The Basic Guide To Making Awesome Ice Cream (2024)

I’ll be honest, neat ice cream flavors aresuper easy.

Yesterday I looked at the stuff I made recently - chocolate-coffee-bourbon, hand-picked mulberry, walnut-rosewater, banana-chocolate swirl - and realized I am making impressive sounding ice cream.

Here are the basics:

There are a few types of ice cream, but the easiest to work with is Philadelphia style. It’s different from the more-complicated French style because while the French style is based on a custard, Philadelphia style is just milk and cream. Custards are cool and give a richer flavor and texture, but they mean you have to plan ahead. That isn’t so much my style, so let’s stick with Philly.

The cream provides you with milkfat. It’s going to be heavy cream, which is about 36% fat. Milkfat provides smooth texture and a good meltdown.

The milk provides you with milk solids. They improve the texture and enhance the air-holding ability of ice cream. Sure it also has fat, but at 4% for whole milk it isn’t too impressive. Ice cream made just from milk tends to be kind of icy.

I like a ratio of 2:1 cream:milk. You can usually get away with 2 cups of cream to 1 cup of milk without overflowing your ice cream machine.

Next up: sugar. Sugar helps resist freezing, too. You’ll want about half a cup to ¾ cup (I recommend the low end). If you’re using a liquid sweetener you’ll only want to use 75% as much as if you’re using regular sugar. Also! Some people make you go out and buy confectioner’s sugar (powdered sugar), but i haven’t found that it makes much of a difference.

So, your standard ratio is now around 2:1:.5, cream:milk:sugar.If you like mnemonics you’ll notice the numbers halve each time.

Now add a teaspoon of vanilla. Everything is better with vanilla! It just fills everything out, I think.

Now, let’s talk about ingredients!

Pick whatever you want. Look up anything - a random dessert, banana bread, gingerbread, whatever - and pull out the flavorful ingredients, spices and whatnot. Let’s cover how to add them into the ice cream mixture:

Whole things: Let’s say you want to make an ice cream flavored with chiles, or peppers, or coriander. You don’t want them in the actual ice cream, though, just the flavor.

SOLUTION: Combine the ingredients (crushed or cut if needed, to release more flavor) with the cream. Put the cream on the stove until it’s hot, then let it sit for a while (up to an hour). Taste it every now and again to see how you’re doing in the flavor department. Strain out the chilies/pepper/coriander

SCIENCE BACKGROUND: What’s happening is that the flavor compounds are fat-soluble, so they’re combining with the fat in the cream. You want to do this with the cream and not the milk because cream is 36% fat while milk is only about 5%, so the cream is way way better at absorbing the flavor.

Powder things:Cinnamon or garlic powder or stuff like that, you can just mix in with the cream-milk-sugar mixture.

Zestables: Citrus fruits live in this category. You can either slice off the rind, twist it to release some of the oil and steep it (like whole things) or zest it into tiny bits and treat it like powder. Zesting is when you grate it up into tiny bits! If you zest you can also let it steep for a while.

Earlier today I zested an orange and let it steep, but then zested a lime and put it right into the mix and then the machine. No rhyme or reason! Also, be careful - zestable are usually pretty powerful flavorwise, add a little bit at a time and taste often.

Liquid things:Same as above! This includes weird mealy things like very-mashed-up bananas.

Chunks:If you want to put pieces of banana or strawberry or anything like that into your ice cream, don’t put it in yet! They’ll all just sink to the bottom or get mashed up and mix in with everything else instead of staying as chunks. You want to run your ice cream machine for a while, then put them in about 5 minutes before you think it’ll be done.

SECRET TIP: Stick ‘em in the freezer before you put them in! That keeps them from raising the temperature of the ice cream when you put them in.

Sugary things: When addingstuff like honey and molasses you replace the sugar with it, not use it in addition to the sugar. Well, unless you’re really into sweet things.

Swirls: Swirls are a big big secret. Let’s say you make a chocolate ganache (liquidy chocolate, basically), and you put it in at the beginning. The whole ice cream will turn chocolatey, and you won’t get streaks. Put it in near the end? The same thing might happen!

The easiest way to get streaks is to wait until the ice cream is done, then layer the chocolate with the ice cream whenever you’re scooping it into a storage container. It seems like a cop-out, but I promise it’s the best way to go (and no one’ll notice!)

Now make it!

Now you can add your ingredients to the ice cream machine! Make sure it’s on before you start adding things, otherwise your ingredients might flash-freeze to the side and make the paddle stick. Oh, and store it in the freezer door, it’s less cold there so it makes for a better ice cream.

The Basic Guide To Making Awesome Ice Cream (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to good ice cream? ›

When it comes to great ice cream, cold temperatures and speed are your friends: the faster you bring your base from liquid to solid, the creamier it'll be. In a 2-quart unit, a typical batch of ice cream will take between 18 and 25 minutes to churn.

How do you make homemade ice cream creamy and not icy? ›

Whole milk – I don't recommend replacing it with reduced fat or skim. Whole milk's higher fat content ensures that the homemade ice cream comes out creamy, not icy. Cane sugar – For sweetness.

What are the 3 most important ingredients of ice cream? ›

If you have ever made ice cream, you already know what goes into it, ingredients such as milk, cream, and sugar. But there is one main ingredient that you may not have thought about, probably because you can't see it—air.

What is the best sugar for homemade ice cream? ›

Most home ice cream recipes call for simple table sugar, which is chemically known as sucrose. But in pro kitchens you have more options. Liquid sugars like invert sugar, corn syrup, honey, and glucose syrup all add body, creaminess, and stability to ice cream, and a little goes a long way.

What makes the perfect ice cream? ›

Fat. A great ice cream owes its smooth, creamy mouthfeel to fat, which helps keep ice crystals small. As Bauer explains, fat is also extraordinarily effective at carrying flavors, so when ice cream melts in your mouth, you are hit with the taste of your ingredients.

How to prevent ice crystals in homemade ice cream? ›

Chill Your Base Well

The initial mixture should be very cold before it hits the ice-cream machine; ideally, you'll want to refrigerate it overnight. It'll need less churning time this way, and that will keep ice crystals from snowballing.

How to stop homemade ice cream from going hard? ›

Sugar, corn syrup or honey, as well as gelatin and commercial stabilizers, can all keep your ice cream at a softer consistency. Ice cream also stays softer when you store it in a shallow container, rather than a deep tub, and cover the surface of the ice cream with plastic wrap to keep ice crystals from forming.

Why should we not drink water after eating ice cream? ›

No. You can drink water after eating ice cream. Its a common myth and the reason behind it might the fact that if we drink water immediately after eating ice cream, there will be a fluctuation in temperature (due to temperature difference in water and ice cream).

What is the ice cream rule? ›

It described the “ice cream rule” as the treatment of all of your belongings as ice cream. You wouldn't ever come home from the food store and leave ice cream on the counter.

What are the bad ingredients in ice cream? ›

As well as sugar and fat, most varieties of mass-produced ice cream also contain potentially harmful chemicals and food additives. Common types of food additives in ice cream include emulsifiers, preservatives, and artificial flavours.

What is the secret to making ice cream very creamy? ›

At the very least, chilling your base ensures it'll churn into ice cream as fast as possible, which translates into small ice crystals for creamier ice cream. Chilling your base also gives you the added advantage of tasting it in close-to-final form, so you can make final flavor adjustments.

Which milk is best for ice cream? ›

Don't worry too much if you don't have whole milk or heavy cream. Nearly any milk will work, and you can substitute half-and-half for the cream. Ideally you want ingredients with a high fat content because these will create a creamy texture when cooled.

What thickens homemade ice cream? ›

Egg Yolks: The most traditional thickening agent, egg yolks contain natural proteins and fats that contribute to a rich and luxurious texture in custard-based ice creams. Cornstarch: Often used in non-custard ice creams, cornstarch mixed with milk helps thicken the base and create a smooth mouthfeel.

How to make high quality ice cream? ›

Ice cream is only as good as the ingredients used to make it. So if you can afford it, buy organic milk and cream and free-range eggs, making sure that everything is as fresh as can be. If you're adding flavorings or ingredients, such as chocolate, vanilla or fruit, spring for high-quality products.

How do you make ice cream taste better? ›

"You can also try diced pineapple tossed in li hing mui powder, which will add sweet, salty, and sour flavors to a simple bowl of vanilla ice cream." In addition to dried fruits, try tossing in chopped nuts, crushed cookies, bite-sized candies, or even bacon bits.

How do you select the highest quality of ice cream? ›

The one metric that grocers and the dairy industry use to determine the quality of ice cream is overrun, which, in the simplest terms, is how much air is in your ice cream. The lower the overrun, the lower the air content, and the better the quality of ice cream.

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