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HOW TO MAKE ICE CREAM
Ingredients
- 1 cup of milk
- 1 tablespoon sugar
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- Alternate flavor: if you want chocolate ice cream, add 1 tablespoon of cocoa powder
- 4-6 tablespoons salt
- 2 trays of ice cubes
- Small amount of butter
- 5 teaspoons flavored syrup
This
is good for making individual servings of ice cream to be eaten promptly after
making. The video at the bottom of this
article shows how to make ice cream with a sandwich bag. Pour in the milk, sugar,
and flavoring in a quart-size bag.
Take
roughly two quarts of ice,
crushed if possible, and place it into the gallon-sized bag with rock salt (also known as coarse salt). Ideally, the gallon bag will be roughly half full with the
ice and salt mixture.
Place
the sealed quart-sized bag with the ingredients into the gallon-sized
bag. Make sure the bags stay sealed. Do
not allow the contents to mix at any time. If the bags don't seal sufficiently,
seal the top of both bags to ensure they don't open during shaking.
Gently
agitate, massage, and shake the bags for about fifteen to twenty minutes. In this amount of time the contents of the quart bag
should start to turn into solid ice cream. It is important that you are mixing
the contents of the inner bag, but you don’t want to be so aggressive that you
burst the inner bag or cut it on the ice. Double-bagging should prevent this.
If your hands get uncomfortably cold, use a towel or an old T-shirt to hold the
bags as you massage them; the bags will be quite cold and might become slippery
with accumulated condensation. Consider using gloves or massaging while holding
onto the top seal if a towel or similar cloth is not available.
Remove
the finished ice cream from the sandwich bag and serve.
This
is how ice cream was typically made before modern refrigeration, using ice cut
from lakes and ponds. Hand-cranked ice cream machines
are a variation of the sorbetière (a covered pail with a handle attached to the
lid) which is a French adaptation of the pot-freezer method.
Put
the ice cream ingredients in a bowl.
Put
the bowl in a tub filled with ice and salt.
Make sure the ice and salt mixture doesn't spill over the edges or into the
bowl.
Mix
the ingredients of the bowl vigorously.
The salty ice water will absorb heat from the mixture, bringing it below the
freezing point of water and turning the mixture into ice cream.[1] It's important to mix as thoroughly as
you can to prevent the formation of ice crystals. If you can, use a whisk or
better yet, a hand-held mixer.
Remove
ice cream from the bowl and serve.
This
method works best with a custard-based recipe that incorporates eggs, because
the result will be much smoother.
Since it involves a good bit of waiting, however, it may not be the most
immediately gratifying for kids.[2]
Pour
the ice cream mixture into a deep baking dish, or bowl made of plastic,
stainless steel or something durable in the freezer.
Put
it in the freezer for 30 minutes.
Check
the mixture. When it starts to freeze at the
edges, take it out and stir it vigorously with a spatula until all of the ice
crystals are broken up. If you can, use a whisk or a hand-held mixer.
Check
and stir every 30 minutes until the mixture turns into ice cream. This might take 2-3 hours.
This
is very similar to the bag method, except instead of using two bags, you use
two coffee cans, one bigger than the other.
Put
the ice cream mixture in the smaller coffee can. Seal tightly.
Put
the smaller coffee can in the big coffee can along with ice and rock salt. Seal the large can tightly.
Shake
the large can vigorously for about 10 minutes.
Kids can roll or throw it around, but make sure the cans are sealed well. Do
this step outside, just in case. Check the smaller coffee can to see if the
mixture has turned into ice cream yet. If you see ice crystals forming, stir or
whisk the mixture.
Continue
shaking, rolling, or throwing until ice cream is formed.
This
can only be done with a commercial product that mixes ice cream within a
specially made ball with two chambers.[3]
Fill
the ice end with with ice and 1/2 cup of rock salt (3/4 cup if using the larger
size ball) and close by hand.
S
S
- Standard ice cubes may not fit. You might need crushed ice.
- You'll probably need at least 10 ice trays' worth of ice.
Pour
the ice cream mixture into the end with a metal cylinder. Leave an inch (2.5cm) at the top for expansion and close
by hand.
Shake,
roll, and pass the ball around for 10-15 minutes. The ball will probably be heavier than you expect.
Open
the ice cream end with the plastic wrench that comes with the ball. Scrape the sides of the cylinder with a plastic or wooden
spoon (metal will damage the cylinder). Close the lid by hand.
- Since the chamber is narrow and deep, stirring the ice cream might be difficult. If necessary, use the wooden handle of a spoon or spatula.
Check
the ice end. Open the lid with the plastic
wrench. Pour out any water and add more ice and up to 1/3 cup of rock salt.
Close the lid by hand.
Shake,
roll, and pass the ball around for 5–10 minutes.
Check
the ice cream. Repeat the above steps as needed,
or eat the ice cream as is.
- When you pour the ice cream out, be careful that it doesn't spill into the raised decorative ledges and tight crevices; these may be very difficult to clean later on, especially if you use chocolate chips.
- The ice cream tends to be "soupy" in the middle and solid along the edges.
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