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Homemade Custard Creams (How to Woo a Brit)

Homemade custard creams cookies are so much better than the store-bought variety. These classic British biscuits literally melt in your mouth.

plate of British custard creams recipe

These custard creams are the most delicious, “melt in your mouth” cookie you’ll probably ever have!

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It’s pretty amazing to me, how almost every single Brit I know (especially ex-pats) become ecstatic over certain types of iconic British food, including savories, sweets, candy, and yes, even junk food.

custard creams

Quintessential British Food

In fact, there are two Facebook pages that I follow which are devoted solely to British food: Quite Peckish and Fat Englishman. One of these pages will post a photo like the one below, and the frenzied comments begin with “Oh, I miss my ___ so much!” or “I’d kill for a ____!” and proclamations of adoration for one candy bar or another.

People will get into heated arguments about which type of biscuit (cookie) or beverage is better–it’s rather funny, actually, and it even happens on another British Facebook group I belong to which has nothing to do with food!

pile of british candy and chocolate

The reason I’m telling you this is that it seems that we are all extremely fond of the foods that we grew up with, and I think part of the reason is because they hold strong memories of our youth. For those of us now in the US, I must say, British chocolate is definitely a lot better than the average American candy bar, which isn’t even allowed to be considered real chocolate in some places (due to the lack of enough cocoa butter).

You could mention some iconic biscuits to an ex-pat Brit and almost bring them to tears, such as Jammy Dodgers, Penguin bars, bourbon biscuits and custard creams, which mean absolutely nothing to most Americans or any non-Brit. As a matter of fact, I’ve learned that they are referred to as custard cookies in the US. 

Custard Creams with recipe

What are Custard Creams?

Custard creams are cookies (US equivalent to our biscuits) that Brits buy at the supermarket, much the same as Americans would buy Oreos. They’re a classic, along with the others I named above. They are made with Birds Custard Powder, which is another British classic. This is the typical pattern when you buy them from the grocery store in the UK, however the photo below is mine (homemade) using a special biscuit stamp/cutter! How cool is that?

custard cream biscuits

What is the Custard in Custard Creams?

The custard in custard creams refers to Bird’s custard powder, and it is only used in making the dough. It is NOT used in the filling (given that it is flavored corn starch, it should be cooked before eating).

What is Bird’s Custard Powder and do I Need it for Custard Creams?

This is essentially a vanilla flavored corn starch which gives the custard creams their melt-in-your-mouth quality. Custard powder was invented during the war when whole foods were in short supply, so Britons could make their beloved custard without eggs. It became a favorite and everyone still uses it. In order to make these classic Custard Creams, I wouldn’t recommend it without Bird’s Custard Powder. They just won’t taste the same (do not use the kind in the paper packet).

SORTED FOOD guys
Barry, Jamie, Ben and Mike (courtesy of Sorted Food)

Sorted Food

Recently, I met and had dinner with the SORTED Food guys (Mike, Jamie, Ben and Barry), four friends from England who have huge following their YouTube food channel and who were passing through LA on their #lostandhungry tour.

custard cream biscuits

A “rule” during their travels is that they can’t eat anything that isn’t suggested or given to them, so I knew they’d appreciate a “taste of home”, and surprised them with Penguin chocolate bars, and a packets of HP Sauce (a very popular British steak sauce which I happen to carry in my purse).

The Custard Cream’s partner in crime: Bourbon Biscuits!

bourbon biscuits recipe British classic

Mind you, they’d only left home a week before, but you can see the look of happiness and excitement on each of their faces as soon as they spotted the Penguin bars!

Sorted Food Guys surprise
photo courtesy of Diane at The Episodic Eater

Given this phenomenon with British people, I’m going to give you a recipe which will allow you to surprise and delight any of your ex-pat friends from the UK, which is a recipe for custard creams. Do you need to be from the UK to appreciate these wonderful biscuits (cookies)? Absolutely not, because they are so crunchy, yet creamy (melt in your mouth) and deliciously tasty, you’ll be a fan after your very first bite. I bet you a Penguin bar, you will!

*Edited 3/2017: my daughter knows me so well and bought me these biscuit cutters for Christmas! They work perfectly to make each of four classic British biscuits in their iconic shapes. It includes cutters for custard creams, bourbon biscuits, Jammy Dodgers and Party Rings. Click here to buy them on Amazon.

Dexam biscuit cutters

Keep Calm and Bake On Custard Creams

Custard creams can be a part of your holiday baking as they make a great choice for cookie swaps. Check out this list of 60 Christmas cookie ideas which includes custard creams.

custard cream biscuits

Reader, Andrea Hampton, made them into Easter themed biscuits using this adorable bunny mold, too!

custard creams, mold and basket of colored eggs
Photo courtesy of Andrea Hampton

Custard Creams Recipe

recipe from an old Lofty Peak cookbook             makes 2 to 3 dozen depending on the shape/size           

FULL PRINTABLE RECIPE BELOW

Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C)

Make the Custard Creams Biscuits

Sift the flour, custard powder and baking soda into a bowl and set aside. Cream the butter and sugar for about 3 minutes, then add the sifted flour, custard and soda and mix well.

Custard Creams dough

Roll or Cut the Biscuits (depending on if you have the biscuit stamps or not)

Form into rounds, about the size of a walnut. Place on a lined baking tray, leaving room to expand. Press with a fork into the top of each round, twice: once horizontally, and once vertically, to look like a cross-hatch.

making custard creams

NOTE: if using the biscuit cutters mentioned above, roll out the dough to about ¼” thick, on a lightly floured surface, instead.

rolling out custard creams dough

Dust a litte flour into the stamp/cutter, then press the custard cream cutter into the dough.

cutting custard creams

Push down.

stamping custard creams

Release, and gently remove the biscuit, shaking the cutter a little if necessary.

making the biscuits

Ta dah! Repeat to use all the dough, continue to dust with flour if needed.

raw biscuit

Place on parchment paper or a silicone lined baking tray.

row of biscuits ready to bake

Bake near the middle of the oven for 15 to 18 minutes. The cutter style may only need 14 minutes or so, until the bottoms just begin to slightly color. Remove from tray and allow to cool completely on cooling rack.

Cooling Custard Creams

custard creams cooling

Make the Custard Creams Filling

Mix the butter, powdered sugar and vanilla until creamy (you may need to add a few drops of milk if you want to pipe the filling).

buttercream filling for custard creams

Next, use the buttercream to sandwich two of the custard creams together. Use a piping bag if you really want perfect results, but you really can just spread the filling with a knife, as well.

filling a biscuit

Repeat until all the biscuits have been filled.

rows of custard creams

I like to match up evenly sized biscuits (the rolled ones) before starting to sandwich them together.

close up Custard Cream

And, the final biscuit cutter custard cream. Which do you prefer?

holding a custard cream

You’ll love the buttery, custard flavor, and the crispiness of the biscuit. However, just wait until it melts in your mouth!

Inside of Custard Creams
Store in an airtight container for up to a week. Most people in the UK have some sort of biscuit tin.

Keep Calm and Bake Custard Creams

I bet they don’t last even half that long! (Here’s a cute apron with the same text as my tea towel!)

custard cream biscuits

Homemade Custard Creams (How to Woo a Brit)

Servings: 15 cookies
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 16 minutes
Total Time: 31 minutes
A traditional and classic British biscuit (cookie) which melts in your mouth and just tastes so good!
4.9 from 199 votes

Ingredients

  • 1 ⅓ cup flour all purpose (plain)
  • ½ cup custard powder (Bird’s Custard Powder-available on Amazon and in British shops)
  • 6 oz butter good quality, salted, room temperature
  • ½ cup powdered sugar (icing sugar)
  • ¼ tsp baking soda

Filling

  • 1 oz butter good quality, room temperature
  • ½ cup powdered sugar (icing sugar)
  • 4 drops vanilla extract
  • ½ tsp milk more or less as needed for desired consistency

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C)
  • Sift the flour, custard powder and baking soda into a bowl and set aside.
  • Cream the butter and sugar for about 3 minutes, then add the sifted flour, custard and soda and mix well.
  • Form into rounds, about the size of a walnut and place on a lined baking tray, leaving room to expand. Press with a fork into the top of each round, twice: once horizontally, and once vertically, to look like a cross-hatch.
  • Bake near the middle of the oven for 15 to 18 minutes until the bottoms just begin to slightly color. Remove from tray and allow to cool completely on cooling rack.
  • Mix the butter, powdered sugar and vanilla until creamy.
  • Then use the buttercream to sandwich two of the custard creams together. Repeat until all the biscuits have been coupled.
  • Store in an airtight container for up to a week.

Notes

  • This recipe makes 15 custard creams (30 single biscuits sandwiched together.)

Nutrition

Serving: 1filled cookie | Calories: 169kcal | Carbohydrates: 17g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 11g | Saturated Fat: 7g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.5g | Monounsaturated Fat: 3g | Trans Fat: 0.4g | Cholesterol: 30mg | Sodium: 106mg | Potassium: 19mg | Fiber: 0.3g | Sugar: 8g | Vitamin A: 332IU | Vitamin C: 0.003mg | Calcium: 7mg | Iron: 1mg

Custard Creams on cloth

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4.86 from 199 votes (178 ratings without comment)

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169 Comments

      1. Thank you Christina! ?
        I’m not a pro but learning around from online bloggers like you and others ( bakeries esp the japanese ones, their stuff amaze me most of time)

      2. Just noticed your update on cookie cutters
        I want to say I love ? cutters your sweet daughter got you!
        Looking forward to your new custard creams post using the cutter
        (How I wish the Amazon here carries thsee cutters)

  1. I am trying to be vegan so I replace the butter with vegetable margarine in this recipe (Birds custard powder in a tin is vegan) but even doing this these biscuits are delicious and very easy to make. I have made them twice and about to make a third time.

    1. That’s so great to hear, Jo! Lovely when recipes can be adjusted to suit special diets! Thanks so much for letting me know and enjoy that third batch! :)

    1. OMG, that’s bloomin’ awesome, Julie!! I love it! Sending Custard Creams to London from the US!! I bet they say yours are so much better! Thank you so much for letting me know! :)

  2. I just came across your recipe and do have a question. I’m checking on the ratio between the ounces and the cup measurements. For instance, when you show 2 ounces you also state a half cup. Wouldn’t it be 4 ounces equals a half cup? Should I follow the ounces in the recipe and ignore the cup equivalents?

    1. Oh goodness! So many people have this question. Volume and weight are two totally different measurements. Unfortunately, because most people in the US don’t have scales, I add cups, HOWEVER I prefer and I myself use the weight measurements as it is so much more accurate and precise.

      Two ounces in a cup (1/4 cup) of flour is not the same as two weighed ounces. Also if you weighed 2 ounces of lead and 2 ounces of feathers on a scale the volume of these two things would be MUCH different. I hope you understand what I’m trying to explain, but long story short, ignore the cups and weigh if you have a scale, your results will be perfect! :)

  3. Good Morning Christina! Whilst sitting here with my coffee enjoying a lovely custard cream from the batch my husband and I baked up yesterday, I wanted to thank you again for bringing this favorite of his from London back with us to Las Vegas! We’ve talked about making our own for quite a long time and he found your recipe – we had to try it. So simple and so delicious. You are right, that Kerrygold makes them perfect. I’d even eat these bad boys with just the cookie – they are that good. We doubled the cream filling ingredients and he is using that on his Digestives!

    1. Thank you so much for letting me (and others) know how much you and your husband enjoyed the cookies/recipe Julie!

      That’s funny that he’s using the filling with Digestives! (I may have to give it a try!) :)

  4. Thanks Christina, now I have a good recipe for that darn Birds Custard Powder that has been in my pantry. I just had to buy it on Amazon and then I could’t find the recipe for the Custard Creams I liked. Yours is it! Thanks Deby cookinginthejungle.com