How
to Make Homemade Ice Cream
(Without an Ice Cream Maker!)
©2004 LeAnn R. Ralph
COLFAX, WISCONSIN — June is Dairy Month and what
better way to celebrate than with homemade ice cream?
When I was growing up on our small family dairy farm
in west central Wisconsin 40 years ago, my dad would make homemade
ice cream using cream and milk from our very own cows and a hand-cranked
ice cream freezer.
But you don't need an ice cream freezer to make your
own homemade ice cream. You can make ice cream with your refrigerator.
Here's how:
Dad's Favorite Recipe
(From the book: Give Me a Home Where the Dairy Cows Roam — True
Stories from a Wisconsin Farm. Coming Soon — Fall 2004)
• 2 eggs
• 3/4 cup sugar
• 2 tablespoons cornstarch
• 1 cup milk
• 1 pint heavy whipping cream
• pinch of salt
• 2 teaspoons vanilla
Using an electric mixer, beat the eggs for several
minutes until thick and lemon colored. Add 1 cup of milk and blend
into the eggs. Mix sugar and cornstarch in a large saucepan. Add egg/milk
mixture to the sugar and cornstarch. Cook until thick (about 5 minutes)
stirring constantly. Allow the custard mixture to cool to room temperature.
When the custard is cool, put into a freezer-safe
bowl. Blend in cream and salt. Freeze for 2 hours or until slushy.
Add 2 teaspoons vanilla. Whip for 5 to 10 minutes with an electric
mixer. Return to freezer and finish freezing (several hours or overnight).
Variations:
After you have whipped the ice cream, fold in 1 to 2 cups of fresh
or frozen fruit, nuts and/or chocolate before returning the ice cream
to the freezer to finish freezing.
Here are some ideas for additions to your ice cream:
Strawberries
Blackberries
Raspberries
Peaches
Cherries (or Maraschino Cherries)
Chocolate chips
Butterscotch chips
Crushed Heath bars
Crushed peppermint candy
Chopped walnuts
Chopped pistachio nuts
Diced bananas
Coconut
Chocolate chip cookie dough (drop into the ice cream by small spoonfuls
and carefully fold in)
Caramel or chocolate or fudge syrup (drop into the ice cream by small
spoonfuls and carefully fold in)
LeAnn R. Ralph is the author of the books: "Preserve Your
Family History (A Step-by-Step Guide for Writing Oral Histories)"
(e-book; 66 pages $7.95;
http://www.booklocker.com/books/1545.html) and "Christmas
in Dairyland (True Stories from a Wisconsin Farm)" (trade
paperback; $13.95; August 2003). Her next book, "Give Me
a Home Where the Dairy Cows Roam" will be available Fall
2004. To order "Christmas in Dairyland," call LeAnn
at (715) 962-3368 or visit —
http://ruralroute2.com.
|