A random comment on Facebook did what nothing else could: prod me into updating my poor, sad, neglected food blog. I don't even know how I can be called a Michigan Lady Food Blogger since I haven't updated my food blog in five months! I've had the pictures for this sitting around since LAST SUMMER. There's no excuse. I'm just lazy as heck.
When I discovered how easy it is to make your own ice cream, I started experimenting with different flavors. I learned that I could take a plain vanilla cream base and add almost anything to it. In one memorable experiment, my friend and I made ice cream which contained Gummi Bears and mini marshmallows (that strange combination was his request). Why not? It was fun, and I love having fun with cooking. Additionally, I am in complete control of the ingredients, and as such my homemade ice cream has no salt, less sugar, and no weird chemicals with multisyllabic names.
Anything chocolate has long been a favorite ice cream flavor of mine, so I began playing with various kinds of chocolate. Orange-infused chocolate chip: a huge hit. Chocolate with Grand Marnier: not so much; something in the Grand Marnier prevents the ice cream from ever fully freezing so the ice cream is mushy and slippery. Chocolate Chambord, however: a smashing success.
Ingredients:
- 1 cup whole milk
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 8 oz bittersweet or semisweet chocolate, broken into 1/2-inch pieces
- 2 cups chilled heavy cream
- 1 tsp vanillla extract
- Chambord liqueur
This is the Basic Chocolate Ice Cream recipe from the user manual for my Cuisinart automatic ice cream maker (a truly wonderful machine). I added the Chambord all on my own. I like to use Ghirardelli bittersweet (60% cacao) chocolate chips because not only does it save you the tedious task of chopping chocolate, the chips are delicious to snack on.
A variation on this ice cream which I made another time included fresh raspberries, which I threw in along with the Chambord at the tail end of churning time. Now that was an epic ice cream!
I know it's winter and we're all so very tired of cold, but it's always time for ice cream!
4 comments:
Welcome back! This summer try blackberry. I used to spend summers on a friend's farm on LI and they had tons of blackberry brambles. It makes wonderful ice cream. Also, a wonderful use for very ripe plumbs. If I'm lazy, I don't even bother to take the skins off.
In place of chocolate chips, you should try Guittard bittersweet chocolate wafers...I'm sure they'd be good for cooking and baking too! :)
Mmm, I need an ice cream maker... this sounds delicious!
This has nothing to do with ice cream but I saw it and thought of you. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126061208
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