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Fresh Mint Ice Cream

03.28.2016 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

Our evenings settle into a routine: I drive The Child home from school, and we review her assignments together. She settles in to work on the sofa, where she cannot start goofing off under my watchful eye. She discovers that lists are helpful, crossing things off is satisfying, and that being organized can be glamorous when you do it in an elegant Kate Spade organizer.

I offer her leftovers and encouragement, and when it isn’t raining too hard, walk either the Red Dog or the Foster Dog, who has been with us far too long. He  spends his nights on her bed, quietly looking out her window and smelling the night air through the screen, and she is quieter too, and seems more rested in the mornings, when we start the routine all over again.

Every few days, I make a treat: Blondies to snack on, or a simple cake, and when I am feeling especially inspired, some ice cream.

I found this simple recipe in a review copy I received of Yossy Arrefi’s cookbook Sweeter off the Vine, a pretty book dedicated to using seasonal fruit and herbs to best advantage. I’d planned to try out his recipe for Spiced Rhubarb Compote, but my rhubarb doesn’t seem inclined to offer me any usable quantities yet.

I don’t have any herbs in my garden yet, either, but the idea of mint ice cream with chocolate chips was enticing, comforting. Some of my early memories of my grandfather involve family trips to the Baskin-Robbins store in our little Wisconsin downtown, then walking home with him and a bright green scoop atop a cone. I don’t recall when those visits stopped, or know quite the moment when we stopped walking downtown, but ever since then, a trip to Baskin-Robbins is a trip down memory lane, paved in bright green bricks.

This ice cream isn’t bright green, though even Arrefi concedes that it’s okay if you put a little green food coloring in, if it makes you happy. I was happy enough to leave it out.

My past efforts with mint have been somewhat disastrous; probably my most memorable failure – memorable in the sense that twenty years after the attempt, I still shudder at the taste – were some homemade oreos with mint filling. They were, in a word, revolting, with so much mint that they upset my stomach for days. I probably did something wrong, but it doesn’t matter – I’ve had an aversion to mint extract ever since.

But mint leaves are another matter, just simple leaves with a pleasing, not overbearing scent. The ice cream uses quite a lot of them – a full cup – but the proportions are perfect when the leaves are steeped a few hours in the cooling custard. The resulting mint taste is light and fresh, with a surprising grassiness that takes a moment to get used to, but then becomes a welcome addition to the fresh, creamy taste.

Arrefi adds creme fraiche to his recipe, but I didn’t have any, so I skipped it, and though I could see it adding a nice tang and a bit more complexity, sometimes simple is nice too (especially where childhood memories are concerned). He also uses cacao nibs, but since I had a giant bar of chocolate from Trader Joe’s, I chopped up a chunk of it instead. I doubled the amount of chocolate from the original recipe, mostly because I chopped up too much chocolate, but it felt like the exact right amount so I wouldn’t change it. Finally, Arrefi’s recipe said to add salt, but didn’t specify a quantity, so I added a half teaspoon and it felt about right.

The Child loved this, and suggested that although I fancy myself a good jam-maker, I should probably consider going into the ice cream business. It’s because she liked it so much that my photo is so lousy: I had to stop her from eating the last bit in the freezer so that I could get any picture at all.

Fresh Mint Ice Cream

Fresh Mint Ice Cream
 
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Author: Slightly Adapted from Yossy Areffi, Sweeter off the Vine
Ingredients
  • 1 cup loosely packed fresh mint leaves, coarsely chopped
  • 4 egg yolks
  • 2 cups heavy cream
  • 1 cup whole milk
  • ⅔ cup sugar
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ½ cup finely chopped dark chocolate, or mini chocolate chips, as you prefer
Instructions
  1. Whisk together the egg yolks in a small bowl, and set aside.
  2. Combine the cream, milk, sugar, and salt, in a medium saucepan. Heat over medium heat, whisking occasionally, until the liquid is hot and small bubbles appear on the edges. Pour about a cup of the hot milk into the egg yolks in a thin stream, whisking constantly, Pour the hot egg yolk mixture back into the cream in the pan, again, whisking constantly.
  3. Cook the mixture over medium heat, whisking and being careful not to let it boil, until it is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. Remove from the heat and stir in the mint leaves, then let the leaves steep in the mixture as it comes to room temperature. Cover the pan and place the cooled mixture in the refrigerator to chill, for at least four hours.
  4. When you are ready to churn the ice cream, pour the custard through a sieve or strainer to remove the mint leaves, pressing on them to extract all the liquid. Freeze in an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer's directions, adding the finely chopped chocolate in the last few minutes of churning.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // chocolate, dessert, ice cream, mint

Mandarin Sorbet

01.03.2016 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

Olives, olives, everywhere, and nary a one to eat.

The great olive-curing experiment continues: Old brine has been replaced with fresh, and makeshift containers have been replaced with large, homey Ball jars, now neatly stored in a box at the side of the kitchen. It will be months before they are edible, a moment I  optimistically assume will come to pass.

During our frequent discussions of the olive situation, talk naturally turns to other produce, but when my father mentions Seville oranges, I get excited. I have been told that marmalade made from Seville oranges is magical.

Maybe I should learn how to make marmalade, he says.

It’s easy, I tell him. I email him a series of recipes for Seville orange marmalade. He emails me a shipping notice: A crate of Satsumas should arrive by Christmas.

Satsuma, or Seville?

Satsuma, he says. A crate of them.

Satsumas are lovely, of course, but as oranges go, they are pretty much the opposite of Sevilles. I say that like I’m an expert on oranges, which I’m not, although I’m well on way given the amount of research I did when I discovered vast quantity of them on my doorstep the day after Christmas – too large an amount for two people to eat before they go bad, especially given that the two people in question had bought a small box of tangerines at Whole Foods while shopping for the correct type of sea salt for brining olives.

Satsumas

No less an authority than Alton Brown claimed I could make marmalade from the Satsumas, so I followed his recipe, increasing the lemon and cooking the marmalade to the oddly specific temperature of 223 degrees fahrenheit, then testing it on a chilled plate.

It didn’t set.

I let it simmer some more, while the temperature held at the 223 degree mark, and tested again on the plate: Not set.

I simmered. I repeated. I tested again.

The marmalade got a bit less runny, but the temperature began to increase, and when it finally hit 225 degrees and seemed semi-jelled on a plate, I poured it into nine small glass jars, sealed them, and processed them.

The next morning, I discovered that in following the most precise jam instructions I’d ever seen in a recipe, I had, for the first time, made jam that failed to set. The little bit that I’d set aside in the refrigerator was chilled, but also runny.

It’s tasty, to be sure, and I’ve mostly forgiven Alton Brown, because failure is nothing if not inspirational: I bought a book on jam-making that was once recommended to me by a jam-seller at a farmer’s market (Mes Confitures by Christine Ferber), and then invested in a snazzy French jam making pan. I educated myself on sugar-to-fruit ratios. I read extensively on the topic of pectin.

I’m sure it will all result in some extraordinary jam, sometime in the not-too-distant future, but as things currently stand, I have an abundance of first-rate Satsumas that I have no hope of finishing before they turn. Something would have to be done, and my usual solution – bake it into a cake of some sort – was off the table, so to speak. After all the excess of the holiday season, I don’t want cake. I want things that taste light and clean.

I found this recipe for sorbet on the Serious Eats website, which in turn gives the source as Into the Vietnamese Kitchen. It’s absurdly simple – all you need is a juicer and an ice cream maker, although you could squeeze the juice by hand if you wanted to, and if you follow the instructions on the original recipe, there is no mention of an ice cream maker, so I may be overstating the amount of equipment you need by quite a bit.

I used both, though, and I’ve amended the instructions accordingly. The lime adds a refreshing, tart twist to the light sweetness of the mandarin, and the flavors stay fresh because the juices aren’t cooked – only the sugar syrup is, and only briefly. It’s a nice treat for those who began the year with resolutions, and those who didn’t, alike.

And something to enjoy while the olives brine.

Mandarin Sorbet

Mandarin Sorbet
 
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Author: adapted from Into the Vietnamese Kitchen
Ingredients
  • ¾ cup sugar
  • 1 cup water
  • 2½ cups fresh satsuma juice (or tangerines, if you prefer)
  • 6 tablespoons fresh lime juice, or to taste
Instructions
  1. Make a simple syrup: whisk together the sugar and water in a small saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a boil, whisking, until the sugar dissolves and the liquid is clear. Remove from the heat and cool completely.
  2. In a bowl, stir together the sugar syrup, and juices. Taste and add more lime juice, if needed, to create the sweet-tart balance you prefer. Strain through a sieve. Cover with and refrigerate overnight. Process in an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer's directions.
Notes
Use fresh fruit for best flavor: You can juice the satsumas and limes while the simple syrup is cooling. When adjusting the flavors, remember that the final product will be served cold, which will make it seem a bit less sweet.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // dessert, ice cream, orange

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
 
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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

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