cake on Saturday. Could you please tell me the best yogurt to use? Costco here has a Greek organic one would that be alright if not let me know the best one please. Thank you so much.
Jj says
I used home made Greek yoghurt just like the Costco one and it was fine.
Lesley Jacksch says
Thank you so much. It is in the oven now. Anxiously waiting for it to finish.
Lesley Jacksch says
Also should this be done in a water bath? Thank you.
Ann says
Hi Nagi
You are my new go to place for inspiration, I love your recipes, I can’t wait to try this one but can I use self raising flour instead of all purpose flour and baking powder, thanks
Chris says
What’s the amount of custard yielded by the recipe? Just wondering if you could substitute making your own for a store-bought custard in a pinch?
Mike says
When I saw this pop up online – it intrigued me (custard & cake together) AND it looked delicious. The game was on. The recipe was SO easy to follow and the metric measurements sped up the process. I had to push my family off for a day and a night but the wait was definitely worth it. My wife and two teens each started with one slice…but that only made them want more. They kept asking me “did you really make this”? Can’t wait to try it with chocolate custard, with raspberries..and maybe both. THANK YOU Nagi for an easy, interesting and fun recipe for the dad to make.
Gina says
Would it better to use a 9 or 7 inch pan since I can’t find an 8 inch?
Sue says
I made this today. Looks awesome sitting in the fridge waiting for us to eat it tomorrow. For leftover egg whites I put them in the freezer till I have about 6 then I make an egg white cake like munavalge kook (munavalgekook). We love custard and that normally takes 2 egg yokes so doesn’t take long to get enough whites to make the cake.
Deborah Ann says
Oh wow! That egg white cake you mentioned sounds so intriguing – you wouldn’t mind sharing it with us/me, would you? 😁
Sue says
I use the recipe from an old blog Nami-Nami but there are different recipes. If you Google “munavalgekook” you’ll find some to try. 😀
Jenn says
This cake is amazing – just love the custard on top with the luscious blueberries… The 12 hour wait was very long and “agonising” – all we could think of was to dig in LOL. But it was worth the wait . Thanks Nagi
Helen says
i Nagi
This looks super delicious. My son has recently been diagnosed with Coeliac Disease so I need to make this GF. Can I just substitute GF plain flour and get a good result?
Donna says
Another beautiful recipe Nagi! I’m in love!
Ailsa McQuade says
German apple custard cake on the link I shared isn’t as lux as yours Nagi but it’s easy enough and the oven cooks the fruit….I’m going to try your one soon
Deborah Ann says
Whoa! You shared a link for German Apple Custard Cake? Where is the link please and thanks 😊
Ailsa McQuade says
https://www.internationaldessertsblog.com/german-apfelkuchen-german-apple-custard-cake/
Not sure if it came thru
Sherie Robins says
I wish I could post a picture here of the finished cake. Nagi, you’ve outdone yourself here. There’s only one problem with this cake – I made it yesterday, my husband and son (and I) waited patiently for this morning to arrive so we could try it, and trying it lead to one piece after another. It’s just too darn delicious to last. I had to laugh when you said it would keep for four or five days in the fridge. In my household, four or five hours is more like it. Just a fabulous recipe.
Roslyn says
thats my question too. Sadly I can only cook with gf flour
Deborah Ann says
So….just substitute gluten-free flour! Easy-peasy…I do it all the time, and I experiment with different blends until I find the best one.
Marbleless says
To everyone who thinks this looks like a lot of work, it really isn’t! Just gave my husband a slice and he loves it. Not overly sweet but nice and creamy! I was worried that my blueberries were too tart but they were fine. Mine did take longer to bake, and next time I won’t discard batter as my pan is larger.
Susanne V says
Hi again – I just spotted an error in the conversion to metric. I used metric and was wondering at using 125ml oil (and used a bit less) but looking at the recipe in cups I see it is meant to be 1/4 cup.
It was still perfect with just shy of half a cup of oil (and I am not even a fan of oil in cake) but will stick to 1/4 cup in future!
Nagi says
Thanks for picking that up Susanne! Interesting you note that it was still perfect with 1/2 cup of oil because that’s exactly why I ended up down at 1/4 cup of oil – I started out with 1/2 cup but then when I reduced it to 1/4 cup didn’t notice a difference in the moistness of the cake. So I stuck to it 🙂 Glad it came out perfectly! N xx
Nicole says
Hi Nagi! LOVE ALL YOUR RECIPES and also bought your book which is fantastic! I just have a question, I made this last week and it turned out so good! This week I tried it differently with the metric and cup conversion and notice the ingredients amount vary when doing this in particular the cornflour in custard? Hoping you can help guide on what measurements are best to follow as I would love to keep making this as well as all your other amazingly delicious recipes! Thanks so much for your effort to help us explore possibilities in the kitchen and being such an awesome inspiration of great energy!!! xxxx
Deborah Ann says
Next time, I’m going to use either lemon or orange-infused extra virgin olive oil from my local supplier. It’s amazing in everything, sweet or savory, and no artificial flavor! Just so you know…
Susanne V says
When i saw the recipe i went out to buy blueberries to make this my weekend project! A winner! Creamy custard, tasty cake base, pops of blueberries (minus the burstage – I didn’t have the heart to take the cake out of the oven to do it – and worked exactly as in the recipe with the 45 min bake time. I love the cool creaminess of the custard, it all works perfectly together, and the whole cake isn’t very sweet. Perfect in my book!