Kennyz wrote:An interesting, thought provoking, and fun idea. The main problem I think you might have is that 7 courses of cream, whether iced or not, is just too much. No matter how good they are (and I must admit to having doubts about at least a couple of your ideas), I'd expect people to feel a little queasy by the end.
Kennyz wrote:For your caesar salad course, how about an ice cream sandwich? I'd juice the lettuce, cook it down to intensify, and puree it into an egg yolky custard that gets a whirl through the ice cream maker. Sandwich that between 2 flat shaped garlic-anchovy croutons.
Jenn_in_RoPa wrote:The next flavor I want to play around with is a spicy thai lemongrass/peanut with coconut milk base.
David Hammond wrote:Jenn_in_RoPa wrote:The next flavor I want to play around with is a spicy thai lemongrass/peanut with coconut milk base.
Coconut milk would have been a good addition to the mango-mint I made yesterday.
Spicy ice cream is interesting because the heat would play off ice cream's expected sweetness.
Cathy2 wrote:David Hammond wrote:Jenn_in_RoPa wrote:The next flavor I want to play around with is a spicy thai lemongrass/peanut with coconut milk base.
Coconut milk would have been a good addition to the mango-mint I made yesterday.
Spicy ice cream is interesting because the heat would play off ice cream's expected sweetness.
You could do a fire and ice combination: same combination served as ice cream, room temperature and hot. You could compare and contrast the differences in chili heat in those three states.
Regards,
sazerac wrote:David, are you considering sorbets as well? As part of the 7 courses or just between some of the courses?
I remember (from a long time ago) an excellent serrano & lime sorbet at Salpicon.
Mhays wrote:Question: doesn't ice cream require sugar to reach the proper texture?
gleam wrote:My guess is that without sugar and without some other sort of stabilizer (eggs, locust bean gum/guar gum), your cream will freeze nearly solid. The only other real option would be to add some alcohol. Of course, a mixture of egg/gum/alcohol will probably get you the desired texture, but I think it'll take a good bit of experimenting.
sazerac wrote:For a smoked salmon course there is a great recipe in the Alinea cookbook (Sour cream; sorrel, smoked salmon, pink pepper; pg 58) with the sour cream made cold with the smoked salmon as shavings. Not exactly 'ice cream' but the textural element of cold sour cream that thaws in the mouth is great.
d4v3 wrote:I am not sure I approve of this activity. I think I find transforming food ingredients into some completely different type of food to be slightly unnatural. It seems to be a trend, though. I suppose we can blame the inventors of Tofurkey.
I admit I do find it interesting. At least he is not making bacontinis.sazerac wrote:We all do silly things sometimes for no better reason than it being fun. I'm quite sure David isn't planning to do this weekly or daily as the makers of tofurkey do (at least I hope not, though though with Hatter Hammond I'm not sure even he can tell). At the very least it is an interesting mental exercise.
d4v3 wrote:I am not sure I approve of this activity. I think I find transforming food ingredients into some completely different type of food to be slightly unnatural.
d4v3 wrote: Sugar lowers the freezing point of water, thereby forming fewer and less dense ice crystals, and leaving more unfrozen water in the ice cream. Apparently, adding a stabilizer to the ice cream can also contribute to less ice (as gleam suggested). Professor Goff also details a formula using palm, sunflower and coconut oils instead of milkfat.
David Hammond wrote:I agree, it's Unnatural to a degree, but I'm not sure where you draw the line. Does taking a steak, chopping it up, and serving it in tomato sauce over spaghetti render it "completely different"? I can't see how that's quantitatively more different than transforming cold potato leek soup into ice cream -- there are actually fewer steps involved. When people ask me what I thought of the food at Alinea, my usual response is that it's Unnatural. It is. So is having an all ice cream dinner. Comparisons between my work in the kitchen and that of Achatz ends there.![]()
d4v3 wrote: My nephew eats fortune cookies injected with cheese whiz. That may not cross the line, but it certainly bumps up against it.
d4v3 wrote:David Hammond wrote:I agree, it's Unnatural to a degree, but I'm not sure where you draw the line. Does taking a steak, chopping it up, and serving it in tomato sauce over spaghetti render it "completely different"? I can't see how that's quantitatively more different than transforming cold potato leek soup into ice cream -- there are actually fewer steps involved. When people ask me what I thought of the food at Alinea, my usual response is that it's Unnatural. It is. So is having an all ice cream dinner. Comparisons between my work in the kitchen and that of Achatz ends there.![]()
David,
I think you know where the line is. If you took that spaghetti sauce and made it into popscicles or breakfast cereal, that would cross it. I didn't even have to mention Achatz as somebody who crosses said line on a regular basis. Of course, it is lots of fun. That is why people pay big bucks for gastrotainment at Alinea. My nephew eats fortune cookies injected with cheese whiz. That may not cross the line, but it certainly bumps up against it.
trixie-pea wrote:You could do a deconstructed gazpacho--a tomato-olive oil ice cream with tiny scoops of cucumber, bell pepper, red onion, and sherry vinegar sorbets.

On the contrary, I cross lines on a daily basis, but there is a method to my madness (at least in my mind). Actually, I even approve of crossing lines simply for the sake of crossing lines or even just for my own amusement (which I am sure is your intention). I ate my fair share of cheese whiz filled fortune cookies (and liked them).David Hammond wrote:Dave, I think our fundamental difference here is that you seem to not approve of crossing lines and I do -- not that I always enjoy the result. Sure, we all have a general sense of where the line is, but I think part of the well-recognized fun in the restaurants of Chicago's lively molecular gastronomists is that they actively push against the line.