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ice cream

 

Strawberry Frozen Yogurt

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Strawberry season is one of my favorite times of year. I have lots of fond food memories of strawberry season from my childhood. We went strawberry picking every summer and I would sit in the rows eating one berry for every one I put in my bucket. My mom always made homemade strawberry jam, which was my favorite for many, many years. And my birthday cakes as a very little girl always included fresh strawberries on top. 

This is definitely the best time to get good, ripe strawberries. The kind that are red all the way through and taste sweetly of summer. It's worth going a little out of your way to get them from a good source: u-pick, farmer's market, or csa. 

So far this season, I have tried my hand at jam and tried David Lebovitz's wonderful, extremely easy recipe for strawberry frozen yogurt

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I encourage you to try it too! It's been a big hit here!

 

Filed under  //   ice cream  

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Seville Orange Ice Cream

The Seville orange obsession continues at JustPigs: a couple of days ago I made Seville orange ice cream. 

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The results, I must admit, were mixed. I adapted a recipe that I found online by Nigella Lawson (and translated for American kitchens at The Splendid Table). A minor aspect of the problem comes from my own futzing around. Nigella's recipe calls for 1 cup plus 2 TBS of powdered sugar. Personal laziness combined with a love of tart things, caused me to use only 1 cup. I later did a little reading up on ice creams and discovered that you really shouldn't reduce the amount of sugar in ice cream recipes. Sugar helps keep the ice cream from over-freezing (I did get a little crystallization, but not much). Also, from a flavor perspective, I do think the extra bit of sugar was needed. 

Another problem I continue to have with ice creams made with heavy cream is the fattiness. More specifically, the weird sensation--on one's tongue and the roof-of-the-mouth--of being coated in frozen butterfat. I've spent the last couple of days researching this and have a couple ideas about how to prevent it in the future. I would also love any suggestions people may have!!

From what I could find online, it's possible that I over-mixed the cream (although I did very thoroughly "lick the bowl" right afterwards and it tasted perfectly divine!). I may experiment in the future with half-and-half and milk to reduce the total fat. 

Another thing that occurred to me is I may not be allowing the ice cream to warm up enough before serving. I attempted patience yesterday and allowed a little more time for the ice cream to come up to a more scoop-able temperature. That did seem to help a bit. I also wonder if it could be an emulsion problem, but have no idea how to fix that. 

In any case, it's not inedible. We will most certainly eat it all. But I will attempt to correct these problems next time. My slight adaptations to Nigella's recipe are as follows: 

Seville Orange Ice Cream

2 cups heavy cream
1/2 cup half-and-half
1 cup powdered sugar (plus 2 TBS!)
Zest of 2 Seville oranges
Juice of 3 Seville oranges
1 TBS Cointreau

Put all the ingredients in the bowl of a stand mixer. Using the whisk attachment, beat the cream to stiff peaks (be careful not over-beat!).Put the whipped cream in a bread loaf pan and cover with plastic wrap. Leave 3-5 hours to freeze. Remove from the freezer 20 minutes before serving to let the ice cream soften up a bit. 

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Filed under  //   Seville oranges   ice cream  

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Blood Orange Sorbet

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Blood Orange sorbet. All of two ingredients and the most beautiful thing in the world. Just gorgeous. 

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All you'll need is 10 or 12 blood oranges and a cup of sugar. 

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Grate the peel of a couple of the oranges. Then squeeze the oranges in order to get 4 cups of juice. Strain the juice, pushing as much pulp as possible through the sieve. 

Put 3/4 cup of blood orange juice and the sugar in a non-reactive saucepan. Heat gently, stirring, until the sugar dissolves. Combine the zest, the juice and the sugar/juice together in a small bowl, mix it around a couple of times, and chill overnight. 

Freeze in your ice cream maker according to the manufacturer's instructions, or pour into a shallow pan, place it in the freezer and mix approximately once per hour until frozen. 

Make this to delight your friends (who really don't need to know how easy it is, do they?) and charm your family. They'll all come back for more. Believe me.

 

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Filed under  //   ice cream   orange   sorbet   vegetarian  

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Two Lemon Sorbets

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In honor of Kim’s request to “Keep the lemon recipes coming,” I want to share two lemon sorbet recipes I made this past weekend.

Because I was making them for a dinner party in the evening, I got started early. I mixed up the ingredients in the morning and let them chill in the fridge for a couple of hours. When I returned to freeze the sorbets in the late afternoon, I hit a snag: my ice cream freezer was not cold enough for some reason (it is the kind that you freeze ahead of time). I could not get either of the sorbets beyond the slushy stage. Argh!

Luckily, I had several hours before dessert eating would commence, so I packaged up the slush and got it into the freezer. I decided to go old school (i.e. freeze and mix, freeze and mix, repeat, repeat, repeat). A couple of times before we left the house, I stirred the slush. When it was time to leave I dumped all the ice from the freezer into my little cooler, along with two frozen bricks of blue ice, and nestled in the sherbets. Then we puttered across town.

When we arrived at at our friends' home, I whisked the sorbets into the freezer and continued the freeze and mix regimen.

In the end, both sorbets firmed up enough to serve. Even though they weren’t perfectly frozen, they were still tasty. As it turned out, our host had--for some mysterious but fortuitous reason--purchased raspberries that day. They were the perfect finishing touch.

I will surely make both of these recipes again. Rob, who doesn’t much like fruity desserts, ate seconds and thirds. Both versions are bright and light and incredibly easy to make. Especially if you have a good, very cold ice cream freezer…but even if you don’t.

Meyer Lemon Sorbet

--adapted from Chez Panisse Desserts by Lindsey Shere

3-5 Meyer lemons

1 cup plus 3 TBS sugar

4 cups water

2 TBS white wine or Champagne (optional)

Zest one lemon. Juice the lemons until you have about ¾ cup lemon juice. Strain the juice into a bowl and add the peel.

Heat the sugar with 1 cup of water until the sugar dissolves. Add the remaining 3 cups of water. Pour the sugar-water into the bowl with the lemon peel and juice. Add wine or champagne if using (this keeps the sherbet from freezing rock hard). Chill completely in the refrigerator (at least 2 hours or overnight). Freeze according the instructions that came with your ice cream maker (or put in a loaf pan or relatively flat Tupperware and put in the freezer for several hours, stirring approximately every hour).

Meyer Lemon Buttermilk Sorbet

--adapted from The Gourmet Cookbook

 

2 cups well-shaken buttermilk

¾ cup light corn syrup

Zest from 3 medium Meyer lemons

¼ cup lemon juice

¼ cup sugar

Stir all ingredients together making sure the sugar dissolves. Refrigerate the mixture until well chilled (at least 2 hours or overnight). Freeze according to the instructions that came with your ice cream maker (or put in a loaf pan or relatively flat Tupperware and put in the freezer for several hours, stirring approximately every hour).

 

Filed under  //   ice cream   lemons   sorbet   vegetarian  

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