Sam Beall's Carrot Soufflé Recipe (2024)

By Kim Severson

Sam Beall's Carrot Soufflé Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 15 minutes
Rating
4(182)
Notes
Read community notes

This is more of a casserole than a traditional soufflé. It comes from Sam Beall, the proprietor of Blackberry Farm in Tennessee, who died at age 39 in a ski accident. The dish makes its seasonal debut on the Beall family table at Thanksgiving, but paired with a salad, it becomes lunch or a light dinner any time of year. Use the sweetest carrot you can find, and grate the onions on the same grater you use for the cheese to save a little prep and clean-up time. Many of the steps are easy enough for children, making it a great dish for teaching cooking skills. It will become part of your winter rotation, and travels well.

Featured in: A Widow Takes the Helm at Blackberry Farm

Learn: How to Make Soufflé

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Ingredients

Yield:8 to 10 servings

  • 1tablespoon unsalted butter, at room temperature, plus more to butter the dish
  • 2pounds carrots, peeled and sliced into ¼-inch rounds
  • 1tablespoon kosher salt, plus 1 teaspoon
  • 1cup whole milk
  • 1cup crushed saltine crackers
  • ¾cup, or about 3 ounces, grated sharp Cheddar
  • cup minced or grated onion (about ½ medium onion)
  • teaspoon cayenne pepper
  • ¼teaspoon freshly ground pepper
  • 3large eggs

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (10 servings)

124 calories; 5 grams fat; 2 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 1 gram monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 16 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 6 grams sugars; 5 grams protein; 342 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Sam Beall's Carrot Soufflé Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Heat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 2-quart soufflé dish or baking dish.

  2. Put the carrots in a large pot and cover with about an inch of water. Add a heaping tablespoon of salt and boil the carrots until they are tender enough to yield to the tip of a knife, about 10 minutes.

  3. Step

    3

    Strain the carrots and purée them in a food processor. Put them in a large bowl; stir in the milk, cracker crumbs, cheese, onion, butter, cayenne, black pepper and remaining salt.

  4. Step

    4

    In another bowl, beat the eggs until they are quite foamy. Using a whisk and a gentle touch, mix the eggs into the carrot mixture.

  5. Step

    5

    Scrape the mixture into the buttered dish and bake for about 45 minutes, until the soufflé is slightly puffed, light golden brown and pulling away from the sides of the dish. Serve warm.

Ratings

4

out of 5

182

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Faded elegance

Better version is "carrot custard" from Lee Bailey's "Country Weekends." Boil 14 oz peeled and chunked carrots 20 mins til extremely tender. Purée in processor with 2. Tb unsalted butter. Add 2 eggs + 1/2 cup milk with pinch each of nutmeg, salt, pepper. Process til smooth. Bake in buttered 8" cake pan in a water bath at 375 for about 30 mins. Let rest in pan on wire rack for about 10 and unmold onto platter. Holds beautifully; can be made ahead; is also good cold.

Maggie

In traditionsl Southern cooking, most casseroles made with eggs are called "souffles."

Francesca

I would reduce the amount of salt. Loved the texture and easiness but next time will not add salt to water

Elizabeth

"This is more of a casserole than a traditional soufflé." The photo looks like glop, without any trace of soufflé. It sounds like it would be tasty, but why call it something it's not?

Sheila

Delicious! Followed recipe exactly except for adding more onions than indicated. Will definitely make this again for family and friends

Kim Severson

The crackers offer lift and texture to this. Saltines are basically fat, flour and a bit of leavening. It's not unlike putting bread crumbs in a meatball or meatloaf, which bring a little lightness to the party.

Lew

Carrots are so much more flavorful when they have a baked char on them, so I would think this recipe would be fantastic. Twice baked carrot soufflé? I think you're onto something special.

Lisa

This would be called a sformato ("unformed") in Italy. A less classy moniker than souffle, perhaps, but a better descriptor. Multiple veg versions exist.

Allison

I really wanted to like this, but ultimately it just tasted like a scoop of puréed carrots. I followed the recipe exactly except for subbing scallions in for the onions, and I was hoping that the scallion and cheddar flavor would come through, but no dice. I put the mixture in individual ramekins in my fridge, so I’m going to try to take the remainder and form it into fritters with lots of extra cheese, salt, and panko instead.

Benjamin

I didn't like this at all. It worked fine but the taste was boring and somehow off. I used organic, premium ingredients. It's not a true soufflé anyway.

Rachel

This is unfortunately not very good.Edible, but not worth the trouble.

Cameron

Surprisingly bland recipe that sounded so good on the page. I was thinking this would be a knockout side dish for dinner parties -- good thing I did a test run before serving it to guests.

Anne Allen

I substituted crushed waffle potato chips for the crackers, and I used a potato masher to lightly mash the cooked carrots with the butter before adding the other ingredients. It turned out delicious and with a great texture.

Brenda

Used 1.5 tsp salt in boiling water with carrots. Added no extra salt. Delicious!

Jean

Anyone tried this with quinoa or other grain instead of saltines?

GERRI

I used the miniature, pre-peeled carrots for convenience. I did not process the carrots; instead I mashed them as you would a potato. I also lowered the salt to a sprinkle. A "heaping tablespoon" is too much for my taste. I found I didn't have saltines, so I substituted with Ritz crackers. It was very tasty and a good substitute in place of a potato; everyone liked it very much.

Faded elegance

Better version is "carrot custard" from Lee Bailey's "Country Weekends." Boil 14 oz peeled and chunked carrots 20 mins til extremely tender. Purée in processor with 2. Tb unsalted butter. Add 2 eggs + 1/2 cup milk with pinch each of nutmeg, salt, pepper. Process til smooth. Bake in buttered 8" cake pan in a water bath at 375 for about 30 mins. Let rest in pan on wire rack for about 10 and unmold onto platter. Holds beautifully; can be made ahead; is also good cold.

Cliff

One opinion. Water bath is more bother. Nutmeg instead of cayenne is OK, but not my preference. Your version lacks cheese?

Karen

Can this be made without the crackers? Has anyone tried it?

Krausova

Why do you need crackers

Kim Severson

The crackers offer lift and texture to this. Saltines are basically fat, flour and a bit of leavening. It's not unlike putting bread crumbs in a meatball or meatloaf, which bring a little lightness to the party.

NancyL

Could I bake the carrot rounds instead of boiling them, which extracts all the nutrients? Also, what about leaving the skin ON as it holds many nutrients?

Lew

Carrots are so much more flavorful when they have a baked char on them, so I would think this recipe would be fantastic. Twice baked carrot soufflé? I think you're onto something special.

GERRI

I don't see any reason why you couldn't bake the carrots; in fact, I'm trying that next time.

Debra

Don't you find the skins add an odd taste to the carrots?

Francesca

I would reduce the amount of salt. Loved the texture and easiness but next time will not add salt to water

Sheila

Delicious! Followed recipe exactly except for adding more onions than indicated. Will definitely make this again for family and friends

GERRI

I agree; it could use some more onions, but I would also saute them before adding.

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Sam Beall's Carrot Soufflé Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why didn't my carrot soufflé rise? ›

Give the oven plenty of time to get to 375 degrees and then always use an oven thermometer to double-check the temperature. If the temperature is too low, the souffle won't rise properly.

What makes a good soufflé? ›

According to La Varenne Practique (a timeless masterwork you should consider owning if learning more about classic French cooking appeals), there are only a few critical points to perfecting a souffle: a base of the right consistency, stiff egg whites, and the careful folding of the base and the beaten whites.

What does a cooked soufflé look like? ›

A soufflé is done baking when it has risen above the rim of the dish and is nicely browned on top. It should feel mostly firm and only slightly jiggly when you lightly tap the top. Flourless soufflés, such as those made with fruit purée or chocolate, are lighter and cook faster.

When making a soufflé What is the yolk of an egg used for? ›

Into that base, a few key ingredients are added. Egg yolks get whisked in for even more richness, and coagulation—as the eggs cook, they set, just like when you fry or scramble them, allowing the soufflé to hold onto its loft for at least some time before deflating.

Why is soufflé so hard to make? ›

If the egg whites are not mixed enough, they will be too heavy to rise, but if they are over-whipped they will collapse in the oven. Finally, and most problematically, any cross-contamination between yolks and whites will cause the whole concoction to collapse, which is the bane of many dessert chefs' days.

Why didn't my soufflé rise? ›

If the temperature is too low, the soufflé won't rise properly. If the temperature is too high, the soufflé will rise with big air pockets inside and fall incredibly quickly.

What is the secret of the soufflé? ›

There's only one serious secret to the perfect soufflé and that is careful whisking of the egg whites so they keep their volume and puff to a maximum in the oven. The whites should be at room temperature and you can reckon at least one and a half per person.

How long can a soufflé sit before baking? ›

Souffle may be made up ahead and refrigerated as long as 24 hours. Put souffle in cold oven and bake 50 minutes at 325 degrees. It can also be frozen up to 7 days. Allow 50 to 60 minutes to bake frozen at the same temperature.

What ingredient makes a soufflé rise? ›

When the egg mixture is baked in a 350-degree oven, those air bubbles trapped in the egg whites expand, making the souffle rise. The heat also causes the protein to stiffen a bit, and along with the fat from the yolk, it forms a kind of scaffold that keeps the souffle from collapsing.

Do you eat a soufflé with a fork or spoon? ›

You can eat it with either a fork or spoon. Typically, savory soufflés will come with a fork to catch all the heartier ingredients, while sweet will come with a spoon for the sauce and berries.

Does opening an oven ruin a soufflé? ›

Opening the oven door while it bakes

It is a bad habit, to say the least, but especially with soufflé. A sudden temperature change can cause fragile baked goods like these to collapse or crack. Undoubtedly, working with an oven that has a window is best since you can examine the soufflé without opening the door.

Should soufflé be liquid inside? ›

Be patient. Don't peek until after the first half of baking is completed, or the soufflé could collapse. It should rise two to three inches above the rim; you want a dry, firm, golden-brown crust with a moist, creamy inside (when testing with a knife, the blade will be wet, but not covered with runny liquid).

Why is my soufflé runny? ›

Setting standard. Soufflés are best when they're still slightly runny in the centre. To check if a soufflé is set, gently tap the dish – it should wobble just a little bit. If the centre seems too fluid, cook for a few more minutes.

How long does it take for a soufflé to rise? ›

Place the ramekins on the baking tray in the middle of the oven for about 14 minutes until risen and turning golden. Don't open the oven during cooking. Time and watch the soufflés carefully – take them out as soon as they've risen and are starting to go golden.

How to make soufflé rise evenly? ›

A generous coating of melted butter and sugar helps the soufflé to rise evenly. The sugar helps the soufflé to 'climb' up the ramekin dish. Alternatively, if preparing a ramekin for a savoury soufflé using breadcrumbs instead of sugar.

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