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Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Salted Caramel Ice Cream

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This is the long-awaited salted caramel ice cream post. Asked for by Cheryl of 5 Second Rule, with a recipe provided by Cheryl the Backseat Gourmet and tweaked by yours truly.

I know I ranted about caramel in the past. I was critical of undiscerning food industry monkeys who dumped it willy-nilly into any and everything hoping to discover the next "it" junk food item. I have come to believe caramel is best enjoyed when it's not vying for attention against peanut butter, chocolate, dried fruit, coffee and a laundry list of unpronounceable stabilizers. While it flirts outrageously with popcorn, I believe caramel has found its soul mate in cream.

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My first attempt at salted caramel ice cream followed (to the letter) the Gourmet.com recipe Backseat Gourmet Cheryl sent me. This seductive version was French-style and called for eggs. I hate making ice cream with eggs but did it anyway. Straining custard is a royal pain. Straining custard during a heat wave in a small kitchen with no cross breeze or air conditioning is sadistic. The resulting ice cream was indeed silky. The taste was intense yet delicately balanced. It bordered on perfection, except it melted VERY quickly.

See. By the time I had the lemon balm in place the scoop was sitting in a puddle of caramel cream.

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So I decided to try a Philadelphia style ice cream instead. With no eggs, this variation is less fussy and a bit firmer. The second version was soft as well, but it tasted just as good and took far less time. Phillies 1, French 0.

The high levels of sugar in caramel prevent the ice cream from freezing as solidly as a less sweet flavour, such as chocolate or cinnamon. This is the price one must pay for all this caramelly decadence. But I honestly don't think your serving will last long enough to melt into a puddle of caramel cream.

See, I couldn't get through a shoot without falling victim to its siren call.

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The only trick to this ice cream is understanding that sugar can turn from delightfully amber to oh-my-god-what-have-I-done umber in seconds. To defend against the needless destruction of innocent sugar use a stainless steel pot with a light interior. It won't prevent burning, but a light interior allows you to gauge the color of the caramel so you can stop the cooking before the contents slip irrevocably from perfection and inedible. Pots with dark interiors, such as non-stick, leave you flying blind and can lead to under or overcook caramel. Beyond that, this ice cream is a guaranteed hit.

So, here's my "lazy" version for Cheryl from Cheryl. Ladies, it was a pleasure recipe testing for you.

I previously posted some ice cream making tips. Does anyone have more tricks or shortcuts they care to share before they start melting sugar and digging out the ice cream maker?

Salted Caramel Ice Cream

Printable recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 1/4 cups sugar, divided
  • 2 1/2 cups whipping cream (35%), divided
  • 1/2 teaspoon flaky sea salt such as Maldon
  • 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 3/4 cup whole milk

Instructions

  1. In a heavy skillet with a light interior, heat 1 cup sugar over medium heat. Stir gently until the sugar starts to melt. When it does, stop stirring but continue to cook the sugar, swirling the skillet occasionally to ensure the sugar melts evenly. The caramel is done when it turns dark amber.
  2. Stir in 1 1/4 cups cream. Be careful, the mixture will spatter! Continue cooking until all the caramel has dissolved.
  3. Pour the caramel into a bowl. Add sea salt and vanilla. Allow the caramel to cool to room temperature.
  4. Meanwhile, bring the milk, the remaining 1 1/4 cups cream, and remaining 1/4 cup sugar just to a boil. Allow to simmer 15 minutes then set aside to cool.
  5. When both the milk mixture and caramel have cooled to room temperature, remove skin from the milk mixture and stir it into the caramel.
  6. Refrigerate the mix for several hours (or overnight) and then pop in the freezer for an hour just before churning. You want to churn this when really cold.
  7. Churn in an ice cream maker according to manufacturer's instructions. The ice cream will still be soft but should be firm enough to keep its shape when you remove the paddle.
  8. Transfer to an airtight container and freezer until firm.

19 comments:

Cheryl @ 5secondrule said...

Turning cartwheels here. Big roly poly cartwheels. Thanks to you and my Canadian doppelganger.

I'm printing the recipe now and will report back...

danamccauley said...

Should I get in my car and start driving toward Guelph or have you eaten all of this heavenly treat already?

I can bring brownies.

Bridget said...

Salty & sweet? a marriage made in heaven! ♥

Q. said...

Just found your blog via Tastespotting. You're a scream! Too hilarious. I have made one attempt at Caramel and it was a sad, sad affair. Clotilde Dusoulier's Chocolate Caramel Tart. I'm scared to try Caramel again, but I'm SO desperate to try this Salted Caramel Ice Cream that everyone raves about...I may have to just suck it up and conquer my fear.

Christie's Corner said...

Cheryl, it's a tough job, but someone has to do it!

Dana, I can always make another batch. Bring brownies.

Bridget, it's now officially my favourite ice cream. And I love ice cream.

Q, thanks so much for commenting. If you fear caramel, use a heavy bottomed pan and go SLOWLY. Or just change the name to Burnt Caramel Ice Cream. It's a real dish.

Ramya Kiran said...

Looks delicious! Love anything that tastes caramel. Yummy!!

ABowlOfMush said...

This is my favorite flavor in ice cream! This looks so amazing, I want it now!

Maggie said...

This looks delicious, thanks for posting! Glad you tried both styles, Philly it is!

Cheryl Arkison said...

Now I have to try it without eggs and compare. I've made it a few times now and I'm in love. I love the texture on it.

Oh, and I can guarantee that burnt caramel ice cream would not taste good at all. I burnt my caramel making this last week. Not good at all.

Next time I'm making ice cream sandwiches, but I can't make a decision on the cookie to use. Chocolate? Peanut butter? Oatmeal with salt?

Christie's Corner said...

Ramya, A Bowl of Mush, Maggie, thanks for your enthusiasm.

Q. I withdraw my comment about burnt caramel in light of Cheryl A's experience. I guess it all depends on how burnt your caramel gets.

Cheryl A, cookies? What about a praline shortbread? A buttery oatmeal might be good too. Oh heck, how can you go wrong? Let me know what you decide on. I will have to live vicariously through you on this one.

The Diva on a Diet said...

Why oh why do I not live next door to you, Charmian?! I adore salted caramel like almost nothing on earth ... my stars this looks GOOD!

To Cheryl A. - didn't you make some salted chocolate cookies last fall? I vote for making the ice cream sandwiches with them. Heaven!

Anh said...

I will try this ice-cream. Thanks for sharing!

zested said...

I've seen this photo several times - glad I finally ended up on your blog. Striking composition, not to mention delicious-sounding recipe.

Christie's Corner said...

Diva, if we lived next door to each other we wouldn't get any work done but we would get very fat.

Anh, let me know how it turns out.

Zested, glad you found you way here! Thanks for the kind words.

Peabody said...

Yum...I love salted caramel anything...and in ice cream...swoon.

Lisa! said...

I just made this and it was incredible.

I added roasted pecans because it was screaming pralines and cream.

Thank you!

Manitowoc Ice Machine said...

all delicious salted caramel ice creams.........

Cheryl @ 5secondrule said...

I finally got my act together and made this today. Well, started it last night, and finished it today. I am now officially your #1 fan? Anyone want to fight me for the title? Andrew? I will crush even you in my devotion to your wife.

This Philly version is phenomenal. Creamy, smooth, and very, very caramelly. It was indeed quite soft, but the longer I left it in the freezer, the firmer it became. (Duh.) Of course, with 3 of us eating it all day long there's hardly any left.

THANK YOU!

Andrew said...

So, Cheryl, I could not let that challenge go unanswered! I am, after all, the one who offers to taste test each and every recipe before it goes on the blog and I am the one who tames the cats for her. (Well OK, lets call that a work in progress.)

She's amazing, and darn pretty too!

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