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Desserts & Baking

Fresas con Crema (Mexican Strawberries and Cream)

Plump strawberries and thick, lightly sweet crema hit that sweet spot between fresh dessert and something you’d happily eat straight from the bowl. The berries soften just enough after a ... Read more

Prep Time 10 min
Servings 4
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Fresas con Crema (Mexican Strawberries and Cream)

Plump strawberries and thick, lightly sweet crema hit that sweet spot between fresh dessert and something you’d happily eat straight from the bowl. The berries soften just enough after a short rest to make their own syrup, while the crema stays cool, tangy, and spoonable instead of turning runny. Every bite lands with juicy fruit, a bright lime note, and that rich creaminess that keeps you going back for one more spoonful.

The trick is restraint. A quick toss with sugar, lime juice, and zest draws out the strawberry juices without collapsing the fruit, and whisking the crema with honey and vanilla makes it glossy and smooth without masking the tang. Mexican crema gives a softer, silkier finish than whipped cream, which matters here because this dessert should drizzle, not sit like frosting.

Below, you’ll find the small details that make a big difference: how long to let the berries sit, what to do if your crema is too thick, and a few smart swaps if you need to work with what’s in your fridge.

The berries turned glossy after just a few minutes, and the crema drizzled perfectly instead of sinking into the fruit. The lime zest made it taste brighter without making it sour.

★★★★★— Ana M.

Save this Fresas con Crema for the kind of dessert where juicy strawberries and tangy crema need only a few minutes to turn into something special.

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The Part Most People Rush: Letting the Strawberries Make Their Own Syrup

The best fresas con crema doesn’t come from stirring everything together at once. It comes from giving the strawberries five minutes with sugar, lime juice, and zest so they soften slightly and release a glossy juice that coats every piece. That short rest is what turns a bowl of fruit into a spoonable dessert.

If you skip that pause, the berries taste flat and the crema sits on top without merging into anything cohesive. If you let them sit too long, the berries go soft and lose their fresh bite, so five minutes is the sweet spot. You want fruit that looks shiny and lightly sauced, not collapsed.

The lime matters more than people expect. It keeps the dessert from reading as one-note sweet and sharpens the strawberry flavor in a way plain sugar can’t.

What the Crema Is Doing Besides Being Creamy

Mexican crema brings tang and body, which is why it works better than plain whipping cream here. It clings to the berries instead of sliding off, and its mild sourness balances the sugar without needing much else.

Honey softens the crema and adds a rounder sweetness than sugar would. Vanilla smooths out the tang and gives the sauce a dessert-like finish, while lime zest keeps the whole bowl bright. If your crema is very thick, whisk in a teaspoon of milk at a time until it drizzles easily; if you use sour cream instead, choose a full-fat version for the best texture.

Fresh strawberries need to be ripe, but not mushy. Pale berries won’t give you much juice, and overripe ones break down too fast once the sugar hits them.

Building the Bowl So the Strawberries Stay Fresh and the Crema Stays Smooth

Coating the Berries

Combine the strawberries with sugar, lime juice, and lime zest in a large bowl and toss gently so every piece gets a light coating. The sugar should start to look damp almost immediately, and within a few minutes you’ll see syrup pooling at the bottom of the bowl. Don’t crush the berries while mixing; you want them softened, not mashed.

Whisking the Crema

In a separate bowl, whisk the Mexican crema with honey and vanilla until the mixture looks smooth and slightly loose. If the honey clings to the bottom of the bowl, keep whisking for another few seconds so it fully disappears into the cream. The texture should be pourable but still thick enough to ribbon off a spoon.

Assembling Right Before Serving

Spoon the strawberries into bowls first, then drizzle the crema over the top instead of stirring everything together. That keeps the fruit from turning watery and gives you clear layers of fruit, syrup, and cream in each bite. If you want it extra cold, chill the strawberries and crema separately for up to 30 minutes before assembling.

Finishing With Mint

Add mint leaves at the very end so they stay bright and aromatic. Tear or leave them whole depending on how much mint you want in each bite, but don’t bury them under the cream or they lose their clean, fresh finish. Serve immediately for the best texture.

How to Adapt This Bowl for What You Have in the Fridge

Use sour cream for a sharper, tangier version

Sour cream gives the dessert a firmer tang and a slightly thicker finish than Mexican crema. Use full-fat sour cream and whisk it well with the honey so it turns smooth instead of chalky.

Make it dairy-free with coconut cream

Chilled coconut cream works when you need a dairy-free option, and it brings a light tropical note that plays well with strawberries. Keep the vanilla and lime, but taste before adding extra sweetener because coconut cream can read sweeter than crema.

Dial the sugar back for very ripe berries

If your strawberries are peak-ripe, cut the sugar to 2 tablespoons or the bowl can skew too sweet. You still need enough sugar to pull out juices, but ripe berries bring enough natural sweetness to carry the dessert.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store the strawberries and crema separately for up to 2 days. Once assembled, the dessert is best within a few hours because the berries keep releasing juice.
  • Freezer: This doesn’t freeze well. The strawberries turn icy and watery, and the crema can separate once thawed.
  • Reheating: No reheating needed. Serve it cold, and if the crema thickens in the fridge, whisk it briefly before assembling.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I make Fresas con Crema ahead of time?+

Yes, but keep the components separate until serving. The strawberries will keep releasing juice, which is great for flavor but turns the dessert watery if it sits assembled too long. Mix the crema just before serving so it stays smooth.

How do I keep the crema from getting too thin?+

Whisk the crema gently and add the honey in small amounts. If it still looks loose, chill it for 10 to 15 minutes before serving. Warm crema loosens fast, so cold ingredients give you the best texture.

Can I use frozen strawberries for Fresas con Crema?+

You can, but the texture changes a lot. Thawed strawberries release more liquid and get softer, so the bowl won’t have that same fresh bite. If frozen berries are your only option, drain them well after thawing and reduce the sugar a little.

How do I fix Fresas con Crema if it tastes too sour?+

Add a little more honey to the crema and taste again before changing anything else. The lime should brighten the berries, not overpower them, so a touch more sweetness usually balances the bowl without dulling it. If the berries are very tart, let them sit another minute with the sugar before assembling.

Can I serve Fresas con Crema without Mexican crema?+

Yes, full-fat sour cream is the closest substitute and works well. It’s tangier and a little thicker, so the dessert will taste sharper and hold its shape a bit more. Plain yogurt is looser and more acidic, so it needs extra whisking and usually a little more sweetener.

Fresas con Crema (Mexican Strawberries and Cream)

Fresas con crema is an easy Mexican dessert where plump strawberries release juice and get coated in thick Mexican crema. It’s quick to make—sweet, tangy, and creamy with a fresh mint finish.
Prep Time 10 minutes
rest 5 minutes
Total Time 15 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Mexican
Calories: 620

Ingredients
  

Strawberries with citrus syrup
  • 2 lb fresh strawberries Hulled and halved.
  • 0.25 cup granulated sugar
  • 2 tbsp lime juice
  • 1 tbsp lime zest
Mexican crema drizzle
  • 1 cup Mexican crema (or sour cream)
  • 1 tbsp honey
  • 0.5 tsp vanilla extract
Garnish
  • 1 fresh mint leaves For garnish.

Method
 

Mac atarar las fresas (make strawberry mixture)
  1. Toss the fresh strawberries with granulated sugar, lime juice, and lime zest in a large bowl until evenly coated, then stop mixing and spread them into an even layer for better juice release.
  2. Let the strawberries sit for 5 minutes to release their juices, and look for a glossy syrup pooling at the bottom of the bowl.
Mix the crema
  1. Whisk together Mexican crema (or sour cream), honey, and vanilla extract in a separate bowl until smooth, thick, and pourable.
Assemble and serve
  1. Divide the strawberries among 4 serving bowls, keeping the extra syrup with the fruit for maximum coating.
  2. Drizzle the crema mixture generously over the strawberries so the surface looks creamy and glistening.
  3. Garnish with fresh mint leaves and serve immediately, or refrigerate until ready to serve.

Notes

Pro tip: use very ripe strawberries so they form a naturally thick, syrupy coating in the first 5 minutes. Store covered in the refrigerator up to 1 day; the strawberries will release more juice as they sit. Freezing is not recommended since the texture can turn watery after thawing. Swap option: use Greek yogurt instead of sour cream/crema for a tangier, slightly lighter drizzle.
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