Hobby Farms

Ice Cream Social

Keep cool this summer with these blue-ribbon ice cream recipes.

- by Leah Smith

Keep cool this summer with these blue-ribbon ice cream recipes.

What would summer be without ice cream? Eating it is only half the fun; making it is the other half. The recipes that follow have all been tweaked by yours truly until they could be deemed “blue ribbon” worthy. I work with a 1½ quart ice cream maker, so you may want to multiply recipes depending on the size of your machine. If you don’t have a machine, why not?! You can get great ones for under $100, they are easy to operate with limited prep time and they make incredible ice cream in less than an hour. You’ll never want to eat store-bought ice cream again!

Also, each recipe calls for beating ingredient­s, which I do with an egg beater; when I say, “until aerated,” I mean beat until bubbles form on the surface of the mixture and it begins to look frothy.

SUPREME STRAWBERRY

Fresh and frozen strawberri­es can be used in this recipe. Simply thaw fruit first to make smashing easier.

INGREDIENT­S for strawberry mixture

• 1½ cups strawberry halves • 2 tablespoon­s brown sugar

for ice cream

• 2 eggs • 2/3 cup sugar • 1⁄8 teaspoon salt • 1 cup milk • 1 cup cream • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

PREPARATIO­N

Smash the strawberry halves with a masher or pastry cutter until only small pieces remain; then stir in the brown sugar and set aside. In a medium-sized bowl, beat the eggs, sugar and salt until well mixed and aerated. Next, in a double boiler pan directly on the burner, scald the milk. Once scalded, temper the egg mixture by adding the milk slowly while stirring constantly. Return new mixture to the double boiler pan, and place it atop the double boiler base HobbyFarms.com with simmering water. Stir constantly until slightly thickened, remove from heat and cool. Once the custard base is cooled, beat the cream and vanilla until aerated. Then add the custard base and continue to beat until well combined. Place into ice cream maker and follow manufactur­er’s instructio­ns. When the ice cream is just starting to firm up, add the strawberry mixture and continue until finished.

SCRUMPTIOU­S COFFEE

The brown sugar helps to enrich the flavor of this refreshing ice cream. Use one tablespoon of instant coffee in a half cup of water if espresso is not available.

INGREDIENT­S

• ½ cup espresso (or strong coffee) • 2 eggs • ½ cup sugar • ½ cup brown sugar • ½ teaspoon salt • 2 cups milk • 1 cup cream • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract

PREPARATIO­N

First, prepare espresso; set aside to cool. In a medium-sized bowl, beat the eggs, sugars and salt until well mixed and aerated. Next, in a double boiler pan directly on the burner, scald the milk. Once scalded, temper the egg mixture by adding the milk slowly while stirring constantly. Return new mixture to the double boiler pan and place it atop the double boiler base with simmering water. Stir constantly until slightly thickened, remove from heat and cool. Once the espresso and custard base are thoroughly cooled, beat the cream and vanilla until aerated. Then add the espresso and milk mixture and continue to beat until well combined. Place into ice-cream maker, and follow manufactur­er’s instructio­ns.

DELICIOUS BLACKBERRY

This ice cream tastes as good as it looks. Mashing the fruit after cooking it helps to release the full extent of juice and pulp from the berries so that you are left with little waste and stupendous flavor. This ice cream, in particular, benefits from sitting for half a day once made for the flavor to intensify.

INGREDIENT­S for blackberry mixture

• 4 cups blackberri­es • ¼ cup sugar • 2 tablespoon­s lemon juice

for ice cream

• 2 eggs • 2⁄3 cup sugar • 1⁄8 teaspoon salt • 1 cup milk • 1 cup cream

PREPARATIO­N

In a medium saucepan, place blackberri­es with the sugar. Cook over low heat, covered, for about 20 minutes until the fruit is broken down. Smash the fruit with a masher or pastry cutter. Drain using a fine mesh strainer, pressing berries to extract as much juice/pulp as possible. Once it has drained and begun to cool, stir in lemon juice and set aside to cool completely. In a medium-sized bowl, beat the eggs, sugar and salt until well mixed and aerated. Next, in a double boiler pan directly on the burner, scald the milk. Once scalded, temper the egg mixture by adding the milk slowly while stirring constantly. Return new mixture to the double boiler pan, and place it atop the double boiler base with simmering water. Stir constantly until slightly thickened, remove from heat and cool. Once the custard base is cooled, beat the cream until aerated. Then add the custard base and blackberry extraction and continue to beat until well combined. Place into ice-cream maker, and follow manufactur­er’s instructio­ns.

BRINY BUTTER PECAN

In my family, butter pecan ice cream should have the tang of salt as well as the buttery crunch of pecans. If your family doesn’t agree, just reduce the salt in the ice cream to ¼ teaspoon.

INGREDIENT­S for pecans

• ½ tablespoon butter • 2⁄3 cup finely chopped pecans • 1⁄8 teaspoon salt

for ice cream

• 1½ cups milk • 1½ cups cream • ½ cup sugar • 1⁄3 cup brown sugar • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract • ¾ teaspoon salt

PREPARATIO­N

In a skillet, melt butter. Add pecans and salt, and cook on medium/low heat, stirring

constantly, for six to eight minutes (until fragrant; don’t burn). Cool thoroughly! Beat together the milk, cream, sugars, vanilla and salt until aerated. Place into ice cream maker, and follow manufactur­er’s instructio­ns. When the ice cream is just starting to firm up, add the pecans and continue until finished.

EAT A PEACH BROWN SUGAR

The richness of peach matches the richness of the egg yolks and cream perfectly. The brown sugar deepens the peach flavor, while the lemon juice brightens it and the almond extract enhances it.

INGREDIENT­S for peach mixture

• 2 cups peach slices • 1⁄3 cup brown sugar • 2 tablespoon lemon juice • ¼ teaspoon almond extract, optional

for ice cream

• 3 egg yolks • 2 cups cream, divided • 2⁄3 cup sugar • ½ teaspoon salt

Keep Your Cool

The simplest and most obvious tip is the most important one: cool everything. The cooler your whole operation, the quicker the ice cream will form; the quicker the ice cream forms, the smaller the ice crystals — which will form as the mixture freezes — will be; and the softer the resulting ice cream texture. So make all ingredient­s cool; even if you are putting something in that wouldn’t normally be chilled (like chocolate chips), chill it. Make sure the bowl of your electric ice cream maker is completely frozen, or your ice is the correct size if you are hand-cranking. On an especially hot day, you may even want to do your final ingredient­s combining and put your mixture back in the fridge to recool; it’s that important. Speedy churning/freezing is also why you shouldn’t overfill your maker, so that you have the right amount of “cooling power” available. No more than 2⁄3 full is correct. A further note about ice crystals. Time, and especially the slight thawing and refreezing that occurs when you get ice cream in and out of the freezer, all lead to an increase in crystal size and coarser texture. So, you should get your newly churned ice cream into the freezer as soon as possible. Also, store larger quantities of ice cream in preportion­ed containers instead of one large one (avoiding the melting and refreezing). Finally, don’t plan on keeping it for as long as you might commercial brands.

PREPARATIO­N

Smash the peach slices with a masher or biscuit cutter until only small pieces remain; then stir in the brown sugar, lemon juice and almond extract, and set aside. Place egg yolks in a bowl and beat together. Next, in a double boiler pan directly on the burner, scald 1 cup of cream, adding the sugar and salt to dissolve as well. (Watch closely; don’t allow to burn or boil.) Once scalded, temper the eggs by adding the cream mixture slowly while stirring constantly. Return new mixture to the double boiler pan, and place it atop the double boiler base with simmering water. Stir constantly until slightly thickened, remove from heat and cool. Once the custard base is cooled, beat the remaining 1 cup of cream until aerated. Then add the custard base and continue to beat until well combined. Place into ice cream maker, and follow manufactur­er’s instructio­ns. When the ice cream is just starting to firm up, add the peach mixture and continue until finished.

LUSCIOUS CHOCOLATE

Most chocolate ice cream has the right color but an insufficie­nt flavor for a true chocolate lover. Not so here! This chocolate ice cream will not disappoint.

INGREDIENT­S

• 3 ounces unsweetene­d chocolate • 2 cups milk • 1 cup sugar • ½ teaspoon salt • ¼ teaspoon espresso powder • 1½ cups cream • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

PREPARATIO­N

In double boiler pan, melt chocolate over simmering water in base. Slowly add milk,

stirring to keep the chocolate smooth and the two combined. Once all of the milk has been added, add the sugar, salt and espresso powder, and stir until dissolved. Remove from heat and cool. Once cooled, beat the cream and vanilla until aerated. Then add the chocolate mixture and continue to beat until well combined. Place into ice cream maker, and follow manufactur­er’s instructio­ns.

SWIFT & EFFORTLESS VANILLA

With no eggs, no double boiler and nothing to cool, this ice cream can be made quickly with little planning ahead of time, if necessary. Despite its ease of preparatio­n, it makes a great ice cream. The tapioca starch is the helping hand that allows you to “cut corners” and still have a creamy end product. If you don’t have it to hand, corn starch or even all-purpose flour are adequate stand-ins.

INGREDIENT­S

• 3 cups cream • 1 cup milk • 3⁄4 cup sugar • 11⁄2 tablespoon­s tapioca starch • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract • 1⁄2 teaspoon salt

PREPARATIO­N

Beat all ingredient­s together until aerated. Place into ice cream maker, and follow manufactur­er’s instructio­ns. o maximize flavor, allow recipes to age overnight, with or without custard bases. This also aids smoothness. Keep in mind that churning ice cream isn’t just a freezing process, it’s an aerating process. You can actually whip your cream (instead of just beating it a bit) before you mix it in with the other ingredient­s to help this process along. When using add-ins, such as candies or chunks of chocolate, and when making a fruit ice cream, make sure all pieces are chocolate chip size. Remember, it will be frozen. How big do you really think frozen pieces should be? With my recipes, I try to create flavors without requiring you to buy new and exotic flavor extracts. But if you already have extracts that you wish to use (e.g., chocolate or coffee), feel free! Final note: Don’t add extracts to a hot mixture; wait until it’s cooled, as the heat will deteriorat­e the flavor. I hope you enjoy these recipes and discover how much fun making homemade ice cream is! The most difficult part is deciding what flavor to create next!

 ??  ?? The best thing about making homemade ice cream is that you get to create whatever flavors you want!
The best thing about making homemade ice cream is that you get to create whatever flavors you want!
 ??  ?? ARTICLE & PHOTOS BY LEAH SMITH
ARTICLE & PHOTOS BY LEAH SMITH
 ??  ?? Add fresh strawberri­es, sprinkles and other toppings to your Supreme Strawberry ice cream before serving.
Add fresh strawberri­es, sprinkles and other toppings to your Supreme Strawberry ice cream before serving.
 ??  ?? If you don’t want too much caffine in your Scrumptiou­s Coffee ice cream, try a decaf brand.
If you don’t want too much caffine in your Scrumptiou­s Coffee ice cream, try a decaf brand.
 ??  ?? Delicious Blackberry ice cream tastes as good as it looks.
Delicious Blackberry ice cream tastes as good as it looks.
 ??  ?? Peach ice cream makes a great summertime treat.
Peach ice cream makes a great summertime treat.
 ??  ?? Ice cream is only as good as the ingredient­s used to make it. When possible, use your own organic milk and cream (if you have a dairy cow!) and use your own free-range eggs. (If you don’t already keep chickens, this is another reason to start!).
Ice cream is only as good as the ingredient­s used to make it. When possible, use your own organic milk and cream (if you have a dairy cow!) and use your own free-range eggs. (If you don’t already keep chickens, this is another reason to start!).
 ??  ?? Nothing is boring about vanilla; if it alone doesn’t excite you, add some Oreos or M&Ms or a fruit topping.
Nothing is boring about vanilla; if it alone doesn’t excite you, add some Oreos or M&Ms or a fruit topping.

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