Guest guest Posted March 24, 2005 Report Share Posted March 24, 2005 An ice cream maker recipe, or a by hand recipe? in' for Chocolate Ice Cream I find myself with a plethora of cream, with at least another pint coming in a couple days. Anyone have a really good ice cream recipe that doesn't involve heat? A killer rich moussy Death-By-Chocolate kinda deal? I don't eat ice cream very often, ergo I don't make it very often, so if I'm going to make it at all, I'd rather a tried and true like-ta-die-for version. Also very open to versions involving coconut milk (although after posting this I'll go scurrying off to check my various cookbooks for that too) - chocolate and coconut being one of the truly great combos never invented by humans, visions of those old Reese's cups commercials notwithstanding MFJ If I have to be a grownup, can I at least be telekinetic too? <HTML><!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC " -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN " " http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd " ><BODY><FONT FACE= " monospace " SIZE= " 3 " > <B>IMPORTANT ADDRESSES</B> <UL> <LI><B><A HREF= " / " >NATIVE NUTRITION</A></B> online</LI> <LI><B><A HREF= " http://onibasu.com/ " >SEARCH</A></B> the entire message archive with Onibasu</LI> </UL></FONT> <PRE><FONT FACE= " monospace " SIZE= " 3 " ><B><A HREF= " mailto: -owner " >LIST OWNER:</A></B> Idol <B>MODERATORS:</B> Heidi Schuppenhauer Wanita Sears </FONT></PRE> </BODY> </HTML> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2005 Report Share Posted March 24, 2005 At 09:17 AM 3/25/05 +1200, you wrote: > >An ice cream maker recipe, or a by hand recipe? Either. I have a Donvier ice cream maker (ya know, stick the insert into the freezer then stir a lot), but if you've got a killer by hand recipe, I'll adapt! MFJ If I have to be a grownup, can I at least be telekinetic too? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2005 Report Share Posted March 24, 2005 , I usually make mint chip, but this is what I'd do: 4 egg yolks 4 cups of cream 1/2 cup or more of maple syrup (remember that the mix will taste less sweet when frozen) 1/2 cup or more of organic cocoa powder mix really well with an electric beater and then chill for a few hours before putting the mix into the donvier. When it's half-frozen, add a chopped up bittersweet chocolate bar for extra yummmmmm. You're having folks over for dessert, right?? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2005 Report Share Posted March 24, 2005 Actually 's sounds easier than mine, but I'll give you mine anyway. It's an ice cream maker recipe, and I've only made it a couple of times, but it was divine. Comes out like soft serve, or like lightly frozen mousse, so if you like it harder, you might want to make it a bit in advance and freeze a bit longer. You do have to heat the cream a bit tho, to melt the chocolate. These are the quantities I use, which doesn;t fill the whole maker, but is convenient for the sizes the ingredients come in, so adjust to suit. 500ml (2 cups) cream 85g (3 oz) block naturally sweetened dark chocolate (if you like really dark chocolate ice cream, could use more) 3 egg yolks coupla Tbs maple syrup Gently melt the chocolate in a double boiler (or a bowl over a pan of hot water) with half the cream, stirring from time to time. Meanwhile beat together the egg yolks and maple syrup till frothy. When the chocolate has all melted into the cream, take off the heat and start whisking whoile adding the rest of the cream, and then the egg mix. Chill. Then pour into ice cream maker and away you go. Deb -----Original Message----- From: [mailto:jessclaire@...] I usually make mint chip, but this is what I'd do: 4 egg yolks 4 cups of cream 1/2 cup or more of maple syrup (remember that the mix will taste less sweet when frozen) 1/2 cup or more of organic cocoa powder mix really well with an electric beater and then chill for a few hours before putting the mix into the donvier. When it's half-frozen, add a chopped up bittersweet chocolate bar for extra yummmmmm. You're having folks over for dessert, right?? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2005 Report Share Posted March 24, 2005 PS Meant to say, haven;t tried it with coconut cream, but in general coconut ice cream is icier and not as creamier as made with cream. RE: in' for Chocolate Ice Cream Actually 's sounds easier than mine, but I'll give you mine anyway. It's an ice cream maker recipe, and I've only made it a couple of times, but it was divine. Comes out like soft serve, or like lightly frozen mousse, so if you like it harder, you might want to make it a bit in advance and freeze a bit longer. You do have to heat the cream a bit tho, to melt the chocolate. These are the quantities I use, which doesn;t fill the whole maker, but is convenient for the sizes the ingredients come in, so adjust to suit. 500ml (2 cups) cream 85g (3 oz) block naturally sweetened dark chocolate (if you like really dark chocolate ice cream, could use more) 3 egg yolks coupla Tbs maple syrup Gently melt the chocolate in a double boiler (or a bowl over a pan of hot water) with half the cream, stirring from time to time. Meanwhile beat together the egg yolks and maple syrup till frothy. When the chocolate has all melted into the cream, take off the heat and start whisking whoile adding the rest of the cream, and then the egg mix. Chill. Then pour into ice cream maker and away you go. Deb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2005 Report Share Posted March 25, 2005 On Thu, 24 Mar 2005 15:40:02 -0500 " F. Jewett " <mfjewett@...> wrote: > I find myself with a plethora of cream, with at least another pint coming > in a couple days. > > Anyone have a really good ice cream recipe that doesn't involve heat? Errr...am I missing something? Since we did making home made ice cream involve the use of heat? The sinews of war, a limitless supply of money. Cicero (106-43 B.C.), Roman orator, philosopher. Philippics, Oration 5, sct. 5. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2005 Report Share Posted March 26, 2005 > Message: 6 > Date: Fri, 25 Mar 2005 18:19:19 -0800 > From: <slethnobotanist@...> > Subject: Re: in' for Chocolate Ice Cream > > > On Thu, 24 Mar 2005 15:40:02 -0500 > " F. Jewett " <mfjewett@...> wrote: > >> I find myself with a plethora of cream, with at least another pint >> coming >> in a couple days. >> >> Anyone have a really good ice cream recipe that doesn't involve heat? > > Errr...am I missing something? Since we did making home made ice cream > involve the use of heat? If your ice cream involves an egg custard for smoothness, then it will of necessity involve heat, though I have also seen recipes with raw egg, or no egg. www.users.en.com/jaquick Evolution's a real bitch...and she's back in heat. --Mike Schneider Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2005 Report Share Posted March 27, 2005 At 05:23 PM 3/24/05 -0500, you wrote: > >, > >I usually make mint chip, but this is what I'd do: > >4 egg yolks >4 cups of cream >1/2 cup or more of maple syrup (remember that the mix will taste less >sweet when frozen) >1/2 cup or more of organic cocoa powder > >mix really well with an electric beater and then chill for a few hours >before putting the mix into the donvier. > >When it's half-frozen, add a chopped up bittersweet chocolate bar for >extra yummmmmm. > >You're having folks over for dessert, right?? > > LOL - sure. When I get that far. Thanks for the recipe - I haven't actually done it yet, but it sounds great. One question, though - most recipes for ice cream tend to use maple syrup for the sweetener. When it's mixed up with everything else, though, can you actually TASTE the maple? (I'm hoping you say you can't taste it, actually). Thanks! MFJ If I have to be a grownup, can I at least be telekinetic too? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2005 Report Share Posted March 27, 2005 At 10:38 AM 3/25/05 +1200, you wrote: > >Actually 's sounds easier than mine, but I'll give you mine anyway. >It's an ice cream maker recipe, and I've only made it a couple of times, but >it was divine. Comes out like soft serve, or like lightly frozen mousse, so >if you like it harder, you might want to make it a bit in advance and freeze >a bit longer. You do have to heat the cream a bit tho, to melt the >chocolate. These are the quantities I use, which doesn;t fill the whole >maker, but is convenient for the sizes the ingredients come in, so adjust to >suit. > >500ml (2 cups) cream >85g (3 oz) block naturally sweetened dark chocolate (if you like really dark >chocolate ice cream, could use more) >3 egg yolks >coupla Tbs maple syrup > >Gently melt the chocolate in a double boiler (or a bowl over a pan of hot >water) with half the cream, stirring from time to time. Meanwhile beat >together the egg yolks and maple syrup till frothy. When the chocolate has >all melted into the cream, take off the heat and start whisking whoile >adding the rest of the cream, and then the egg mix. Chill. Then pour into >ice cream maker and away you go. > >Deb Oh, yours sounds excellent too! I'll just pretend I'm making Heidi's white bread - " Whisk until failure! Whisk until failure! Switch arms!!!! Whisk until failure!!!! " MFJ If I have to be a grownup, can I at least be telekinetic too? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2005 Report Share Posted March 27, 2005 At 08:01 PM 3/26/05 -0500, you wrote: ME: Anyone have a really good ice cream recipe that doesn't involve heat? >> MICHAEL: Errr...am I missing something? Since we did making home made ice cream >> involve the use of heat? > JEFFREY: If your ice cream involves an egg custard for smoothness, then it will >of necessity involve heat, though I have also seen recipes with raw >egg, or no egg. Looking in more conventional places for ice cream recipes results in lots of recipes involving cooking the stuff, and I don't make ice cream often enough to be able to wing it from one of those recipes. However, since not *everyone* is a purist (wink wink), it seemed better to note that I was looking specifically for no-cooking types in my initial request. So in other words, Mr. Quick is not only correct, but also beat me to the post. Thanks. MFJ If I have to be a grownup, can I at least be telekinetic too? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2005 Report Share Posted March 27, 2005 Oh not that much whisking!!! My attention span is not that long for whisking. Just enough to get it mixed together. The ice cream maker gets it smooth ..... BTW, using katja's law of conservation of posts and replying to your other one re the cooking..... The recipe in my ice cream maker book did call for cooking it all first and I just ignored that bit. Seems to work fine. Tho maybe if I followed the full instructions it would be firmer???? -----Original Message----- From: F. Jewett [mailto:mfjewett@...] Oh, yours sounds excellent too! I'll just pretend I'm making Heidi's white bread - " Whisk until failure! Whisk until failure! Switch arms!!!! Whisk until failure!!!! " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2005 Report Share Posted March 27, 2005 > Thanks for the recipe - I haven't actually done it yet, but it sounds > great. One question, though - most recipes for ice cream tend to use > maple syrup for the sweetener. When it's mixed up with everything > else, though, can you actually TASTE the maple? (I'm hoping you say you > can't taste it, actually). > > Thanks! > MFJ > If I have to be a grownup, can I at least be telekinetic too? I just did my first batch of raw ice cream today, using my Cuisinart ice cream maker. I used 2 cups of cream, 1/4 cup of maple syrup, some vanilla and 2 egg yolks. I then added some chopped up pistachios during the last 5 minutes of mixing. It came out wonderful !!! I was afraid it wouldn't be sweet enough so I did add a couple of tbsps of powdered sugar but it wasn't necessary - I'll skip it next time. I can't taste the maple in the final product, maybe just the tiniest hint?? Let us know how yours turns out. I'm going to try chocolate next... Magda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2005 Report Share Posted March 27, 2005 - " One question, though - most recipes for ice cream tend to use maple syrup for the sweetener. When it's mixed up with everything else, though, can you actually TASTE the maple? " The only ice cream where I've ever tasted the maple was vanilla. The other flavors all hide it well. Steph Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2005 Report Share Posted March 28, 2005 - >I find myself with a plethora of cream, with at least another pint coming >in a couple days. > >Anyone have a really good ice cream recipe that doesn't involve heat? Well, this one involves *some* heat, but it is good. Take a couple ounces or so of unsweetened chocolate and grate it into powder. Gently melt the chocolate powder in some cream. You can get away with surprisingly little heat. Overall, the recipe calls for 1 pint of cream, 6 egg yolks, the chocolate, 2T glycerine or sweetener of your choice, and, well, that's it. Melt the chocolate in some or all of the cream, mix in the yolks and your sweetener, add the remaining cream if any, chill, put into the ice cream maker and have at it. On the rare occasions I've made this I haven't been really scientific about the quantity of chocolate, but it's VERY rich. For a more " normal " ice cream you'd probably want to replace some of the cream with milk, and I suppose you could cut down on the chocolate a bit. Hard to say. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 29, 2005 Report Share Posted March 29, 2005 At 11:18 PM 3/28/05 -0500, you wrote: >On the rare occasions I've made this I haven't been really scientific about >the quantity of chocolate, but it's VERY rich. For a more " normal " ice >cream you'd probably want to replace some of the cream with milk, and I >suppose you could cut down on the chocolate a bit. Hard to say. > Now why in the world would I want to cut down on the chocolate a bit? Blasphemy!!!! Someone else suggested to me the other day to mix some chocolate into some cream and leave it in the turned-off oven overnight to melt (I have a gas stove with pilot). Get up in the morning, mix it up, don't bother with anything else, just eat it for breakfast. lol MFJ If I have to be a grownup, can I at least be telekinetic too? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 29, 2005 Report Share Posted March 29, 2005 Hi , I originally never responded to this thread because by the time that I saw it I figured the ice cream was made and long gone. > MICHAEL: Errr...am I missing something? Since we did making > home made ice > cream > >> involve the use of heat? > > > > JEFFREY: If your ice cream involves an egg custard for > smoothness, then > it will > >of necessity involve heat, though I have also seen recipes with raw > >egg, or no egg. Yes. Heat makes a smoother and more custard like ice cream. If you were to eat a cooked batch right next to a raw batch, both made with the same ingredients, you would perceive the cooked one to be richer tasting and have better mouth feel. The raw one tastes fresher and cleaner, though, IMO. The problem with chocolate ice cream is that you must use heat to get the chocolate to incorporate into the mix. You can make a syrup or buy a pre-made syrup but that just means that the syrup was already heated and cooked and most likely it contains water which will make your ice cream tend to be more icy. The best way is to use baking chocolate or cocoa or both and heat them minimally while incorporating them into the minimum amount of minimally heated cream that it takes to get them to fully dissolve rather than re-clump into little particles of chocolate. As for sweetener -- I've definitely found that maple syrup or Rapadura make the ice cream taste off. This is one time where table sugar works great. Since I find the arguments for the added nutrients in " natural " sugars to be pretty silly I think that the trick is to use the minimal amount of sugar that will make your ice cream taste good. If you want maple flavored ice cream, go for it. I just like my ice cream to taste like the ingredients I'm using and find the natural sugars to be a big distraction. The trick is to just eat a little bit. Right. Here's a recipe that I have used several times since getting turned on to raw cream and milk: Ozz unsweetened chocolate 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder 3/4 cup sugar 2 large eggs 1Ds vanilla -- optional skimmed cream to make total mix volume of 4 cups -- about 3 cups Makes about 1.5 quarts when frozen - place the chocolate in the top of a double boiler and melt. - whisk in cocoa powder. Everything gets very clumpy but you want to heat the cocoa to begin melting the fat solids in it. - start with 2 cups of cream and slowly add some of it to the mix. Everything still remains clumpy but as you get more cream into the boiler and it heats up it will begin to dissolve the chocolate. Once you have enough cream (judgment call) and things are warmed sufficiently blend until smooth with a powered hand blender. This can be messy. - take mixture off of the heat and slowly add the remaining portion of the original two cups of cream to the blended mix. This will cool things down. The additional cream is never really cooked. This is the best compromise I have found for getting it all into solution. - cream the eggs and sugar. - slowly add the warm chocolate/cream mix to the egg/sugar mix and stir until completely blended. - add enough additional cream to make the total volume of the mix 4 cups - strain through a fine mesh strainer - chill until refrigerator cold. - freeze This makes a very mild and relatively sweet chocolate ice cream. You can double the chocolate and cocoa for a richer chocolate flavor. I use all cream if I'm using cream that I've skimmed myself from our raw milk. If you are using machine separated cream it might be heavier and have a little bit too much fat content. I'd try it and see. You can always add some milk and use less cream next time you make it if you find that the butterfat does not incorporate well into the mix. Ron Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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