PizzaPolice wrote:I must admit that I was wrong to fire on nr706. I took his/her advice and read his/her previous posts. We are literally on the same page. I sincerely apologize, nr706.
Pie Lady wrote:Okay, I'm about to make a batch of bittersweet chocolate and raw honey ice creams, the former for a party and the latter for my belly. My questions:
I never made the honey one before so I'm just going to do like the recipe says. I was thinking of throwing in some cardamom too - how many pods do you suggest for a 1-qt batch? Or how much ground stuff, if that texture would be more interesting.
Do you mean you made a bad batch of Banana, or have you actually named one of your ice creams this?Pie Lady wrote:All I have left is...Shitty Banana of my own making.
nr706 wrote:Since honey is mostly monosaccharides, I doubt you'd need corn syrup in addition for smoothness. You might use it if you want additional sweetness without the honey flavor, though.
RAB wrote:I don't know what type of recipe/method you are using, but I'll share a couple of recent experiences:
I made a 1.5 qt batch of honey cardamom gelato with 15 cracked cardamom pods. I steeped the pods in my (heated) milk/cream base for about 15 minutes. The primary flavor was cardamom, and the gelato was a big hit.
I recently used cardamom as an accent flavor for a batch of coffee gelato. I used the same method with 12 cracked pods and found the result to be overwhelmingly cardamomed. The coffee and cardamom fought, and the cardamom won. Next time, I'm going to go with 4 or 5 pods max, when I'm looking for a secondary flavor.
grits wrote:Do you mean you made a bad batch of Banana, or have you actually named one of your ice creams this?Pie Lady wrote:All I have left is...Shitty Banana of my own making.
I just had to ask!
Ah, I didn't think of that. It could be both a bad batch and a formal name.Pie Lady wrote:grits wrote:Do you mean you made a bad batch of Banana, or have you actually named one of your ice creams this?Pie Lady wrote:All I have left is...Shitty Banana of my own making.
I just had to ask!
Both!The name came later.
Independent George wrote:I hope I'm posting this in the right place; there are about a dozen Ice Cream threads, but this looked closest to my question.
I decided to make ice cream this weekend, and I just realized I can't remember how fast to set the churn on my ice cream machine. Like the OP, I have a KitchenAid ice cream maker attachment for my stand mixer. Do I want it faster or slower to reduce my overrun?
I'm not sure that it matters, but it's an avocado ice cream (2 ripe avocados, 1.5 cups cream, 1 cup whole milk, 1/2 cup sugar, 1 tbsp lime juice, candied lime zest (3 limes) blended until smooth).
KajmacJohnson wrote:Is anyone familiar with a soft serve ice cream maker? I have a ten year old Rival soft serve ice cream maker I bought for five bucks at an estate sale, looks like it was never used and I think I figured out why, it's a total pain in the ass and limits what you can make and how to make it. I used one of the recipes provided, did everything it told me to do and the ice cream did not solidify. My husband thinks it was because the canister that was put in the freezer was not cold enough though it sat in a bag for two weeks in the freezer. Any thoughts or suggestions? Or just anyone with feedback or knowledge of having one.

spinynorman99 wrote:KajmacJohnson wrote:Is anyone familiar with a soft serve ice cream maker? I have a ten year old Rival soft serve ice cream maker I bought for five bucks at an estate sale, looks like it was never used and I think I figured out why, it's a total pain in the ass and limits what you can make and how to make it. I used one of the recipes provided, did everything it told me to do and the ice cream did not solidify. My husband thinks it was because the canister that was put in the freezer was not cold enough though it sat in a bag for two weeks in the freezer. Any thoughts or suggestions? Or just anyone with feedback or knowledge of having one.
Was the ice cream mix as cold as possible before adding it to the ice cream maker?
BR wrote:Well, not exactly ice cream. But for the picnic this coming Sunday, I'm planning on making a tomato-olive oil sorbet to go along with gazpacho and manchego cheese straws. Problem is, I'm worried that the sorbet will separate with the olive oil - never made a sorbet with oil before. Any advice? I'd like to keep it vegetarian, so no gelatin. And I don't want to have it too sweet obviously. So, anything available for purchase in the city (north side preferably)? Arrowroot? Gum? What kind and where?
BR wrote: I seem to have solved my own problem. After considerable research, I decided to purchase kuzu, which is apparently a wild Japanese arrowroot. They sell it at Whole Foods in crystal form, but it was incredibly easy to turn it into a powder in my mortar and pestle. Basically, I used 1 tablespoon of powder for 1 cup of liquid, and it did the trick - the sorbet did not separate. My research had indicated that kuzu is great to use in ice cream and sorbets for mouth-feel and emulsification and because it would not impart any off flavors (which it did not). Hopefully, you'll find this helpful the next time you're making ice cream or sorbet.
The GP wrote:BR wrote: I seem to have solved my own problem. After considerable research, I decided to purchase kuzu, which is apparently a wild Japanese arrowroot. They sell it at Whole Foods in crystal form, but it was incredibly easy to turn it into a powder in my mortar and pestle. Basically, I used 1 tablespoon of powder for 1 cup of liquid, and it did the trick - the sorbet did not separate. My research had indicated that kuzu is great to use in ice cream and sorbets for mouth-feel and emulsification and because it would not impart any off flavors (which it did not). Hopefully, you'll find this helpful the next time you're making ice cream or sorbet.
And the final result was excellent. Thanks, BR!