In addition to the mint/red fire chip ice cream, I'll be making a modified version of eatchicago's
Pissaladière. Instead of Martha's pizza crust, I'll be making homemade puff pastry (if my air conditioning doesn't break as it usually does when I try to do this. You really can't make puff pastry without AC.), and serving the Pissaladière as mini-tarts. I'll use eatchicago's topping recipe, except along with the onions I'll caramelize some of the beautiful spring fennel that Nichols Farm has been carrying. This will be just fine at room temperature, so no need for oven time.
Here's the ice cream recipe:
- Heavy cream and whole milk at a 2:1 ratio (I'm using
Traderspoint Creamery milk)
- 5 fresh, local egg yolks for each quart of liquid
- 3/4 cup of sugar for each quart of liquid
- as many fresh peppermint leaves as you can possibly add to the pot, roughly torn
- 3/4 of a Vosges Chocolate Red Fire bar for each quart of liquid, choppped
Low-simmer cream, milk, and mint together on the stove covered for about an hour. Turn off flame and let steep for a few hours. Strain, being sure to press hard on the leaves to extract every bit of oils and flavors. Return to stove.
Beat egg yolks until pale. Temper the yolks by adding a little warm cream at a time, then pour yolks into the pot and combine well. Heat this custard slowly, stirring constantly, until it coats the back of a spoon. Strain again, just in case you were drinking and rushed the egg tempering, in which case you may have little bits of scrambled yolk to get rid of. (ahem, not that this has ever happened to
me)
Chill the custard until cold, then process in ice cream machine per manufacturer's directions. A minute or two before the churning is done, add the red fire chips.
...defended from strong temptations to social ambition by a still stronger taste for tripe and onions." Screwtape in
The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis
Fuckerberg on Food