Adventures in Ice Cream

melidasaur • Jul 13, 2006 7:36 pm
I just got an ice cream maker and I'm trying to experiment with different flavors - the first batch was made with Guinness - so far, it tastes good. It's still mixing right now. Anyone have any good yet unusual flavors or ingredients to try (preferably alcohol based)?
bluecuracao • Jul 13, 2006 9:23 pm
Champagne sorbet is delicious, and ice cream is better than sorbet...so Champagne ice cream would probably be amazing!
smoothmoniker • Jul 13, 2006 10:00 pm
I would recommend not doing any Wasabi based flavors - it was the experimental flavor of the week at Cold Stone once, and like a fool, I had to try it. It was so bad, I had to eat two scoops of vanilla just to wash my mouth out.
Hoof Hearted • Jul 13, 2006 11:04 pm
Knew someone that made homemade ice cream out of vanilla and Amaretto.
wolf • Jul 13, 2006 11:17 pm
Banana Rum = Good (add to a basic vanilla base, IIRC)

Orange Sorbet with Peachtree Schnapps makes a nice Fuzzy Navel ... or you could do Peach sortbet with Grand Marnier, I suppose.
melidasaur • Jul 13, 2006 11:57 pm
wolf wrote:
Banana Rum = Good (add to a basic vanilla base, IIRC)

Orange Sorbet with Peachtree Schnapps makes a nice Fuzzy Navel ... or you could do Peach sortbet with Grand Marnier, I suppose.


ooooh, wolf - those sound good. I bought these really awesome peaches so I may try the orange sorbet with peach chunks and the schnapps.
SteveDallas • Jul 14, 2006 12:06 am
How do you intend to study for the bar exam while consuming all this booze?? :angel:
wolf • Jul 14, 2006 12:07 am
I think that she's going about studying for the bar the very best way.

My undergrad thesis defense was helped along by two shots of Jack and a beer back.
melidasaur • Jul 14, 2006 12:56 am
SteveDallas wrote:
How do you intend to study for the bar exam while consuming all this booze?? :angel:


for some reason, i think it helps me stay sane! I don't really make the stuff for me, it's more for my friends so that they let me hang around and bitch about the bar exam.
footfootfoot • Jul 16, 2006 1:07 pm
wolf wrote:
I think that she's going about studying for the bar the very best way.

My undergrad thesis defense was helped along by two shots of Jack and a beer back.


Wolf's roomie:
"Hey Wolf, don't you have a thesis to work on? Should you be hittin' the sauce?"

Wolf: "Get off my back, it's on substance abuse, I'm doing research."
wolf • Jul 16, 2006 1:57 pm
Actually, it was on immigration patterns and laws in Australia. My undergrad is in Geography and Planning.

It was still basically research, though, because Fosters is 'Straylian for beer, mate.
footfootfoot • Jul 16, 2006 2:54 pm
It's hot enough to boil a monkey's bum t'day, I say the sun's up over the yardarm...
cableguy • Jul 17, 2006 3:57 am
Last time I heard that phrase was on a Monty Python skit........:D
I've always wanted to try making mint chocolate chip with Creme De Menthe, but I don't drink :(
BrianR • Jul 17, 2006 11:29 pm
Use the supermarket stuff...no alcohol!

I make killer mint milkshakes with it sometimes.
disenchanted • Jul 18, 2006 3:28 am
SteveDallas wrote:
How do you intend to study for the bar exam while consuming all this booze?? :angel:


Ok, I'll bite:

Which bar is giving the exam?
xoxoxoBruce • Jul 18, 2006 7:49 am
:eek:
Urbane Guerrilla • Jul 23, 2006 2:31 am
I've had Creme de Menthe-Choc Chip done up as a homemade milkshake. Good. The mint gets thoroughly enriched.
WabUfvot5 • Jul 23, 2006 7:09 pm
Never tried myself but a quality hobo wine, such as Cisco, could make for an interesting taste / experience.
barefoot serpent • Jul 25, 2006 5:16 pm
get some pawpaws in the fall (should be growing in semi-bottomlands in Illinois woods) and do 'em up with Mezcal (or tequila) but vodka or gin would prolly work, too.
glatt • Jul 25, 2006 5:33 pm
Pepto-Bismol ice cream

Image
Urbane Guerrilla • Aug 14, 2006 5:09 am
And how come nobody's mentioned the recipe in Serve It Forth, Anne McCaffrey, ed., for grapefruit sherbet both chilled and aerated by stirring liquid nitrogen into the mix?
Ingredients:
1 part honey
4 parts grapefruit juice
4 to 8 parts liquid N2

Equipment: deep metal pan/shatterproof bowl, wooden spoon, gloves, face shield, coat, dewar for N2.

Dissolve honey in grapefruit juice -- if it's stubborn, heating the juice will help. In a deep metal pan or shatterproof bowl, stir mixture with a wooden spoon while pouring liquid N2 directly into it. Pour slowly and keep stirring to help aerate. It will look like the witches' cauldron from MacBeth; this is normal. Stop stirring when mixture freezes solid. Then allow excess nitrogen to boil off before tasting! Sherbet is ready to eat when it starts to soften again.

The gloves, coat, and face protection are there for safety when pouring liquid nitrogen into things.

Deponent saith they then capped the evening by freezing marshmallow Peeps and then blowing them up in the microwave.

This is the same cookbook that tells how (and why) to fix armadillo. Apparently it's good stewed, though chunked armadillo roasts well and is good with dumplings.

No oreodont in Oreos, though. :(
Sundae • Aug 14, 2006 8:36 am
Bacon & Egg Ice Cream anyone?

Made famous in the UK by Heston Blumenthal at The Fat Duck - if you select the Tasting Menu you will also see Snail Porridge and Nitro-Green Tea & Lime Mousse (uses liquid nitrogen to freeze "a quenelle of green tea and lime foam" as a palate cleanser)

Bacon and egg ice cream

This forms part of a dessert served at the restaurant. The idea stemmed from thinking about why some ice cream tastes of egg. I came to the conclusion that it's because the custard is overcooked. When you cook custard, the heat makes the proteins in the egg coagulate, which thickens the mix. If you continue cooking the custard, it will scramble, with the proteins completely clumped together. Egg yolk sets at 72C. So, by cooking the custard to 82C or more, as advised in many traditional recipes, the proteins begin to coagulate. Although the custard may still look liquid, tiny clumps of protein will have formed. And so, according to the coffee bean theory, the custard will be full of little bursts of egg flavour.

All of which got me thinking about how to exploit this eggy flavour, and so this recipe was born. The other parts of the dessert (bar the caramel/mushroom dish) follow, because the ice cream needs them to deliver the full impact of the breakfast dessert. And yes, you do need this many egg yolks; use the whites to make the chocolate fondant from the March 9 issue. These quantities make around one litre.

300g sliced streaky smoked bacon
1 litre full fat milk
25g skimmed milk powder
24 egg yolks
50g liquid glucose
175g unrefined caster sugar

Roast the bacon in an oven at 180C until slightly browned. Place in cold milk and leave to marinate overnight. Tip the milk and bacon into a casserole, and add the milk powder. Put the egg yolks, glucose and sugar in a mixing bowl and, using an electric whisk, mix at high speed until white and increased in volume.

Heat the milk and bacon mix to simmering and, with the whisk still going, pour a little on to the yolks. Tip this back into the milk pan, and cook over a lowish heat until it hits 85C. Hold at this temperature for 30 seconds, then remove from the heat. Cool the mixture down by stirring it over ice, tip into a blender and liquidise until smooth. Pass through a sieve and churn.


From here
rkzenrage • Aug 14, 2006 1:48 pm
I don't have a recipe for it, but one of the most intriguing, cooling & wonderful flavors I have ever had was cactus.
Had some in LA and Miami... I often crave it.
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 7:55 pm
What fun!!!! I do love vanilla or chocolate best of all....these are intriguing!
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 9:28 pm
Cactus Ice Cream (Saboten Aisu)
A tasty treat that will prick the hearts of ice cream lovers everywhere. It is smooth and refreshing with a taste that must be like drawing water from a cactus after being parched in a desert for days.


(I wanted to put these all in one post, but could not)
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 9:29 pm
Chicken Wing Ice Cream (Nagoya Tebasaki)
Nagoya is famous for its poultry, so it shouldn't come as a surprise that the taste of this ice cream is best described as foul. It actually tastes like a fried chicken wing, which is fine if that's what you're eating, but not if you're tucking into some ice cream.
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 9:30 pm
Crab Ice Cream (Kani Aisu)
Hokkaido, Japan's northernmost prefecture, is renowned for its rich array of seafood, prime amongst the delicacies being crab. Though not everybody's preferred ice cream flavour, this is a dish worth getting the claws into.
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 9:31 pm
Eel Ice Cream (Unagi Aisu)
Eel is a summer delicacy in Japan, which probably explains why Futaba decided to use it to flavour an ice cream. Surprisingly, the smooth taste is quite palatable, even if the thought of what's being eaten is not quite as tasty
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 9:32 pm
Fish Ice Cream (Sanma Aisu)
Something must smell fishy about ice cream flavored with saury, a saltwater fish popular in Japan...But there's no worries about that with this offering from Kimura Shoten as the fishy fumes have been drowned out by liberal doses of brandy. Not the greatest tasting ice cream on earth, though.
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 9:32 pm
Octopus Ice Cream (Taco Aisu)
Want to tantalize the taste buds with a tentacle? If so, Octopus Ice Cream is the go. Japanese have been able to come up with an amazing variety of uses for octopus, ranging from delicacy to porno movie prop. Little wonder that octopus has found its way into ice cream, then.
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 9:33 pm
Shrimp Ice Cream (Sakura Ebi Aisu)
It's prawnographic! Most people would be making a report to health authorities if they dug up a full shrimp's body from their ice cream, but with this product from Roman Holiday that's the norm. The image Shrimp Ice Cream probably conjures up amongst most people probably comes closest to the actual taste
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 9:34 pm
Wasabi Ice Cream (Wasabi Aisu)
Sushi gets its sting from the horseradish paste known in Japanese as wasabi. While its tingling taste makes a delightful addition to raw fish, wasabi's tangy flavor also makes for a surprisingly edible ice cream
bluecuracao • Aug 14, 2006 9:54 pm
MsSparkie wrote:
Octopus Ice Cream (Taco Aisu)
Want to tantalize the taste buds with a tentacle? If so, Octopus Ice Cream is the go. Japanese have been able to come up with an amazing variety of uses for octopus, ranging from delicacy to porno movie prop. Little wonder that octopus has found its way into ice cream, then.


I don't care how adorable that octopus is on the container--I wouldn't touch that stuff. Wasabi and cactus ice cream sound tasty, though.
MsSparkie • Aug 14, 2006 10:48 pm
How about the porno octopus? I imagine it having a mustache...LOL
Happy Monkey • Aug 14, 2006 11:04 pm
Did someone say porno octopus?
BigV • Aug 15, 2006 11:25 am
Urbane Guerrilla wrote:
And how come nobody's mentioned the recipe in Serve It Forth, Anne McCaffrey, ed., for grapefruit sherbet both chilled and aerated by stirring liquid nitrogen into the mix?--snip--

Been there, done that.
Urbane Guerrilla • Aug 18, 2006 3:47 pm
V, just read it. Major LOL, since you didn't get hurt except for the hearing loss thing... catastrophic failure modes of pressurized two-liter bottles, aye.

________________
Odenton, the home of Ohappiness
wolf • Aug 19, 2006 4:43 pm
Once again, MsSparkie misses the point of a thread.

Go figure.
lulu • Aug 27, 2006 7:56 pm
Have you tried it with Baileys or any of the Godiva based liqueurs? :)