Almond cream (crème d’amande) is a smooth, rich French pastry filling made by creaming equal parts butter and sugar with ground almonds, eggs, and a splash of almond extract or rum. This versatile preparation serves as the foundation for galette des rois, pithiviers, fruit tarts, croissants aux amandes, and countless other European pastries where a moist, nutty interior is desired.
Popular Recipes and Regional Variations
Classic crème d’amande follows a 1:1:1:1 ratio by weight — equal parts butter, sugar, almond flour, and eggs — producing a balanced filling that bakes into a moist, cake-like interior with a delicate almond fragrance. This pure almond cream is used in galette des rois (the traditional French Epiphany cake), where it fills a puff pastry shell and bakes until golden, developing a caramelized crust around the soft center.
Frangipane is a variation that blends almond cream with an equal portion of pastry cream (crème pâtissière), creating a lighter, more custard-like filling. Frangipane is the standard filling for fruit tarts — particularly pear, cherry, and apricot — where it bakes around the fruit, absorbing juices while maintaining structure. The pastry cream component adds moisture and a silkier texture that pure almond cream lacks.
Italian frangipane cream tends to use a higher proportion of almond paste (marzipan) rather than plain ground almonds, producing a sweeter, denser filling with a more pronounced almond flavor. Some German and Austrian pastry traditions add a tablespoon of rum, kirsch, or amaretto to the cream, while Scandinavian versions may incorporate cardamom. Croissants aux amandes use almond cream both as a filling and a topping, creating a double layer that crisps on the exterior while remaining soft inside.
Preparation Technology
For classic crème d’amande: ensure 125 g butter is at room temperature (soft but not melted). Beat the butter with 125 g powdered sugar in a stand mixer or by hand for 3–4 minutes until pale and fluffy. Creaming the butter properly incorporates air that keeps the baked filling light rather than dense.
Add 125 g fine almond flour and mix until just combined. Beat 2 large eggs (approximately 125 g total) lightly in a separate bowl, then add them to the mixture in three additions, beating well after each. Adding the eggs gradually prevents the emulsion from breaking — if the mixture curdles, it will produce a greasy, separated filling. Add 1 tablespoon rum, amaretto, or 1 teaspoon pure almond extract and mix until smooth.
For frangipane: prepare a half batch of pastry cream (250 ml milk, 2 egg yolks, 50 g sugar, 25 g cornstarch, 15 g butter, cooked until thick and cooled). Fold the cooled pastry cream into the almond cream in two additions until homogeneous. The frangipane should be smooth, pipeable, and hold its shape when spooned.
The cream can be used immediately or refrigerated for up to 3 days. To fill a tart: spread 200–250 g of almond cream or frangipane evenly over the base of a pre-baked or raw tart shell. Arrange fruit (pear halves, cherries, apricot halves) gently on top, pressing slightly into the cream. Bake at 180°C for 30–35 minutes until the filling is puffed, golden brown, and set in the center. A skewer should come out clean with no wet batter.
Tips and Common Mistakes
Butter temperature is the most critical variable. Cold butter will not cream properly and produces a lumpy, dense filling. Melted butter incorporates no air and creates a flat, greasy result. The butter should hold a fingerprint when pressed but not feel warm or shiny — approximately 20–22°C. If the butter is too cold, microwave in 5-second bursts; if too warm, refrigerate briefly.
Curdling during egg addition is the most common mixing error. If the eggs are added too quickly or are cold, the butter emulsion breaks and the mixture looks grainy and separated. To prevent this: use room-temperature eggs, add them in three small additions, and beat thoroughly between each. If curdling occurs, adding a tablespoon of almond flour can help re-emulsify the mixture.
Almond cream continues to expand during baking due to steam and the leavening effect of the eggs. Never fill a tart shell more than two-thirds full, or the cream will overflow during baking. For more on French pastry techniques and fillings, see our A-Z Encyclopedia of Food Products and Dishes.
History and Cultural Significance
Almond cream’s origins trace to the broader European tradition of almond-based confections that developed during the medieval and Renaissance periods. The technique of combining ground almonds with butter, sugar, and eggs emerged from the Italian and French pastry workshops of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, where the wealthy demand for elaborate sweets drove continuous innovation in filling techniques.
The galette des rois — the most iconic use of almond cream — has been an Epiphany tradition in France since at least the fourteenth century. The custom of hiding a fève (small figurine) inside the almond cream filling and crowning whoever finds it as king for the day has made the galette one of the most culturally significant pastries in the French calendar, with bakeries producing millions of galettes each January.
In modern professional pastry, almond cream remains one of the five fundamental preparations that every pastry chef must master. Its versatility, stability, and flavor-carrying properties make it indispensable across the entire spectrum of French pâtisserie, from simple morning croissants to elaborate multi-component desserts.