Go Back
fancy single-serve dessert for one

Poached Pear with Crème Anglaise (Dessert for One)

Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 40 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 25 minutes
Servings 1
Course Dessert
Cuisine French, German
This warmly spiced poached pear with crème anglaise and buttery streusel is the perfect fancy dessert for one. Bonus, your house will smell amazing for hours!

Equipment

  • Medium Pot
  • Pot Lid
  • Peeler
  • Measuring Cups
  • Measuring Spoons
  • Parchment Paper
  • Baking Tray
  • Fine Mesh Sieve
  • Small pot
  • Whisk
  • Pairing Knife
  • Butter Knife
  • Slotted Spoon
  • Mixing Bowl

Ingredients

PEAR
  • 1 pear
  • 200 g sugar more than ⅓, less than ½
  • 200 g pomegranate or cranberry juice 1/2 cup
  • 200 g water
  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 ½ tsp ground cloves
  • 2 peels of orange skin
STREUSEL
  • 15 g flour
  • 15 g ground almonds
  • 15 g brown sugar
  • 15 g butter melted
CRÈME ANGLAISE
  • 75 g whole milk
  • 75 g heavy cream
  • tsp vanilla extract
  • 30 g sugar
  • 2 egg yolks

Instructions

POACHING YOUR PEAR

  • Peel your pear but leave the stem intact. Use a pairing knife to remove any bits of skin near the stem. Then use the back of a butter knife to gently run along any ridges present on the pear after peeling, to smooth your pear.
  • Use a small teaspoon (I used a ¼ tsp) to remove the core from the bottom. Gently scrape out any seeds going upward from the hole you’ve made. Keep your hole as small as possible.
  • If needed, minimally trim the bottom of your pear to make it flat so it can sit upright on a plate once poached.
  • In a medium pot, combine the sugar, juice, water, cinnamon, cloves, and orange peels. Place on stove over medium-low heat and bring to a gentle simmer (just a few bubbles)
  • Lay your peeled pear on its side in the liquid before placing a lid tilted on your pot to allow a little steam to escape. Keep the liquid on a very low simmer
  • Every few minutes, remove the lid and roll your pear, making sure it’s poaching evenly. After 5-7 minutes, carefully lift the pear out of the liquid with a slotted spoon and insert a pairing knife into the hole at the bottom of your pear. If the knife goes into the pear with no resistance, it’s ready. If not, gently set it back into your liquid, cover with the lid, and poach for another 2-3 minutes before checking again. When ready, place your cooked pear upright into a bowl
  • Remove the orange peels from your liquid and bring the liquid to a boil. Boil your liquid until it has reduced by half, and it's thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. You should be able to draw a line through the coating on the spoon and it holds without running back together. Remove from heat
  • From the top, at the base of the stem, use a spoon to pour glaze along each side of your pear. Move in a circle around the pear until it is fully coated. Do 2-3 coats, to give a nice glaze on the fruit. Remove and sit on a plate until ready

STREUSEL

  • Preheat your oven to 350°F
  • Stir together all of your streusel ingredients in a bowl, cover, and pop in the fridge for 15-20 minutes, until the butter has rehardened and the mixture is firm
  • Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and crumble your mixture evenly onto it, pushing it together so it lies flat, but no gaps are in between. This will make it easy to break into different-sized chunks once it’s baked and cooled
  • Bake for 10-15 minutes until golden
  • As soon as you pull it from the oven, carefully slide your parchment paper with cooked streusel off of the pan, onto the counter to cool completely

CRÈME ANGLAISE

  • In a small pot, simmer your milk, heavy cream, and vanilla
  • In a medium bowl, whisk together your sugar and egg yolks until pale yellow, this will take a minute or two
  • Pour ⅓ of your milk mixture into your yolk mixture and whisk to combine. Pour another third into your egg mixture and whisk. Repeat with the last third
  • Rinse your pot out with cool water and wipe clean
  • Return your mixture to the pot and place on the stove over medium-high heat, stirring occasionally with a spatula. Cook until the mixture coats the back of your spatula and you can draw a line, that holds, through it
  • Remove from heat. If not using immediately, pour into a bowl, and place parchment paper directly on the liquid to prevent a skin from forming

ASSEMBLY

  • Make a small circle of your streusel, on a plate, enough for your pear to sit on
  • Place your poached and glazed pear onto the streusel
  • Pour your crème anglaise on the plate, around the streusel
  • Enjoy!

Notes

*If you prefer, you can use red wine instead of juice for poaching the pear
*Keep a close eye on your pear while it poaches. You don’t want it to overcook and become mushy
*For your glaze, be sure to cook it down enough so it’s almost syrupy. This will allow it to stick to the pear and make a delicious coating. Be careful not to overcook your mixture, making it too sticky that you won’t be able to spoon it over the pear evenly to glaze
*I received this recipe from Chef Ashley during my patisserie course in Scotland
QR Code linking back to recipe