Portuguese Custard Tarts – Pastéis de Nata
Shatter-crisp pastry cups cradling silky vanilla custard, finished with caramel blisters at 550 °F. One overnight rest and you’re a Lisbon bakery.

Why These Tarts Win
- One Dough, One Custard – no laminating machine, just a quick fold-and-roll.
- Blistered Tops – the 550 °F oven caramelizes sugar for iconic leopard spots.
- Make-Ahead Friendly – pastry logs chill overnight; custard keeps 3 days.
- 12 Bite-Size Tarts – perfect for brunch or dessert grazing tables.
Ingredient Science
Flaky Pastry
- 1 cup (125 g) all-purpose flour – structure without toughness.
- ¼ tsp kosher salt – controls gluten.
- ⅓ cup cold water – hydrates just enough.
- 1 stick (113 g) unsalted butter, softened – creates lamination when rolled.
Caramel Sugar Syrup
- ¾ cup white sugar
- ¼ cup + 1 Tbsp water
- 1 cinnamon stick (optional)
- 1 lemon – large strips of zest (optional)
Silky Custard
- ⅓ cup (45 g) all-purpose flour – thickener
- ¼ tsp kosher salt
- 1 ½ cups whole milk
- 6 large egg yolks – richness & color
- 1 tsp vanilla extract (optional)
Step-by-Step Method
1. Quick Pastry Dough
- Mix: Combine flour, salt, and water in a bowl until a shaggy, sticky dough forms.
- Rest: Knead 1–2 min, cover, rest 15–20 min.
- Roll & Fold: Roll dough 1/8-inch thick. Spread 1/3 of softened butter over 2/3 of the square, fold like a letter. Repeat twice, chilling 10 min between folds.
- Roll into Log: Roll final rectangle, spread remaining butter, roll tightly into a log. Wrap and refrigerate at least 2 hours (overnight best).
2. Caramel Sugar Syrup
- Simmer sugar, water, cinnamon, and lemon zest until 210 °F (100 °C). Cool.
3. Custard Base
- Roux: Whisk flour, salt, and cold milk in a pot. Cook over medium heat until thick, 5 min. Cool 10 min.
- Enrich: Whisk yolks into cooled roux, then syrup and vanilla. Strain.
4. Shape & Fill
- Pre-heat: 550 °F / 288 °C. Grease a 12-cup muffin tin.
- Slice: Cut chilled log into 12 even pieces.
- Mold: Dip thumb in cold water; press dough into each cup, pushing up the sides.
- Fill: Pour custard ¾ full.
- Bake: 12–14 min until tops blister and pastry is browned.
5. Serve
Cool 5 min, then unmold. Enjoy warm or room temp.
Shaping & Filling Hacks
- Thumb Trick: Moistened thumb prevents sticking & creates thin, even shells.
- Overfill: Custard shrinks slightly; ¾ full gives perfect dome.
- Blister Boost: High heat + sugar syrup = leopard-spot caramelization.
Flavor Twists
- Chocolate: Swap ¼ cup flour in custard for cocoa powder.
- Orange: Add ½ tsp orange zest to custard.
- Spiced: Pinch of cardamom or nutmeg in milk roux.
- Mini Tarts: Use mini muffin tin; reduce bake to 8–10 min.
Make-Ahead & Storage
- Overnight Pastry: Dough log keeps 2 days refrigerated or 1 month frozen.
- Custard: Refrigerate up to 3 days; warm gently before filling.
- Baked Tarts: Cool completely, store airtight 3 days, or re-crisp 5 min at 350 °F.
📖 Recipe Card
Portuguese Custard Tarts (Pastéis de Nata)
Crispy cups + blistered custard = Lisbon in 12 bites.
Pastry
- 1 cup (125 g) all-purpose flour
- ¼ tsp kosher salt
- ⅓ cup cold water
- 1 stick (113 g) unsalted butter, softened
Custard
- ¾ cup white sugar
- ¼ cup + 1 Tbsp water
- 1 cinnamon stick & lemon zest (opt.)
- ⅓ cup flour
- ¼ tsp salt
- 1 ½ cups milk
- 6 large egg yolks
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
Instructions
- Make pastry, fold butter 3 times, chill overnight.
- Cook sugar syrup to 210 °F; cool.
- Make milk roux, cool, whisk in yolks, syrup, vanilla; strain.
- Slice chilled log, line muffin cups, fill ¾ with custard.
- Bake 550 °F 12–14 min until blistered. Cool 5 min, devour.
Notes
High heat is non-negotiable for blistered tops. Pastry can be frozen for 1 month.
Hands-on: 25 min | Chill: 2 hr | Bake: 12 min | Yield: 12 tarts | Category: Dessert | Cuisine: Portuguese
Baked the blisters? Tag @01easylife and let the caramel spots shine!


