Monday, February 13, 2012

Strawberry Buttermilk Ice Cream

You guys. Something epic has happened.

Strawberry Buttermilk Ice Cream by freshfromthe.com

I got an ice cream maker. Technically an ice cream maker attachment for my Kitchenaid. Same difference.

The world will never be the same. Because I? I loooove ice cream. In fact, this is probably a disaster, because whenever I have ice cream in my freezer, that's all my brain seems to think about. There's ice cream in there! Don't you remember? You can EAT IT ALL UP!

It will be a lesson in self-restraint. Delicious self-restraint.

So what did I make for my first batch of homemade ice cream? This strawberry buttermilk stuff. It's pretty delish. I was actually quite skeptical whether it was going to start turning into ice cream while it was mixing up, but lo, I left the room, and when I came back some 12 minutes later, there it was. Ice cream! That I made myself!

Strawberry Buttermilk Ice Cream
(adapted slightly from Joy the Baker)

2 cups cream, half and half or milk
1/2 cup buttermilk
1/2 cup sugar
pinch of salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 Tablespoons cornstarch
heaping 1/2 cup sliced and diced strawberries (optional 1 Tablespoon sugar)

Rinse strawberries under water and slice. Create a mixture of sliced and diced pieces. If the strawberries aren't very sweet, go ahead and mix them up with that optional tablespoon of sugar and let them soak until you're ready to use them later.

Pour 1 1/2 cups of cream or milk into a small sauce pan. Add the sugar and salt and heat the milk mixture over medium low heat. Keep an eye on it, stirring often so you don't get some burned milk on the bottom of your pan.

Measure out the remaining 1/2 cup of milk or cream. Stir the cornstarch into this 1/2 cup of milk, until smooth and no lumps remain. Keep stirring, it'll happen.

The milk on the stove should be hot and steaming. It doesn't need to boil, just steam. With the milk over a medium low flame, stir in the milk and cornstarch mixture. Stir the milk constantly until you begin to feel it thicken. It won't be suddenly all molasses-like, but will be thicker than regular milk. It should take only a couple minutes once the cornstarch is in there.

Once it's thickened, add in the buttermilk and vanilla. Stir to incorporate.

Pour through a strainer into a mixing bowl and cover with plastic wrap. Stick it in the fridge for a couple of hours so that's it's cooled.

Once it's cooled, put it in your ice cream maker per manufacturer's directions. When you've let it go for about 10-15 minutes, dump in your strawberries. Why don't you do this before, you wonder? Because they will freeze to the edges of your mixing attachment! Truth.

Strawberry Buttermilk Ice Cream by freshfromthe.com
Once it's done mixing in there, you're going to have to transfer it to a freezer-safe bowl. Either you can wait until it's frozen some more to eat it, or you can enjoy some soft-serve style straight from the ice cream maker, which is obviously what I did.

Strawberry Buttermilk Ice Cream by freshfromthe.com
Yum! Though, I will say, the strawberry bits do get frozen in there, and are therefore not as good as if you just made a strawberry glaze to pour over the top. Live and learn.

*No step by step photos this time. I was making this at night, and the lighting was just not great.
 

2 comments:

  1. Isn't that ice cream maker fabulous! So glad you can now make ice cream whenever you want. (So dangerous!)

    A trick with the strawberries (or any fruit which freezes in the ice cream): You can puree them and mix the puree into the ice cream. Or you can let the strawberries (chopped into small pieces) macerate in a bit of vodka before mixing them in. That will help keep them and the ice cream a bit softer.

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