[This guest post is from my sister Lacey, who recently got her own ice cream maker.]
Rating: *****
Nickname: Pity Party Chocolate
This ice cream was inspired by a Facebook status that my friend Cate posted during the World Cup when her team got knocked out of the running: “No one makes a chocolate ice cream that's chocolaty enough for my pity party.” My natural reaction, of course, was to remedy that situation, so I set out to make an ice cream chocolaty enough. Here’s what I came up with:
For the base (Chocolate 1) I used Jerry’s Chocolate Ice Cream recipe from Ben & Jerry’s Homemade Ice Cream & Dessert Book. For the cocoa I used a combination of Scharffenberger organic unsweetened cocoa and Hershey’s Special Dark, which made for an extremely dark color and rich chocolate flavor.
Chocolate 2 was about half of an 8x8 pan’s worth of gooey brownie chunks. I used the recipe for Katharine Hepburn’s Brownies from Luscious Chocolate Desserts by Lori Longbotham — the whole recipe calls for only 1/4 cup of flour! I undercooked them slightly and used pieces from the middle for maximum gooey goodness factor.
Chocolate 3 was about 1/3 cup of shaven bittersweet chocolate – I used Scharffenberger 70% cacao baking chocolate.
Chocolate 4 was a chocolate syrup made from 2/3 cup of semi-sweet chocolate chips, melted in a double boiler, then mixed with 1/4 cup cream, cooled somewhat so that it wouldn’t melt the ice cream but that it would still pour from the pan.
I churned the base ice cream until it was basically ready, then added in the brownie chunks and shaven chocolate at the end to get them mixed in. Then I alternated dollops of ice cream with glops and drizzles of chocolate syrup as I transferred it to the freezing container.
The result was phenomenal, if I do say so myself. This ice cream has lots of different chocolate flavors and textures, but beware – it’s extremely rich! I can only manage one scoop in a sitting, which is probably just as well.
The 5-star rating is based on the following individual ratings and comments:
Kirsty: 5 out of 5
Robbie: 4.5 out of 5 (compared to B&J’s Phish Food)
Hugo: 4 out of 5 (for a man who says he doesn’t like chocolate ice cream, that’s pretty high. On a scale of only chocolate ice creams, he gave it a 5)
Me: 5 out of 5 (“Wow.”)
Cate: 5.5 out of 5 (“When I said I wanted chocolate ice cream, this is exactly what I had in mind.” And “This is seriously the best ice cream I have ever tasted.”)
Victor: 15 out of 10 (“5.5 out of 5? Are you kidding me? 15 out of 10!”)
Natalia: no specific rating, but it ended up all over her face in her eagerness to scarf it up, which is about as good as you can ask for from a 19 month-old. :)
Monday, July 19, 2010
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Carob
Rating: *****
Nickname: The Mother-in-Rule's Favorite
Last summer I was commissioned by Cheryl's mother to make her a carob ice cream. Well, now the in-rules (they aren't technically my in-laws) are visiting again, so the time has come!
Turns out there is a peculiar dearth of straight-up carob ice cream recipes. The only one I found was a vegan version from Altered Plates. I didn't particularly want to do a vegan one, since I want to get a clear experience of what carob ice cream is like, without being distracted by substituting dairy stuff, etc. So I backwards-converted the Mimicreme, almond milk, and agave, and came up with the following.
Bring to just boiling:
2 c. cream
6 T carob powder
1 c. sugar
pinch salt
Cut heat and melt in:
1 c. carob chips
Whisk in:
1 1/4 c. milk
1 t vanilla
Blend smooth with immersion (or regular) blender.
Chill in the refrigerator for a few hours or overnight.
Churn and freeze in the ice cream machine.
I've never particularly been a fan of carob, but I must say I was surprised at how good this turned out. Linda enjoyed it as well, and apparently it lived up to the memories of the carob ice cream she used to get in college. Success!
Nickname: The Mother-in-Rule's Favorite
Last summer I was commissioned by Cheryl's mother to make her a carob ice cream. Well, now the in-rules (they aren't technically my in-laws) are visiting again, so the time has come!
Turns out there is a peculiar dearth of straight-up carob ice cream recipes. The only one I found was a vegan version from Altered Plates. I didn't particularly want to do a vegan one, since I want to get a clear experience of what carob ice cream is like, without being distracted by substituting dairy stuff, etc. So I backwards-converted the Mimicreme, almond milk, and agave, and came up with the following.
Bring to just boiling:
2 c. cream
6 T carob powder
1 c. sugar
pinch salt
Cut heat and melt in:
1 c. carob chips
Whisk in:
1 1/4 c. milk
1 t vanilla
Blend smooth with immersion (or regular) blender.
Chill in the refrigerator for a few hours or overnight.
Churn and freeze in the ice cream machine.
I've never particularly been a fan of carob, but I must say I was surprised at how good this turned out. Linda enjoyed it as well, and apparently it lived up to the memories of the carob ice cream she used to get in college. Success!
Saturday, July 3, 2010
Strawberry Basil Sorbet
Rating: ****
Nickname: You Say BAY-sil, and I say BAA-sil....
I don't usually go for sorbet myself, but this recipe from Scoopalicious looked very intriguing. So Cheryl and I made a batch to take to Cathy's 4th of July picnic.
It's one of those flavors that keeps you paying attention. You can't just go on autopilot, "Yep, I'm eatin' strawberry, yep.... whoa! Basil!" So it's kind of fun in that way.
The one thing I'd add to the recipe is that it's probably worth straining out any remaining basil leaves before you freeze it. At least, my immersion blender couldn't really catch them all, so instead they clumped up in the ice cream maker and had to be picked out later.
Nickname: You Say BAY-sil, and I say BAA-sil....
I don't usually go for sorbet myself, but this recipe from Scoopalicious looked very intriguing. So Cheryl and I made a batch to take to Cathy's 4th of July picnic.
It's one of those flavors that keeps you paying attention. You can't just go on autopilot, "Yep, I'm eatin' strawberry, yep.... whoa! Basil!" So it's kind of fun in that way.
The one thing I'd add to the recipe is that it's probably worth straining out any remaining basil leaves before you freeze it. At least, my immersion blender couldn't really catch them all, so instead they clumped up in the ice cream maker and had to be picked out later.
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