The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Sweet secret to creamy frozen yogurt? Maple syrup

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We set the bar high with this recipe: We wanted a naturally sweetened, pleasantly tart vanilla frozen yogurt with the creamy, smooth texture of premium ice cream.

We started with plain wholemilk yogurt; not wanting to mask the yogurt’s tangy flavor, we immediatel­y ruled out the additional dairy we saw in some other recipes. Next, we needed to choose a natural sweetener that wouldn’t disrupt the clean flavor of the yogurt.

Sucanat, coconut sugar, and honey proved to be overpoweri­ng, but maple syrup worked perfectly: It offered just the right amount of rounded sweetness without being distractin­g. To develop distinct, nuanced vanilla flavor, we used a whole vanilla bean along with a small amount of extract.

With the yogurt’s flavor down, we turned our attention to finetuning the texture. Usually, sugar helps to prevent ice crystals from forming in ice cream and frozen yogurt, but with the small amount we were using we needed to find a different way to avoid an icy texture.

We wondered if the water in the yogurt was to blame. Draining the yogurt overnight and eliminatin­g a measured amount of liquid resulted in a much better final texture, but the ultrasmoot­h creaminess we coveted was still proving elusive. We knew that store-bought frozen yogurts often rely on additives and stabilizer­s to achieve a smoother texture, and we wondered if we could re-create the effect at home by using gelatin.

We tested yogurts made with various amounts of gelatin (blooming it in the strained yogurt liquid kept our recipe streamline­d), and landed on 1 teaspoon. Finally, we prevented large ice crystals from forming by allowing the frozen yogurt base to cool to 40 F or lower before churning.

You can increase the vanilla extract to 1 tablespoon if you don’t have a vanilla bean, though the flavor will be duller. We prefer to use whole-milk yogurt in this recipe; the frozen yogurt will be less creamy if you substitute low-fat yogurt.

RECIPE VANILLA FROZEN YOGURT

Servings: 8 (Makes 1 quart)

Start to finish: 2 hours and 40 minutes, plus 8-12 hours to strain yogurt

INGREDIENT­S

1 quart plain whole-milk yogurt

1 teaspoon unflavored gelatin

1 vanilla bean

1⁄2 cup maple syrup

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1⁄8 teaspoon salt

INSTRUCTIO­NS

Line colander or fine-mesh strainer with triple layer of cheeseclot­h and place over large bowl. Place yogurt in colander, cover with plastic wrap (wrap should not touch yogurt), and refrigerat­e until at least 1 1⁄4 cups liquid has drained from yogurt, at least 8 hours or up to 12 hours.

Discard 3⁄4 cup of drained liquid and return remaining liquid to bowl. Sprinkle gelatin over liquid and let sit until softened, about 5 minutes. Microwave mixture until bubbling around edges and gelatin dissolves, about 30 seconds. Cut vanilla bean in half lengthwise. Using tip of paring knife, scrape out seeds; discard bean. Add seeds to warm gelatin mixture and let cool for 5 minutes. In large bowl, whisk drained yogurt, maple syrup, vanilla extract, salt, and cooled gelatin mixture until well combined and smooth. Place bowl over ice bath, or cover and refrigerat­e, until yogurt mixture registers 40 F or lower.

Transfer mixture to ice cream machine and churn until mixture has consistenc­y of thick soft-serve and registers about 21 F, 25 to 35 minutes. Transfer frozen yogurt to airtight container and freeze until firm, at least 2 hours or up to 5 days. Serve.

Nutrition informatio­n per serving: 131 calories; 36 calories from fat; 4 g fat (3 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 16 mg cholestero­l; 95 mg sodium; 19 g carbohydra­te; 0 g fiber; 18 g sugar; 5 g protein.

 ?? CARL TREMBLAY — AMERICA’S TEST KITCHEN VIA AP ?? Scoops of frozen yogurt
CARL TREMBLAY — AMERICA’S TEST KITCHEN VIA AP Scoops of frozen yogurt

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