Just
ask me what I want for dessert and my number one answer will always be ice
cream…good ice cream!
I’ve
already admitted to being an ice cream snob. I grew up on great ice cream and
can’t eat anything that isn’t made using top quality, farm-fresh, locally
sourced ingredients.
I’ve
been researching ice cream recipes since my recent trip to San Francisco. Both Humphry
Slocombe and Bi Rite have inspired me to cook ice cream rather than take the
easy way out and always use cold ingredients.
Nancy
Silver of Snookelfritz
Ice Cream told me the same thing on Saturday when I tried some of her flavors at
Green City Market. She cooks her ice cream and said they are all custard based.
Just look at her Peach and Brown Sugar and Blackberry. Both were both delicious.
In fact, I haven’t had an ice cream I didn’t love at Snookelfritz.
I
treated the ladies at Flamin’ Fury Peaches to Nancy’ ice cream. They let me use
their delicious fruit to showcase Nancy’s scoops.
The
recipe below is for Bi-Rite’s vanilla and was in the August issue of Better Homes and Gardens. Honestly, I haven’t looked at the magazine for
years but was really impressed with the recipes in the August issue.
It’s
my first time cooking ice cream and I was not sure how long to leave it on the
stove but like everything else, I took a leap of faith to bring it to the next
level.
In
fact, I just had a bite (straight out of my ice cream freezer) and it was so
delicious that I broke down and bought a copy of Bi-Rite Creamery’s Sweet Cream and Sugar Cones. In fact, I’m
studying the all-famous recipe for Salted Caramel, the ice cream that started
it all in San Francisco at the Street Food Fest.
Stay
tuned and Bon Appetit!
1 whole vanilla bean
1 3/4 cups heavy cream
3/4 cup milk
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
5 large egg yolks
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
In heavy saucepan stir together
cream, milk, half the sugar, and the salt. With a small knife split the vanilla
bean lengthwise and scrape seeds from bean. Add seeds and split bean to pan.
Heat over medium-high heat. When mixture just begins to bubble around edges,
remove from heat; cover. Let seeds and split bean soak for 30 minutes to infuse
the liquid. Remove and discard vanilla bean.
Place egg yolks in a medium
heatproof bowl and whisk just enough to break up yolks. Whisk in remaining
sugar until smooth. (The sugar dilutes the eggs a bit and prevents them from
scrambling when the hot cream is added.) Set aside. Uncover cream mixture and
heat over medium-high heat until almost simmering. Reduce heat to medium.
Using a ladle, carefully scoop out
about 1/2 cup of the hot cream; whisking constantly, pour into yolks. Repeat.
(This step, known as tempering, gradually heats the yolks to reduce the risk of
overcooking.) Stirring constantly with a wooden spoon, slowly pour yolk mixture
into hot cream in saucepan. Continue to cook on medium, stirring constantly in
a figure eight to cover entire bottom of pan. Pay close attention as the
consistency can change quickly. Cook until mixture goes from the consistency of
heavy cream to that of a thin puree, but no thicker. You'll notice the mixture
thickening slightly and feel a little more resistance as you stir.
(NOTE: See, it doesn’t exactly tell you how long to cook it.
I read in a Humphry Slocombe
recipe that it should be 2-3 minutes so that’s what I did. The path on the
spoon did hold but I also read a recipe that said it should be cooked to a certain
temperature. More later)
To test the readiness of the
custard, remove the spoon from the saucepan and drag your finger across it. If
the base coats the back of the spoon and the path made by your finger holds for
a second or two, it's ready. Remove the pan from heat and immediately pour
through a fine-mesh sieve into a measuring cup or small bowl.
Set the bowl in a larger bowl of ice
water and stir frequently with a clean spatula until cool. Remove and cover
with plastic wrap. Refrigerate for at least two hours until completely cold.
Stir in vanilla extract just before churning and freezing the ice cream.
Variation Cinnamon and
Snickerdoodles:Stir in crumbled cinnamon-sugar cookies and a hefty sprinkle of
cinnamon. If you like, top with sauteed apples or a drizzle of caramel sauce.
Variation Lavender and Honey:Stir
snipped fresh or dried lavender and honey into the finished ice cream. For a
more intense flavor-before making the ice cream base, add 1/4 cup honey and 2
tablespoons dried lavender with the vanilla bean.
Variation Strawberry and Balsamic
Vinegar:Before stirring strawberries into the ice cream, chop and cook the
berries with a little sugar to remove excess water. Cool, puree, then stir into
ice cream with a few dashes of balsamic vinegar.
Variation Double Chocolate:Before
heating the cream, stir together 1/4 cup of Dutch process cocoa powder with
half the sugar. Whisk in a little of the cream to make a paste. Then whisk in
the remaining cream, the milk, and salt.
Variation Blueberry-Lemon Ice Cream
PieTo create an ice cream pie in sundae form, start with a sweet blueberry
sauce made by cooking the berries with sugar and a squeeze of lemon until
thickened. Pour over the ice cream and finish with crumbled gingersnaps or
graham crackers.
Variation Citrus Olive Oil and Sea
SaltDrizzle ice cream with bergamot olive oil (a citrus fruit that gives Earl
Grey tea its hint of orange flavor), Meyer lemon, or orange-flavored olive oil
will add the same citrusy brightness. Top it all off with a dollop of whipped
cream and crunchy coarse sea salt flakes.
Variation Caramelized Banana Sundae.
Create a sundae with warm cooked bananas. Start by melting butter and brown
sugar in a skillet. Add a couple of split bananas; cook until caramelized. If
desired, add a little rum and cook and stir a few minutes. Spoon over ice
cream. Top with whipped cream and toasted chopped pecans.