Monday, February 27, 2012

Spiced Earl Grey with Candied Orange Peel Ice Cream

I absolutely love a good Earl Grey with cream and sugar; it has to be my favorite tea flavor. I know it isn't original, but it's just so darn good! I've seen plenty of Earl Grey tea ice cream concoctions on food blogs, but I wanted to do something different with mine. One of my favorite spices is cardamom, and it pairs quite well with black tea and with citrus flavors. I thought what the hell?! Might as well give it a whirl. I also wanted to enhance the citrus notes from the bergamot in the tea. I considered simply adding some orange zest, but I thought it might be bitter or not freeze well with respect to its texture. Then I thought of candied orange peels. They are quite delicious, and while I'm not sure how their texture will fair in frozen cream, I'm gonna throw them in anyway!

Finding the orange pieces was not easy. Well, finding them was easy. Getting to them wasn't. The closest place to me that I could probably have found them was Dylan's, and the hell I'm gonna pay $12/lb for them. That means heading all the way down to the LES for them, which takes about 45 minutes one-way. sigh
And for the tea I just used Bigelow because it was on sale for $2 at the grocery store. Now I have no problem with this brand - in fact I find it tasty. However, I do long to try the Earl Grey Provence from Mariage Frères, but at around $25 a pop I just can't do it.

I had a few different friends weigh in on this combination. One person immediately said 'yum!', another was hesitant (she doesn't like Earl Grey. gasp!), and another said it sounded good, but the combination of flavors might end up being overwhelming. I'll let you know who was right at the end of the post.

Spiced Earl Grey with Candied Orange Peel Ice Cream


Ingredients


1 cup whole milk
1/2 cup heavy cream
1/4 cup + 2 tbsp sugar
3 earl grey tea bags
1 tbsp ground cardamom
handful of chopped candied orange peels



Instructions



Combine the milk and sugar into a small saucepan and heat over low heat for about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally to make sure the sugar fully dissolves. After the sugar is finished dissolving, put the tea bags into the milk, and continue to heat over low for another 5 minutes, or until you see the tea beginning to steep (aka my milk started to turn light brown). Remove from heat and let sit for 15-20 minutes with a lid over it.





This is what color mine was before I proceeded. 








(sorry it's a little blurry!)



Next I whisked in the heavy cream and a tablespoon of ground cardamom. Now, I love cardamom. It is hands down one of my favorite spices, and I can never get enough of it. I always say the more the better! So digest that for a moment and then take into consideration the fact that I'm telling you that maybe one tablespoon of it might be a little too much. I probably should have scaled back the measurement to two teaspoons.


....still can't believe I think there is too much of it.




As this batter chilled in the fridge I chopped the orange peels. I don't mind orange peels, but sometimes they are a little too bitter for me. I briefly considered just putting some orange zest into the batter when I was feeling too lazy to go across town for the candy.




What's crazy is that this batter took twice as long as the Spiced Plum, and it still wasn't finished! I left this to churn for 16 minutes, and once again it looked finished but had some liquid stored at the bottom I couldn't see till I had already unloaded the ice cream maker into some tupperware for storage. I don't understand why this batter took nearly as long to churn as a full recipe. :/

Anywho, is still finished with a strong flavor. Though, the cardamom did lend a slight texture to the otherwise creamy treat. It wasn't gritty, but was almost chalky. It was weird. I guess that since cardamom doesn't necessarily dissolve that it would leave behind a texture, but I've had cardamom ice cream before that was very creamy. Hmmm I wonder what that company did. I'm sure that be decreasing the amount by a third would help somewhat with that issue. Also, the orange peels added absolutely nothing to the product. I even caught myself scooping out bites around the peel chunks. Would zest have been better? I'm beginning to believe that no citrus additive is probably the best thing for it.

Overall it's a solid ice cream, but there is definitely room for improvement.

Oh and I ate too much of it before I remembered to take a picture of it. Hence why there is no picture! teehee

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Dark Chocolate Raspberry Cream Cheese Swirl Brownie Ice Cream (now that's a mouthful)

This flavor, once again, came from me having too many sweets in the apartment and not knowing how best to consume them. Perhaps for my next flavor I'll actually consult my ever-growing list of ideas.

For Valentine's Day, I made my sweetie some of these brownies. They were damn good. However, because I am incredibly cheap, I used a full 8 ounces of cream cheese and only 4 ounces of goat cheese. Doing the recipe by the book would have involved me spending $10 on goat cheese! No way dude. I also managed to find a decent-looking 6 ounce container of fresh raspberries for $2.50! Very strange for this time of year. And that's another change I made to the recipe - I put the full 6 ounces of berries into the cheese swirl and just put an extra handful of chocolate chips into the batter instead of adding berries to the brownie batter. I just didn't see the point. The chocolate flavor would have overwhelmed the berries.


Dark Chocolate Raspberry Cream Cheese Swirl Brownie Ice Cream

Ingredients


2 cups whole milk
1 cup heavy cream
3/4 cup sugar
a ton of chopped brownies

Instructions


Man these instructions are beginning to sound redundant!





I heated the whole milk and sugar in a small saucepan on low for about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally to ensure the sugar was fully dissolved. Next I poured that mixture, along with the cream, into the KitchenAid for another 5 minutes to combine.















After the batter was mixed, I poured it into some tupperware and threw it into the freezer to chill for a few minutes while I chopped the brownies! These had been in the freezer prior to chopping in hopes that they wouldn't crumble in the ice cream the same way the carrot cake did. I like my chunks!









You may think this amount looks like overkill, but I think it's just right! The more chunks, the better the ice cream.











I put in so many chunks they wouldn't all incorporate into the batter! Now that's what I like to see :D






Well isn't this not the pretty picture I was hoping for?
So I only let this churn for about 16 minutes instead of the full 20 as I should have. It looked done! Anywho, that's the last time I go on looks instead of numbers. I suppose I could have put this slushy pile back into the KitchenAid to churn for a few minutes, but I was feeling lazy. So I ended up with part ice cream, part icy slush, which didn't make for the fluffiest ice cream :/
Still turned out pretty tasty though! And the chunks were awesome.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Spiced Plum Tea Ice Cream

My inspiration for this flavor was brought about by an accidental run-in with a Harney & Sons flavor while eating brunch one day about three years ago. My cousin and brother were visiting me and we grabbed a table at Sarabeth's on the UES (overpriced but overall good food). Now this is the ONLY place in the city I've been able to find this specific flavor of tea. I've checked every coffee/tea shop I can think of, grocery stores, department stores, other restaurants, etc. Nothing. Nada. ZIP.
Now don't be getting this tea confused with the Passion Plum. While it's a fine tea, it nowhere compares to the rich flavor of the Spiced Plum. I've been able to find the Passion Plum in almost every establishment where I've found Harney & Sons tea. It's quite common, and normally found in bag-style. The Spiced Plum, which I was only able to find once Harney & Sons opened a store in SoHo, is only available in loose-leaf form. Actually, it's finer than that - almost like it's been ground. Better have a super fine-sieved tea infuser for this one! As for why I never bothered to order online, I just...didn't.

Putting this ice cream together required a little innovation on my part. My main problem was how to infuse the milk with tea. I have two tea infusers, both of which are not super-fine and both would not sit well in a pot of milk. So what did I use? A coffee filter and a chip clip. Not the prettiest, but it worked. Sort of. The ice cream itself turned out a little bland. What's weird is when you eat it, you know it's flavored with something, you just don't know what. Don't get me wrong - it's quite tasty and has good texture. I just don't think I added enough tea, which is funny because almost every tea ice cream recipe I've seen uses ~4 tbsp/teabags for a full recipe. I halved my milk and sugar, so naturally I halved the amount of tea. I wouldn't mind trying this one again because the idea of this flavor sounds really good. I'll just use 3-4 tbsp next time.


Spiced Plum Tea Ice Cream

Ingredients


*note - I'm halving all the amounts from now on in order to save on materials and cost. And my waistline.


1 cup whole milk
1/2 cup heavy cream
1/4 cup + 2 tbsp sugar
2 tbsp tea

Instructions


First I heated the milk and sugar in a small saucepan on low for about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.



Next I made up my little "teabag" and placed it in the milk for about 5 minutes before turning off the gas and covering the pot with a lid. I left the milk to sit for about an hour or so in order for the tea to infuse.












Afterwards, I added the cream and whisked the mixture for 1-2 minutes making sure everything was incorporated before pouring the batter into the KitchenAid.











This batch only took about 8 minutes to churn completely (on low), and was put in the freezer to harden for a couple hours before eating.











The texture of this was superb :D