Ice Cream
Coconut-Cherry-Chocolate Chip Ice Cream
by Cathy Pollak
Ever since making coconut ice cream, well, I am in love with the stuff. It's so refreshing and addicting! It makes me feel like I'm on a tropical vacation. I knew I wanted to make different versions of that ice cream very, very soon.
Then, my friends at Republic of Jam just happened to stop by our tasting room (okay, they are right next door) with 6 quarts of freshly picked, sweet Pacific Northwest cherries. After eating about 2 quarts myself (swear), I decided to make ice cream. And chocolate needed to be involved...it just did.
In my adventures around the internet (I could read food blogs all day), I found OXO has a new cherry pitter,...and wait for it...it has a splatter screen. Yes folks, it's the little things. I have no other choice but to get this, like NOW. While I love my cherry pitter, it sprays juice, the seed goes flying, the dog chases it and swallows it. It's a mess and I've ruined quite a few articles of clothing. I need the screen and I'm getting it.
Anyway, what I love about this ice cream...there is no-custard, but you do have to make sure your ingredients are cold. In other words, some planning is necessary.
The Best Ice Cream in Los Angeles
by Susan Salzman
For the past two months, my children and I have been trying all kinds of
ice cream places in and round the city. After Eli’s post on finding
the best hamburger in Los Angeles over at my other site, BigMouthLA, he
made his own editorial calendar of what foods he wanted to critique
next. Ice cream, pizza, macaroni and cheese, and burritos are at the top
of his list.
Here is his list of favorites:
Milk
This place is Eli’s obsession. Since his first taste over 2 years ago,
according to him, nothing beats Milk. The extensive menu of both sweet
and savory has something for everyone (and ironically their salad’s are
some of the best). From a Milky Way Shake to a Warm Ooey Gooey
Chocolate Sundae, to the Citrus Vanilla Float, everything is off the
charts good! The Mint Chocolate Crunch Shake was his latest tasting;
mint ice cream, chocolate chips, and crunch malt balls. For a 13 year
old that is one heck of a cocktail. Milk is one of our family
favorites. For me it is always the Scooter Pie (marshmallow sandwiched
between two cookies and covered in chocolate), but it is their logo that
sends me to the moon and back!
The Best Ice Cream
by Holly PalanceButterscotch Pecan Ice Cream
by Susan Salzman
A few weeks back, Patricia and I made this angel food cake which was delicious. It also left me with 9 egg yolks. 9 I say! I gave Eli the choice of what to do with the yolks; pot de creme, lemon curd, custard, ice cream. He, of course, chose the ice cream. He and I sifted through David’s book, The Perfect Scoop and it was a toss up between two flavors. I have made a lot of David’s ice creams and I really didn’t want to repeat a recipe. The Butterscotch Pecan got the final vote. And I am so glad it did.
The key word in this recipe is “butter”. The butter mixed with the brown sugar is the flavor profile that resonates on the back of your tongue, long after the ice cream has left your mouth. Mind you, I am not a huge ice cream fan. Generally, I pass on this decadent dessert and go for the apple tart with caramel sauce or a piece of chocolate or the gourmet doughnut (fried-yes, I love a really, really good doughnut). This ice cream is like no other. It is in a class all by itself and this ice cream could send me to a Weight Watchers meeting each week: confessing that my daily points were consumed with a scoop of this ice cream.
Rhubarb Sorbet
by Joseph Erdos
When pretty pink rhubarb stalks show up at the market, you know that
summer isn't far behind. Strawberries, too. Known as the pie fruit,
rhubarb isn't just for pies. As one of my favorite vegetables (yes, it's
a vegetable), I try to take every opportunity to make a unique dish
every year when it's in season. Cobblers, crisps, compotes, and pies are
all traditional. But this time I made sorbet.
This dessert couldn't be any more refreshing or palate-cleansing.
Rhubarb has a tart, slightly astringent taste. That's why usually
rhubarb desserts have a lot of sugar. But rhubarb's tartness is best
tamed by its buddy, the strawberry. The two are a match made in dessert
heaven. Strawberries keep the sorbet on the slightly sweet side, without
the use of too much sugar, and brighten the pink color, making it
appealing in taste and in beauty.
Dynamite Ice Cream
by Laraine Newman
Sometimes there are things in this life that you have to eat no matter what the consequences. You have to block out the nasty knowledge you have about fat and heart disease and go back to your childhood,
where, in my case, you could find print ads with doctors endorsing
cigarettes. Holy Smokes!
The other day, my husband took me to Williams Sonoma to buy the latest model Cuisinart. That’s for another article by the way because it is a cook’s wet dream.
What we hadn’t planned on was purchasing an ice cream maker; also made by Cuisinart. The little devil was $60 and there was a cute cookbook we bought, as well. The recipes went from labor intensive, (custard based gelato), to simple, (ice creams and sorbets). Of course, my daughter Hannah and I had to attack the custard one. I rationalized that it was about time my beautiful 15 year old learn basic custard. We chose a cinnamon and brown sugar ice cream because those were pantry staples.
The whisking and the tempering and the straining all went as planned, then Hannah lost interest and went into the living room to watch Family Guy because I’m Mother of The Year. The mixture had to sit in the refrigerator for 2 hours or overnight. Like a watched pot, I took the bowl out of the fridge after two hours exactly. Hannah had moved on to Gossip Girl because I’m a saint and should be writing parenting books.
Get Out the Ice Cream Maker
by Sue Doeden
We've got a few ice cream machines in our house. Two of them we've had for years. They're identical with their big plastic tub that holds a can with a paddle inside of it, with plenty of room between the can and the sides of the tub to pack in lots of ice and salt.
And then there is the Cuisinart machine with its ice cream can insert that needs to be frozen before you can make ice cream. I have two inserts. I store both in the freezer so they are ready to go whenever I have a sudden urge for something sweet and frozen.
I use my old machines for making ice cream, preferring the creamy consistency that results. I use the Cuisinart machine for making sorbet.
Earlier this week I plucked leaves from my lemon verbena plant out in my garden. It was the first time I was using the bright, fresh lemon-scented leaves. For the last couple of years I had searched local nurseries for lemon verbena plants and always came out empty-handed until this spring. There are so many ways I want to use lemon verbena and I am so excited to finally have a plant of my own. I'm told it is a perennial, and if it comes back each year, it becomes a nice shrub. We'll see if it can survive a cold Minnesota winter. I hope so.
The Bandit is Back
by Cathy Pollak
I've written here before about my youngest son's undying love for the almighty Snickerdoodle. While he loved the Snickerdoodle Muffins I made him, they did not stand a chance against this Snickerdoodle Ice Cream.
Honestly, I think this is the best ice cream I have ever made. The most amazing part; it tastes exactly like a Snickerdoodle. Exactly.
When my picky eater tasted this, his eyes lit up in amazement. "Mom, how did you do this?" Music to my ears. I got him.
Not only is this delicious, it happens to be about one of the easiest recipes to throw together. There is no custard to make. No cooling off period in the fridge and it sets up nice in the freezer.
We All Scream for Crunchy Ice Cream Sandwiches
by Sue Doeden
Start with oatmeal cookies (the homemade variety, of course), add
ice cream, make sandwiches, then sit back and watch the enjoyment as
happy people eat them.
Kids love ice cream sandwiches, and adults feel like kids as they eat them.
Raisins are always a great addition to oatmeal cookies, but when they are frozen, they can get hard and difficult to chew. It seems the perfect way to get their sweet flavor in an ice cream sandwich is to puree them before incorporating them into the dough.
I discovered, too, that giving raisins the puree treatment fools those who dont' care for those little dried grapes. My husband is a good example. He won't eat anything that involves raisins. I offered him one of these cookies, still warm from the oven. After he ate about three of them, he asked, "What is that flavor that I can't quite pinpoint? Dates?" (He likes dates – hates raisins). I thought it safe to share the secret with him. How could he say he didn't like them after already wolfing down three with great gusto? He gave me a sheepish little grin and grabbed another cookie.
White Peach Sherbet
by Joseph Erdos
If anyone asks what my favorite fruit is, I always answer peaches, but
not just any peach. White peaches are my absolute favorite fruit.
Besides eating peaches as they are, my other favorite ways to enjoy
them are in desserts. I love this peach galette, a foolproof fruit tart
recipe that I rely on every summer. But I also love to make sorbets,
ice creams, and sherbets. What could be a better
dessert than a cooling scoop or two? This summer it's white peach
sherbet all the way.
Just think of the sherbets from when you were a kid and the ones
available in the supermarket. Don't you ever wonder what those
fluorescent colors are actually made of? They're hardly fruit. Though
as a kid I too loved eating them, but not anymore. This recipe couldn't
be easier. Sherbet is unlike ice cream in that the milk or cream is not
cooked. In ice cream you almost always need to make a custard from eggs
and milk and simmer it until thick. Sherbet is simply puréed fruit
mixed with milk and then frozen.
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