You're Going to Make Ice Cream This Summer! (2024)

You're Going to Make Ice Cream This Summer! (1)

Hey everyone,

Allow me to step on to my soap box for a second. Have you ever made homemade ice cream? What about sorbet? Gelato? No?! Well you, my friend, are missing out on one of the most joyful, rewarding, and lick-able things you can do in your kitchen… especially in the summer. Not convinced? Here are the main reasons why you need to make your own ice cream this summer:

(1) You don’t need a fancy ice cream maker to make ice cream.

You're Going to Make Ice Cream This Summer! (2)

A basic 1.5 quart Cuisinart ice cream costs $67.97 on Amazon. This is the ice cream maker that I’ve had for over fifteen years and it still works just as well as the day that I bought it. As you can see from the pic above, there are four parts: the lid, the spinner thingie, the freezer bucket, and the base. If you store the freezer bucket in your freezer (like I do), you can make ice cream whenever you want. (The more that you make it, the more you’ll want to make it again.)

The difference between this and more expensive ice cream makers is that the fancier ones can chill down your base immediately so that once you make your custard, you can pour it right in and churn your ice cream. Big whoop! It’s really not that big of a deal to refrigerate your base for a few hours. I made this rum raisin ice cream base yesterday morning and churned it yesterday afternoon.

You're Going to Make Ice Cream This Summer! (3)

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  1. Homemade ice cream will always taste better than store-bought ice cream.

    Not to get all Alice Watersy on you, but if you look at the side of your store bought ice cream carton, you’ll see things like Xantham gums and other chemicals whose names you can’t pronounce. Homemade ice cream, on the other hand, always has the same basic ingredients: cream, milk, egg yolks, and sugar. You essentially make a custard and then flavor that custard with whatever you’re making.

    And the thrill of tasting it once it’s churned? Electric. It tastes so pure, so fresh, so unadulterated. You don’t know what fresh ice cream tastes like until you dip a spoon into your own personal machine after its been churning for twenty minutes. Even if you go to a local store that makes ice cream from scratch, it still can’t taste as good as the one you make yourself. It just can’t.

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  2. Your guests will go crazy for homemade ice cream / sorbet.

    You're Going to Make Ice Cream This Summer! (5)

    Adam Roberts on Instagram: “CHOCOLATE SORBET. A perfect dinner party dessert: all of the richness of chocolate without the heaviness of dairy. This recipe comes from @kingarthurbaking. Forgot to mention: add 2 teaspoons of espresso powder with the dry ingredients for an even more intense flavor! ⁠




    #sweettooth #delicious #dessert #food #recipe #foodie #instafood #desserts #icecream #foodp*rn #chocolate #sorbet

    April 19, 2023

    As someone who loves to make dessert for a dinner party, I’ve experienced all the validation and love that you get when you serve a cake, a pie, or cookies to an eager crowd. But nothing comes close to the thrill of arriving to the table with homemade ice cream.

    You're Going to Make Ice Cream This Summer! (6)

    Maybe it’s because most dinner party meals can be a bit heavy (well they are at my house), so a scoop of something frozen is a welcome sight because it’s so refreshing. And the fact that you made it yourself? People can’t believe it. A soup container filled with homemade ice cream — bonus points if you hand write the name of the ice cream on a piece of tape on the side — brought to the table with an ice cream scooper for people to help themselves? That gets an A+ in the entertaining department.

    Get all of the recipes mentioned in today’s newsletter by becoming a paid subscriber! That’s right: subscribers get a PDF at the bottom of this newsletter that includes recipes for the Rum Raisin, Fresh Peach, and Double Vanilla Bean Ice Creams PLUS the Chocolate Sorbet and the Strawberry Sorbet. 🍓🍓🍓

  3. It’s really easy.

    You're Going to Make Ice Cream This Summer! (7)

    Here’s how you make homemade ice cream. Step one: put some egg yolks into a bowl. Step two: heat cream, milk, and sugar with a pinch of salt until steamy. Step three: rapidly whisk your egg yolks and pour the hot liquid in so they don’t curdle. Step four: pour the mixture back into the pot and keep stirring on low heat until it’s thick. Step five: strain, chill, and churn.

    That’s it! Of course, you can flavor that base in hundreds of different ways: with real vanilla beans, with melted chocolate, with fresh mint, with strawberries from the farmer’s market. And if you make sorbet? It’s as simple as putting fruit in a food processor, adding lemon juice and sugar, and churning.

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Dare I say that sorbet from summer fruit is the ultimate expression of said summer fruit? It’s like the distilled essence of strawberries or melon or peaches or whatever it is that you want to churn into a frozen dessert. And best of all, the freezer preserves that flavor for you so you get to experience the intensity of fresh summer fruit for the rest of the month… if it lasts that long.

So if you’ve ever thought about making ice cream at home, now’s the time to get yourself an ice cream maker. Because summer is less than two weeks away and you — yes, you! — need to be churning all summer long.

Bonus tips:

  • Look for ice cream / sorbet recipes with a little booze in them. They make your frozen desserts a little softer / more scoopable.

  • Really make sure to cool down your ice cream base before churning. It should be cold to the touch before it goes in (otherwise it won’t freeze properly).

  • You know your ice cream is done churning when it gets to the consistency of soft-serve. It’ll set up the rest of the way once it’s in the freezer.

Best resources:

  • The Perfect Scoop by David Lebovitz. As far as I’m concerned, this is the only ice cream cookbook that you need. It’s got perfect recipes for everything and the Malted Milk ice cream with Whoppers in it? It’s out of this world.

    You're Going to Make Ice Cream This Summer! (9)
  • La Grotta: Ice Creams and Sorbets by Kitty Travers. I picked up this book at a gourmet store here in LA and I’ve loved it ever since for the pictures and the design; the recipes are fun too (that’s where the peach ice cream recipe, included below, comes from).

  • The Salt & Straw Ice Cream Cookbook by Tyler Malek. I’m a big fan of Salt & Straw the store, and though I don’t own this book, if I were going to buy another ice cream cookbook, this might be it. I have a friend who churned his way through it and loved every recipe. I have a feeling I would too.

So, this newsletter ended up turning into ice cream propaganda!

I swear I’m not getting paid off by Cuisinart or the Frozen Dessert Deep State. I just love making homemade ice cream and I want you to love making it too.

See you next time!

Your pal,

Adam

You're Going to Make Ice Cream This Summer! (2024)

FAQs

Is making ice cream endothermic or exothermic? ›

However, for the ice to melt it needs to borrow heat from the environment around it – which is your ingredients. As the ice absorbs the heat from the milkshake, the milkshake get colder, until it freezes and ends up as ice cream. We call this an endothermic reaction.

Why are we going to use salt to make ice cream? ›

Similar to sugar, salt affects how water freezes and effectively lowers the freezing/melting point of water. Creating a saltwater slush and packing this around our ice cream base allows us to cool the base enough so that it starts to thicken and freeze before the ice melts completely.

What keeps ice cream from freezing solid? ›

The presence of sugars in the water lowers the mixture's freezing temperature to below 0°C. Here's why that's important. As ice crystals start to form, the concentration of sugars and other dissolved materials in the unfrozen liquid increases, which further lowers its freezing point.

What is the chemical reaction in making ice cream? ›

An exothermic reaction is a chemical reaction that releases light or heat, otherwise known as energy . In this case, heat is released from molecules moving around, freezing cream into ice cream! More exothermic reactions include the burning of materials and explosions.

Is making ice exo or endothermic? ›

Exothermic reactions release energy (in the form of heat) into their surroundings. Examples of exothermic reactions include lighting matches, campfires, etc. In fact, water freezing into ice is also exothermic. As water releases heat into its surroundings, its temperature lowers to its freezing point and ice is formed.

How does adding salt to ice make it colder? ›

Water freezes at 32°F (0°C), but adding salt to the mix can lower this freezing point. This is because salt disrupts the formation of ice crystals, causing the water to remain in a liquid state even at temperatures below freezing. The lower the freezing point, the slower the ice will melt.

Can salt prevent ice from melting? ›

However, the ice will only melt if there is enough salt present to lower the freezing point of the water. If you don't add enough salt, then the ice will simply stay frozen. So, if you're trying to make ice last longer, it's important to use enough salt. In conclusion, don't fill your cooler with salt.

Does salt melt when heated? ›

The melting point of sodium chloride is -800°C. Wear eye protection when heating the crucible and salt and use a safety screen to protect observers.

How to unlock Eric in Dreamlight Valley? ›

How to Unlock Eric. Eric won't be available from the start of the game. Instead, you will need to get both Ursula and Ariel to a level 10 friendship. Upon reaching that level of friendship with Ursula, you'll be able to do a quest where she gives Eric back if you find some dark crystals for her.

How do you crush big ice in Dreamlight Valley? ›

With those materials collected, head to a Crafting Station and create the Warmth of Summer Potion. Return to Elsa and give her the potion. She'll apply the potion to your Pickaxe, allowing you to destroy Ice Shards throughout the valley.

What to do with dried ginger in Dreamlight Valley? ›

Ginger makes Root Beer, Dried Ginger from the chest makes "Extra Fizzy Root Beer".

How to get rid of ice crystals in ice cream? ›

Allow the ice cream to melt a little, then remove the crystals with an ice cream scoop or a serrated knife before serving. (Freezer burn ice cream is safe to eat since ice crystals do not spoil the ice cream.)

What does a freezer burn? ›

Freezer burn is a term for the moisture lost from frozen food. It's what happens when meat left in your freezer for a long time loses moisture and begins to look discolored or shriveled. The surface may be covered in ice crystals. When you thaw foods that look like this, you'll notice that their texture appears tough.

How much alcohol is in ice cream? ›

In a pint or quart of ice cream, there are only a few tablespoons of booze. Adding too much alcohol would not only make the ice cream taste bad, but it also wouldn't fully freeze. This amount of alcohol is unlikely to get you drunk, but you can get buzzed.

What type of heat transfer is ice cream? ›

Your favorite scoop of ice cream melting on a hot summer day is a perfect example of heat conduction where heat from the air is naturally drawn to the much colder ice cream scoop.

Is a freezer endothermic or exothermic? ›

Freezing would be considered to be an exothermic process since bonds are being formed. Energy is released in the form of heat since the molecules are at a lower [potential energy state. Melting is an example of an endothermic process since breaking bonds requires energy.

What is the endothermic process that will allow your ice cream to freeze? ›

What is the endothermic process that will freeze your ice cream? The ice melting is the endothermic process that will freeze the ice cream. We want to freeze the milk mixture. We want the heat to come from the milk mixture.

What happens to heat energy when making ice cream? ›

When you use ice to make something cold, you are NOT adding cold, you are removing HEAT. Because the ice is colder than the ice cream mixture (or your drink), heat moves from the mixture (or your drink) to the ice. This causes the ice cream mixture (or your drink) to lose heat and become colder.

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