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Banana Malt Ice Cream

02.26.2015 by J. Doe // 2 Comments

The rest of the country has been buried under snow, but in Seattle, spring came early, and suddenly – unexpectedly. February itself had enough of the dark and gloom, and that was that: Crocuses appeared along with the sun, and the Red Dog and I started taking longer and longer walks in the midday sun. Some days, I don’t even bother wearing a jacket.

My East Coast coworkers email updates about weather-related transportation delays, while my Facebook friends post videos of snow falling and updates about school closures, and everyone grumbles at my replies: 55 and sunny here!

I know that makes me sound like an awful person, or at least a bit irritating, but turnabout is fair play – every time a Seattle resident complains about bad weather to a non-Seattle resident, they receive this reply: I don’t know why you live there. I couldn’t stand the weather.

Usually, of course, they’re right. This is the one time in the history of everything that Seattle has had better weather than the rest of the country. Let us enjoy it. It isn’t likely to happen again.

It’s not quite warm enough for the garden to begin growing, but I optimistically start some seedlings. This year, I will have fresh vegetables; this year, my garden will grow. I’ve got some waiting to do, for the garden, and the farmer’s market. In the meantime, we eat frozen strawberries from Costco and frozen blackberries we picked last August, and when we think of it, fresh bananas from the store.

You know the bananas I mean: The wallflowers of the kitchen; the ones that turn brown waiting for us to remember them, notice them, invite them to dine with us. This last bunch turned a very depressed shade of brown, waiting, but I just wasn’t feeling it – not the bananas, nor the banana bread, nor even the banana cake. Spring arrived, and all I want is More Spring. Spring On A Plate. Spring In A Bowl.

Then, something magical happened – as magical as unexpected sunshine in Seattle.

I found a copy of Karen DeMasco’s The Craft of Baking at the local library, and checked it out, since I’ve enjoyed some of her recipes (Spicy Caramel Corn and Granola Jam Bars) in the past. I opened the pages to a recipe for Banana Malt Ice Cream – a most unexpected thing to find in a baking book – but, more importantly, it called for ripe, pureed bananas, something I just happened to have three of.

I had to do a little driving to make it happen – not being snowed in, I can do that – as the recipe calls for malt syrup, which isn’t something I keep on hand, but fortunately I had no trouble finding it at the local PCC, and DeMasco offered a substitute in case I couldn’t (malt powder or ovaltine). The custard is simple enough to make, just remember to leave time to chill it before putting it in the ice cream maker.

I found this made a little much for my ice cream maker, which overflowed toward the end of the cycle, just after I stopped watching it like a hawk. This may have been my fault, though, as I got some extra-large eggs and so there was probably more yolk than there was supposed to be.

Which is fine by me, because that means there’s also more delicious ice cream, and it is so delicious: the malt flavor intensifies the natural banana flavor, yet both are smooth and mellow in the frozen custard. It doesn’t need anything else, but you could toss in some chocolate chips or chunks if you wanted some texture (or, you know, chocolate).

The Child looked at me as though I had lost my mind when I offered her some banana ice cream; then she took a taste and cried out with joy and scooped herself a big bowl.

When I went looking for my next helping a day or so later, the ice cream was more than half gone.

Banana Malt Ice Cream

 

Banana Malt Ice Cream
 
Print
Author: adapted from Karen DeMasco, The Craft of Baking
Ingredients
  • 5 large egg yolks
  • 1 cup barley malt syrup
  • ½ cup plus 3 tbsp sugar
  • 1½ cups whole milk
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • ½ vanilla bean, split
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 2 very ripe bananas (to yield about 1 cup pureed banana)
Instructions
  1. In a large bowl, whisk together egg yolks, barley malt syrup, and about half the sugar.
  2. In a medium saucepan, whisk together the rest of the sugar, milk, cream, and vanilla bean. Bring to a boil, whisking frequently, and when the mixture begins to rise in the pan, remove from the heat.
  3. Add the the milk mixture to the egg mixture in a thin stream, whisking constantly. Whisk in the salt.
  4. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate 8 hours or overnight.
  5. Mash the bananas thoroughly (or puree in a blender or food processor), then whisk into the chilled custard.
  6. Freeze the custard in an ice cream maker, following the manufacturer's instructions.
Notes
You can find Barley Malt Syrup at stores like Whole Foods and PCC. DeMasco suggests you can substitute ovaltine or another malt powder if you can't find it.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // bananas, dessert, ice cream

Nutella Ice Cream

07.07.2014 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

I saw an article recently that advocated giving children a 1970s summer – which was defined as letting them watch lots of TV (Love Boat! Charlie’s Angels!), eat whatever they want (Fritos! Kool-Aid!), and play outside. I didn’t know we now needed the media to tell us to do these things. This was pretty much how I spent most of my summers growing up, even into my teen years, when I had a series of summer jobs where I got paid for watching other people’s children watch TV (I want my MTV!), feeding them whatever they wanted (Jeno’s pizza!), and taking them out to the local playground. It was one of the best jobs I ever had, if not the best. I still can’t believe I got paid for it.

Apparently, the summer I’m giving The Child is retro-cool: She sleeps until noon or so, then flops in front of the tv, watching South Park, and eating breakfast cereal and Nutella. Sometime in the early evening, I offer her something for dinner, and she says she’s not hungry. The Nutella supply is being depleted at a pretty brisk pace, not really a surprise given that it’s being eaten straight from the jar with a spoon, and in true 1970s mom fashion, I don’t consider this to be a problem, except that the partially consumed jars are often left where the dog can get them. Also, it’s starting to add up.

I need a way to stretch my Nutella dollar.

I start researching Nutella recipes on the internet, and rapidly become overwhelmed: Nutella is a shining star in the food blog universe, possibly a whole constellation. But then The New York Times published an article titled The Only Ice Cream Recipe You’ll Ever Need. I saw it and thought, that’s handy, because there are any number of cookbooks on the subject and if this works out, I don’t have to buy any of them – further stretching my food (and thus, my Nutella) dollar. It turns out the recipe helpfully includes a Nutella variation, and luckily, there was just enough Nutella left in the pantry to make it.

The Times did not lie. The base recipe is simple enough, and though I had a bit of trouble keeping the heat sufficiently low as I cooked the custard, the few slightly-too-large curdles came out easily when strained. The resulting ice cream texture was magnificently smooth, and the flavor was perfectly rich, but not overwhelmingly so. The end result was a glorious bowl of Nutella that can – and should – be eaten with a spoon.

I was kind of mad at myself for not having any bananas on hand, because this ice cream cries out to be made into a banana split. The original recipe as printed in the Times contains numerous variations to add flavorings. Peanut butter, it seems to me, would pair well with Nutella, but then again, so would vanilla. Or strawberry. Or maybe all three in a sort of Neapolitan banana split. The possibilities are near limitless, and summer has only just begun.

Nutella Ice Cream

 

Nutella Ice Cream
 
Print
Prep time
20 mins
Total time
20 mins
 
Author: Melissa Clark, The New York Times
Ingredients
  • 2 cups whole milk
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • ⅔ cup sugar
  • ⅛ teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 6 large egg yolks
  • 1 cup Nutella
  • 1 tsp vanilla
Instructions
  1. In a small pot, simmer cream, milk, sugar and salt until sugar completely dissolves, about 5 minutes. Remove pot from heat. In a separate bowl, whisk yolks. Whisking constantly, slowly whisk about a third of the hot cream into the yolks, then whisk the yolk mixture back into the pot with the cream. Return pot to medium-low heat and gently cook until mixture is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon (about 170 degrees on an instant-read thermometer).
  2. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve into a bowl. Whisk in Nutella and vanilla. Cool mixture to room temperature. Cover and chill at least 4 hours or overnight.
  3. Churn in an ice cream machine according to manufacturer’s instructions. Serve directly from the machine for soft serve, or store in freezer until needed.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // dessert, ice cream, nutella

Tangelo Sorbet

03.13.2014 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

The Red Dog starts to settle in, and becomes very attached to me very quickly: I cannot leave his sight, even for a moment. He follows me from room to room, watches me in the kitchen, whines when I go into the garage and leave him on the other side of the door. I go on a one-day business trip, and get a message from the dog walker, he would not leave the house, so I walked him in circles in the yard.

It’s all very endearing, until I discover  the extent of the panic he experiences whenever I leave, on the leg of my grandmother’s antique dining table.

Separation anxiety, says the vet.

I order baby gates to contain him, and while I wait for them to be delivered, take him with me everywhere.

In the midst of this puppy love, I decide it’s time to lose some weight. My father bought me a juicer a year ago, and I stashed it on top of the refrigerator, where I could mostly ignore it, feeling guilty only when it happened to catch my eye, which happened only when the cat would climb up alongside it and knock some part down with a loud clatter.  I find a juice diet online, and go to the store and load up on veggies and fruits and follow the plan exactly. I lose six pounds in five days and although some will hurry to point out that It’s Just Water Weight, I have to say, it’s very motivating water weight.

I’m eating my vegetables, just like grandma always told me to. Everyone’s happy.

So pleased am I by this turn of events that I decide to indulge myself in a gift: An ice-cream maker. I know an ice cream maker seems to have no place on a diet,  but this is a juice diet, and of course you can make other things in an ice-cream maker. Sorbet, as luck would have it, turns out to be made entirely out of juice.

The ice cream maker arrives and I decide I want to make something with blood oranges, which were abundant in the fruit section less than a week before – but now, they’re gone, replaced by tangelos, something I was told I would like when I was six or seven and haven’t eaten since. I must not have liked them when I was six or seven, but that was a while ago, so it’s probably time for me to reconsider the tangelo. I have a recipe for tangerine sorbet from David Lebovitz’s newsletter, which seems like it should work for tangelos too, so I buy a dozen of them figuring that should yield the required three cups of juice, which it does, plus five leftover tangelos.

Which is not a problem, because I learned two important things: 1) Tangelos are delicious, and 2) tangelo sorbet is even more delicious.

The sorbet is also absurdly easy to make, and requires just two ingredients, or three if you’re feeling posh and want to add the optional cup of champagne. I loved the crisp citrus flavor, so light, and just lightly sweet. It would be the perfect finish to any meal, especially where you didn’t want something heavy. Just a little goes a long way, although The Child was so entranced with this that it didn’t last very long at all.

 

Tangelo Sorbet

 

Tangelo Sorbet
 
Print
Once frozen, the sorbet will get a bit hard in the freezer, so let it sit for 5-10 minutes before scooping.
Author: slightly adapted from David Lebovitz, My Paris Kitchen
Serves: 4
Ingredients
  • 3 cups freshly squeezed tangelo juice
  • ⅔ cup sugar
  • Optional: 1 cup Champagne
Instructions
  1. Warm 1 cup of the tangelo juice in a small saucepan with the sugar, stirring until the sugar is completely dissolved.
  2. Stir the mixture back into the tangelo juice and chill thoroughly.
  3. Freeze the mixture in your ice cream maker, according to the manufacturer's instructions. (If you want to add Champagne, mix it in right before churning.) Makes about a quart.
Notes
Lebovitz uses tangerine juice in his recipe, for which I substituted tangelos.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // dessert, ice cream, orange

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