Categories
food ice cream wine

red wine ice cream with dark chocolate sauce and cherries

My brother in law came round, with a rather triffic New Zealand Pinot Noir. There was a bit left in the bottle so what should I do with it rather than drink it? I thought about red wine ice cream.

It’s a bit off the wall but we’re not a million miles from a red berry or grape ice cream are we? I’m no stranger to experimenting with ice cream. I played with what was left in the bottle, then popped out to get some more to continue the testing! And after a bit of tweaking, the addition of cherries and a dark chocolate sauce helps nudge your palate in the right direction, accentuating the sweetness and the bitterness to help you on your way.

What wine varieties would work well in ice cream?

  1. Port: sweeter varieties like Ruby or Tawny Port can add a rich and fruity flavour.
  2. Cabernet Sauvignon: This full-bodied red wine with blackcurrant, blackberry, and hints of oak can bring depth and complexity to ice cream.
  3. Merlot: With its softer tannins and flavours of ripe red berries, plum, and chocolate, Merlot can lend a smooth and sweet character to ice cream.
  4. Zinfandel: Known for its bold and jammy fruit flavours, Zinfandel can add a vibrant and fruity punch.
  5. Malbec: This medium to full-bodied red wine offers flavours of black cherry, plum, and hints of spice.

The Marlborough variety that I’m using offers a vibrant and aromatic style. The region is usually known for sauvignon blanc but this pinot is just how I like it: fruity, not heavy with a really clean taste.

With rich, fruity flavours we’re not a million miles away from a black forest gateau? Suddenly the cherries make sense.

Here’s some of my other ice cream recipes:

Print

red wine ice cream

Course Dessert
Keyword booze, cherries, custard, pudding
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Freezing time 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 40 minutes
Servings 500 ml

Equipment

  • Ice cream machine

Ingredients

For the ice cream:

  • 400 ml red wine
  • 250 ml double cream
  • 75 ml whole milk
  • 4 egg yolks
  • 100 g sugar
  • 8-10 frozen cherries fresh will work but add them just before serving instead

For the chocolate sauce:

  • 50 g dark chocolate
  • 20 g butter
  • 100 ml double cream
  • 1 tablespoon sugar

Instructions

  • Put the red wine in a wide saucepan and put on a high heat. Boil until it has reduced by half - this can take 20-40 mins depending on the conductivity of your pan and water content of your wine. Once reduced pour into a jug or bowl to cool.
  • While it cools, put your cream and milk into another saucepan and bring to a simmer. While you wait beat the egg yolks and sugar together until light and foamy, about 3-4 minutes.
  • Add the wine reduction to the cream and then very gradually drizzle this into the egg yolks, beating all the time. This will help prevent the eggs cooking and scrambling. Return to a low heat and add a pinch of salt. Continue cooking until the mixture coats the back of a spoon, and leaves a trail when you draw a finger across - this will be about 80°C. Pour off to another container.
  • If you have an ice cream machine, churn until just set - a gelato kinda texture (I mean, you do what you want but I prefer the silky smoothness with the wine) and add the frozen cherries when prompted to mix in by your machine. If you don't have one pop the container in the freezer and churn up with a fork every 30 minutes until set, adding the cherries.
  • When ready to serve make the chocolate sauce. Combine all the ingredients in a saucepan and heat gently, stirring occasionally. Once melted together serve with the ice cream.

Notes

This pairs really well with a dense, rich chocolate cake or even as an affogato with a sweetened espresso.
Categories
bacon egg food ice cream milk

heston blumenthal’s egg and bacon ice cream

Heston Blumenthal was born in West London in 1966. His childhood fed many of his culinary fantasies he was to later draw upon and revisit: from fish and chips at Norman’s Plaice, to ice cream at the Regent Snack Bar. Breakfast and ice cream recur throughout his career, and the confluence of those is one I’m going to look at and cook today: egg and bacon ice cream.

This recipe, like so many of Heston’s, was born out of obsession and one of the first foods he investigated in depth at The Fat Duck restaurant. He wanted to find the perfect creamy mixture, with bold flavours, and yet not tasting too eggy. Not every ice cream recipe needs eggs but egg is an emulsifier that suspends butterfat particles and creates richer, creamier ice cream that stores really well. Searching for the perfect ice cream he began to experiment with all the variables, tweaking egg volume, freezing time, sugar content. After pushing received wisdom that custard bases should be cooked no higher than 85°c, his pastry chef Jocky Petrie commented that the overheated result “looked just like scrambled egg”. This eureka moment sent Heston off in a breakfast direction, remembering how much egg and bacon was a special treat growing up. After some refinement the dish first appeared on the menu at the Fat Duck restaurant in 2000.

The original plating in 2000

It might surprise you that this recipe uses milk powder. Heston has long favoured ice cream recipes with a low sugar content. Not for dietary reasons, but to create a denser texture and heightened flavours. Because of reduced fat and sugar, this recipe is high in egg yolks. The skimmed milk powder stops the ice cream from crystallising to create richness yet light and clean.

There are two published versions of the recipe: the uber-recipe from The Fat Duck Cookbook is an unsurprisingly complex and multi-layered affair, with tea jellies and tomato compotes. But there’s also the comparatively laid back version in Heston at Home, which is what I’ve emulated here: with the ice cream served with an egg-soaked bread and candied bacon. Much more approachable and likely more crowd pleasing.

The original recipe requires dry ice. I wasn’t willing to stretch to this – I can’t find it for under £37 – but instead used my ice cream maker for the final step. It may not be truly authentic but at least it’s Heston’s own endorsed model?

The result is a surprising and playful dessert that combines sweet, creamy ice cream with the savoury and smoky flavours of bacon. The Egg and Bacon Ice Cream reflects Blumenthal’s signature style of molecular gastronomy, where he combines unexpected ingredients and techniques to create unconventional but delicious dishes.

It is terrific. Really, super tasty. If you like dishes that combine sweet and salty flavours this is the one for you. The ice cream has a sweet but smoky flavour with a slightly ‘chunky’ texture and is a real winner. But the pain perdu / french toast / eggy bread is stunning. With a glass-like finish and sweet, chewy middle it’s sensational and worth having with other desserts.

Here’s a variation on the recipe served in egg shells.

And here’s Aldo’s version from BigFatUndertaking.

Print

egg and bacon ice cream

Heston Blumenthal's ice cream inspired dessert is french toast with a twist of sweet / savoury ice cream.
Course Dessert
Cuisine British
Keyword savoury, sweet
Servings 2 people
Calories 609kcal

Equipment

  • Ice cream machine

Ingredients

For the ice cream base:

  • 66 g sweet-cured smoked back bacon
  • 166 g full-cream milk
  • 5 g semi-skimmed milk powder
  • 4 large egg yolks
  • 20 g caster sugar

For the pain perdu:

  • clarified butter
  • 2 slices brioche stale (refrigerate overnight in a container to speed this up)
  • 100 g milk
  • 1 egg
  • 10 g golden caster sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

For the caramelised bacon:

  • 2 slices smoked bacon
  • 1 tablespoon maple syrup
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon sugar

Instructions

For the ice cream base and caramelised bacon:

  • To start the ice-cream base, preheat the grill to high. Lay the bacon slices on a baking tray lined with baking paper and place under the grill for 5-7 minutes or until crisp.
  • At the same time mix the syrup, salt and sugar together and then brush on two more bacon slices and grill with the other bacon. When this is cooked refrigerate until needed.
  • When the initial bacon is cooked, drain on kitchen paper and cut it into strips. Place in a bowl, pour over the milk then refrigerate to infuse overnight.
  • The next day, put the milk and bacon into a saucepan and add the milk powder. Place over a medium-low heat and bring to a gentle simmer. Remove from the heat and strain off the bacon.
  • In the meantime, blitz the egg yolks and sugar together using a hand blender. Combine the egg mixture with the warm milk and return the pan to the heat. Warm the liquid until it just reaches 90ºC.
  • Once this temperature has been reached, remove the pan from the heat and pass the ice-cream base through a fine sieve into a clean container over iced water, pushing the custard through with the back of a spoon. Transfer to an ice cream machine and churn until done. Freeze until needed.

For the pain perdu:

  • Mix the egg, milk, vanilla and sugar together. Dunk the bread in to soak for 20 minutes. After this time remove the bread to a rack to drain for a couple of minutes.
  • Melt a tablespoon of clarified butter in a non-stick frying pan over a medium heat. Add the bread and fry on all sides, remove and place on paper towel to absorb any excess fat.
  • Wipe the pan out then place it over a medium-high heat. Add enough sugar to cover the bottom of the pan and allow to melt.
  • Once the sugar has completely melted and caramelised, add the bread and cover every side. Once coated on all sides, remove the bread from the pan, place on a silicone mat and allow to cool.
  • To serve, scoop the ice cream into a serving bowl (I used an egg cup). Place a slice of crystallised bacon on top and serve with pain perdu on the side.

Video

Notes

If you don't have an ice cream machine, you probably don't have dry ice either. This can be also made by placing into a freezer, and breaking up every 30 minutes but the results won't be a smooth.
Categories
coffee food ice cream

caffe latte ice cream

I really like coffee. Like, a lot. So an excuse to try a brand marketed as “the world’s strongest coffee” must be worth a go!

Black Insomnia is a very strong coffee made using traditional barrel roasting techniques to create a smooth, rich taste from a mix of carefully selected Arabica and Robusta beans.

Made by Black Insomnia Coffee Company Limited, the coffee has been certified as having 1,105mg of caffeine per 12oz mug (standard size), equating to more than four times the strength of Starbucks or other typical high street brands.

When I tried it, yes it was strong! But seriously, it’s smooth with a hint of smoke, and sweet background aromas. Not sure I would drink it every day, but perhaps when I have “one of those days” it’ll be a great pick me up!

With such a strong coffee, I thought it would be good to mellow it down in an ice cream. A rich, complex flavour swaddled in sweet, creamy ice cream is a great match. If you give the below recipe a try, dial up or down the coffee dosage to your taste. A coffee syrup swirled through at the end would be a tremendous addition. I used my Sage SmartScoop Ice Cream machine which I’ve had for years – if you’re a fan of ice cream save up for this because it’s an outstanding machine that produces perfect ice cream every single time with no effort.

While writing this post, I also found this interesting article on the history of ice cream. Check it out!

Black Insomnia sent me coffee samples to try. I was not influenced to write a positive review.

Print

caffe latte ice cream

Course Dessert
Servings 1 litre
Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 500 ml double cream
  • 100 ml whole milk
  • 30 ml strong espresso
  • 5 egg yolks
  • 100 g caster sugar

Instructions

  • Put the cream, milk and coffee in a saucepan over a low heat until it starts to simmer, then remove from the heat.
  • Meanwhile beat egg yolks and sugar in a bowl until pale and thick. Once coffee cream is hot, slowly pour into the egg mixture, whisking all the time to prevent the egg scrambling.
  • Wipe out the pan and pour this mix back in. Stir over a low heat. Keep cooking gently until thickened, and when you drag your finger over the back of the stirring spoon it leaves a clear ridge. This will take 3 - 6 minutes. Transfer this to a jug to chill.
  • When chilled, churn in your ice cream machine until smooth and creamy. If you don't use an ice cream machine, put the mix in a tub in the freezer and churn it up with a fork every 30 minutes or so until set.
Categories
ice cream mint

mint choc chip ice cream

Ice cream: everyone has their favourite. Vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, pistachio, lemon… when you get me in front of an ice cream vendor there’s only one choice for me: mint choc chip ice cream. The freshness and the bitter dark chocolate is a sensational combination.

Did you know July is national ice cream month? Given how hot it’s been it’s not like we’ve needed the excuse! But here’s my version of mint choc chip ice cream, but be warned it’s not toothpaste-zingy, it’s sweet and herby – a very grown-up flavour.

This is made using the Sage by Heston Smart Scoop Ice Cream Maker. I’ve been using this for months and it’s one of the best gadgets I’ve ever owned. Ever!

This one does it all. It doesn’t have a separate bowl that you pre-freeze, and can prepare a range of desserts from gelato to sorbet to ice cream. You can set it off to get cold before you add your custard base so that you start churning from a chilly -30°. This means your ice cream sets faster and therefore smoother. Setting to a firm ice cream takes around 60 minutes if the machine is already cold.

Here’s a video of the machine around the end of it’s cycle:

Sadly I didn’t capture the best bit: when the machine is finished it twinkles a little tune just like your ice cream van plays. So cute!

It’s a beast of a machine and makes a noise when it’s working, and it’s not cheap. But it really is a top-class gadget and if ice cream is as popular in your house as it is in mine, then it’s a worthy investment.

If you don’t want to make it in an ice cream machine, you can pour the custard into a container and mix with a fork every hour or so.

Thanks to Sage by Heston for the machine, and they also helped buy some ingredients.

Buy the Sage by Heston Smart Scoop from Amazon

Want more ice cream goodness? Check out Kavey’s BSFIC!

Print

mint choc chip ice cream

Course Dessert
Servings 1.5 litres
Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 60 g mint leaves picked
  • 300 ml double cream
  • 600 ml whole milk
  • 6 egg yolks
  • 150 g caster sugar
  • 100 g dark chocolate melted

Instructions

  • Bring the mint leaves, cream and milk to a simmer and once hot turn off the heat. In a separate bowl whisk the egg yolks and sugar together until pale and fluffy. Pour the minty cream over the egg slowly, whisking all the time.
  • Strain off the mint leaves into a blender and whizz until pureed. Add back to the cream and put back over a gentle heat. Stir constantly with a wooden spoon until it coats the back of the spoon.
  • Transfer to an ice cream machine and churn until done. In a container, add a few tablespoons of melted chocolate, then top with ice cream. Repeat the layering, lasagne-style until all the mix is used up. Freeze for a further hour so the chocolate is set.
Exit mobile version