Smooth and rich with plenty of zing and zest and just a hint of ginger. Once you’ve made it, this ginger and lime curd may just become your go to fruit curd. Spread it on bread, pile it onto scones or fill your cakes with it.
I know this ginger and lime curd isn’t strictly about chocolate. Actually it’s not about chocolate at all. But it did come about because of our We Should Cocoa chocolate challenge and it will be featuring in a couple of chocolate recipes to come. The lime challenge gave me so many ideas and as usual with these things, my list of recipes to make has grown even longer.
Phil from As Strong As Soup made lime curd as part of his entry and Chele over at Chocolate Teapot has also recently made it. I so liked the idea of making lime curd that I was determined to do so and worry about what to do with it afterwards. In the end I adapted a recipe for Lime and Ginger Curd that I found in one of the books I’d borrowed from the library, Seasonal Preserves by Joanna Farrow.
Ginger and Lime Curd
The first time I made this ginger and lime curd, I grated the lime zest into a food processor and blended it with the sugar. The theory behind this is it will make the sugar green and give some colour to the final curd. It did make the sugar a lovely pastel green, but as you can see from the pictures did not make much of a difference to the curd. It’s an unnecessary step which I haven’t bothered repeating.
So the main effort in this recipe is in the stirring. Everything goes into one bowl and you just need to keep stirring until the mixture coats the back of a spoon. In other words it needs to resemble custard.
Once the curd is thick enough, pour it into sterilised glass jars. Cover with a wax discs, then screw on the lids. There is some debate as to whether wax discs are effective or not. But I’ve been making preserves for many years and I find jams and curds keep better if they’re covered with a wax disc. But I leave it to you to decide.
Leave to cool then store in the fridge. Unopened jars will keep for at least two weeks, but opened jars should be consumed within 3-4 days.
The colour might lead one to think this was lemon curd rather than lime. But I was thrilled with the gorgeous yellow that I can only assume comes from the duck eggs. As for the taste, it’s as delicious as I’d hoped: smooth, rich, very limey and with just a hint of ginger. I’ve made it several times since.
How to Eat Ginger and Lime Curd
One of the best ways to eat ginger and lime curd is simple spread on bread or toast, with or without butter. There are, however, any number of other delicious ways you can use it.
- It makes an excellent substitute for jam when eating scones.
- As a topping for this ginger and lime cake.
- Make ginger and lime curd tarts instead of jam tarts. Or make these chocolate lime and mascarpone tarts.
- A sandwich filling for cakes and biscuits. It can work well on it’s own, or turn it into a buttercream. See my recipe for chocolate victoria sponge with lime curd buttercream.
- Top your pancakes or waffles with a good dollop of it.
Other Fruit Curd Recipes You Might Like
- Apple & lemon curd
- Blood orange curd
- Lemon curd
- Passionfruit curd
- Raspberry & rose curd
- Rhubarb & elderflower curd
Keep in Touch
Thanks for visiting Tin and Thyme. If you make this ginger and lime curd, I’d love to hear about it in the comments below. And do please rate the recipe. Have you any top tips? Please share photos on social media too and use the hashtag #tinandthyme, so I can spot them.
For more delicious and nutritious recipes follow me on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram or Pinterest. And don’t forget to SUBSCRIBE to my weekly newsletter. Or why not join the conversation in our Healthy Vegetarian Whole Food Recipes Facebook Group?
If you’d like more lime recipes, follow the link and you’ll find I have quite a lot of them. All delicious, of course.
Choclette x
Ginger and Lime Curd. PIN IT.
Ginger and Lime Curd – The Recipe
Ginger and Lime Curd
Ingredients
- 150 g golden granulated sugar
- 3 limes preferably organic or unwaxed. Otherwise scrub them well in soapy water before using.
- 25 g root ginger grated (I wash but don't peel)
- 50 g unsalted butter
- 3 medium eggs (I used 2 duck eggs in the recipe shown here)
Instructions
- Put the sugar in a large bowl and place over a pan of gently simmering water. Grate in the lime zest then squeeze in the juice. Stir until the sugar had dissolved.150 g golden granulated sugar, 3 limes
- Add the ginger and butter and leave until the butter had melted.25 g root ginger, 50 g unsalted butter
- Whisk in the eggs then stir the mixture until it thickens enough to coat the back of a wooden spoon. This can take quite a long time – anything from 15 to 25 minutes. You don't have to stir constantly, but don't leave it too long in between stirs as you don't want to make scrambled eggs. The curd will thicken further as it cools.3 medium eggs
- Pour the curd through a sieve, pressing the contents through with a spoon to remove any lumps and bits of grated ginger.
- Pour into 2 x 150ml sterilised glass jars. Cover with wax discs, then screw on the lids whilst the contents are still hot. Leave to cool then store in the fridge.
Notes
Nutrition Estimate
Sharing
I’m sharing this recipe for ginger and lime curd with A Strong Coffee for #CookBlogShare.
Michelle Rolfe says
This sounds so yummy! I love ginger and the kick that comes with it. Not to mention the heath side of it, and with lime I can see this is something I would love. Thanks for linking up to #CookBlogShare. Michelle x
Choclette says
We go through quite a lot of ginger. We both love it. It’s not the most obvious thing to use in a fruit curd, but it works really well in this lime curd.
Nic@daydreamaboutfood says
Love this recipe – definitely making it! I’ve successfully made lemon curd before so fingers crossed this should come out ok:)
Choclette says
Celia – thank you. As you know I’m rather fond of sunny bright colours. Am sure your hens eggs give an excellent result too.
Choclette says
Foodycat – thank you. The ginger is definitely a welcome addition.
Torwen – thank you. Don’t worry about the duck eggs, it’s well worth making anyway.
Jill Colonna – Heaven indeed.
Jill Colonna says
I LOVE it. Lime and ginger? Heaven.
torwen says
That’s a wonderful recipe! I love the addition of ginger 🙂
However, I doubt I can get duck eggs here *hehe*
Foodycat says
That looks absolutely gorgeous! The colour is amazing, and I love the idea of adding ginger.
celia says
It looks very pretty, Choc! I’ve made lime curd from duck eggs, and I think the golden colour is from the yolks – it was super rich too!
Choclette says
Bridgett – I can vouch for it being good on toast and good on scones as well as cake of course.
Hannah – now what a nice thought. Wouldn’t have thought of using it for that. Wouldn’t have thought about using nut butter either. Both sound good.
LF – do have a go, it isn’t hard. I made a tart with some of mine and it was delicious.
LF says
The curd looks gorgeous! Citrus curd is one of those things I’ve never made, but I’ve got my eye on a tart that requires lemon curd that I was planning to make this weekend, so perhaps I should give it a go and make my own?!
Hannah says
This would be perfect on my beloved morning oatmeal! That is, if I could bring myself to give up the huge spoon of nut butter… 😛
Bridgett ~ La Bella Cook says
Oh goodness, I may just put this on anything. The color is fabulous as well….very appealing flavors.
Choclette says
Jac – you posted your comment at the very same time as me 🙂 A hard decision to make. Shall have to check out the Banoffee curd. as for the jars, they are jam jars or chutney jars or something I’ve collected at some point and the lids are marmite pot lids.
Choclette says
Maria – thank you.
Maggie – thank you, I so like the colour, quite glad it wasn’t green after all.
Three Cookies – thanks for visiting. Chocolate by name, chocolate by nature 😉
Jacqueline says
How wonderful Choclette! I do love curd. Mangocheeks just made a lovely Banoffee Cur, so I don’t know which to make first! Oh and where did you get those lovely jars?
Three-Cookies says
New to your blog, I like the recipes and the title with specific mention of chocolate:)
Maggie says
I like the idea of lime and ginger curd too! It is an incredible colour too.
Maria♥ says
That curd sounds and looks lush!
Maria
x
Choclette says
Chele – welll I think of you as the Queen of curds, so would be expecting to see another batch appearing on your blog sometime soon 😉
Ananda – thank you. It’s the colour that pleased me most, although it does taste very good too.
Kitchenmaid – thank you. Some more good recipes to come – very behind with posts and I’ve used goose eggs again.
C – thank you. Warning – home made curd is so much nicer than bought, it’s hard to go back once you’ve started.
Phil – it’s very hard to be modest with all these lovely things to tempt one on folk’s blogs. I’m not very good at it.
Hopeeternal – I’m guessing I used a recipe, but can’t for the life of me think where I got it from. I’ve had a trawl around likely suspects on my book shelves, but haven’t found it. It’s possible I used another curd recipe and just substituted rhubarb. I last made it a few years ago.
Brittany – let me know if you make it and what you think.
Ocean Breezes – it’s all gone now. I’ll be posting about how I used it in the next week or so. I managed three recipes and had some of it on toast and very nice it was too.
Ocean Breezes and Country Sneezes says
What a decadent curd! How do you think you’ll use it?
Have a wonderful week!
Les rêves d'une boulangère (Brittany) says
I love citrus curds but really haven’t experimented with them much as my recipe bank is lacking. So, thanks for this recipe!
hopeeternalcookbook says
Oh yum, I can see my husband liking this! I must have a go at making some soon. I’m putting it on my list of curds (as well as citrus ones I have posted about Blackberry, Banoffee and am just about to add Mango). I like the sound of your Rhubarb too – is there a recipe anywhere?
hopeeternal
‘Meanderings through my Cookbook’
hopeeternalcookbook says
Oh yum, I can see my husband liking this! I must have a go at making some soon. I’m putting it on my list of curds (as well as citrus ones I have posted about Blackberry, Banoffee and am just about to add Mango). I like the sound of your Rhubarb too – is there a recipe anywhere?
hopeeternal
‘Meanderings through my Cookbook’
Phil in the Kitchen says
Ginger is an interesting addition – I’ve not tried that. Love the colour, too. I must make some more curd as soon as I feel a bit less fat.
C says
It looks gorgeous – fabulous colour! Must get round to making my own curd one of these days!
Ananda Rajashekar says
I’m love with yellow colour this season, lime and ginger is a great combo…gorgeous ones!
The KitchenMaid says
Looks amazing – as do all your recent posts. I’m still in awe of those goose eggs!
Choclette says
Kate – this was my first attempt at lime curd and still haven’t made lemon. But I have made rhubarb curd in the past and that was really good.
Lorraine – sweet and sour can work really well.
Kath – next time, I think I’d add more ginger. It’s a lovely flavour combination.
Manu – thank you, just wish I’d made more now 😉
Suman – lime and ginger are a classic and the curd went particularly well with mascarpone.
Dom – very forgiving of you. Don’t hang out for my curd / roulade creation – it was a complete disaster Well perhaps not complete, it tasted great.
Grazing Kate – lime and ginger soda sounds good. Weirdly, I scoffed a whole bar of Sea Dog today (no CT around to share it with). It was delicious.
Gillian – you know what? It does 😉
Gloria – ooh, what type of curds have you made?
Baking Addict – it’s worth the effort, home made is so very much nicer than bought. As mentioned above, I ate my way through a whole bar of Sea Dog today. I was working from home and needed it – that’s my excuse.
Baking Addict says
What a lovely colour. I think it’s time I made my own curd.
PS totally vouch for Montezuma’s sea dog. I used it for the lime challenge – really delicious!
Chele says
Oooooooooooooh – loving the idea of adding ginger! Will need to make another batch to give this a try ;0)
Gloria says
I love this type of recipes, I love lemon curd, so this lima curd with ginger sound delicious!
Chocolate Here says
Yom! Bet that would go well with chocolate 😉
Grazing Kate says
looks amazing – great idea. I’ll try that as a variation on one of my meringue and ‘lemon’ curd cooking days this summer. Lime and ginger are a fab combo – e.g. Thai cooking and also in drinks – a Itchy Feet cafe in Bath used to do a homemade lime and ginger soda that was v refreshing that I could never replicate at home!
BTW: Have you tried Montezuma’s Sea Dog Chocolate? – it’s plain chocolate with lime and sea salt. I love it, the the other 3 members of my family can’t stand it – it’s therefore perfect!
Dom at Belleau Kitchen says
but you didn’t dye it bright green like mine?… still, love the yellow!… can’t wait to see what you do with this… i’m assuming it’ll be some kind of lime roulade… oh god I cant wait!!
Suman Singh says
I can imagine the flavor of lemon and ginger in yogurt..simply delicious and great recipe!
manu says
This sound so yummy and freah!!! LOL
Kath says
I keep meaning to make it too, yours sounds delicious with the added ginger.
Lorraine @ Not Quite Nigella says
This sounds like a delicious flavour combination and piquant enough to lift the creamy, sweet curd too! 🙂
katesbakesandcakes says
Funny enough I just attempted lemon cuts for the first time at the weekend, I was really pleased with it and practically licked the bowl clean before realising I needed some for a cake! oops! But I was looking for a lime cues recipe last night, keen to explore more cords so thank you very much for the inspiration!