Ice Cream Machine
Apple Crumble Ice Cream With Calvados and Créme Fraîche
My favorite apple pie recipe comes from a friend who shares my name, and who was kind enough to share with me a recipe for an apple pie that's practically a work of art. More than a thousand words long, it features little anecdotes here and there, making the recipe valuable for the writing alone, never mind the pie that comes off its pages. We wanted to re-create the flavor of apple pie in ice cream, but pie crust didn't quite work out when tucked into custard—it got too soggy for it to be any good. Instead, we decided to keep the filling and use bits of cooked crumble topping as cookielike bites mixed in with bits of apple. Calvados is a nice way to bump up the apple flavor, but if you don't have that on hand, rum or brandy should do in pinch.
By Laura O'Neill, Benjamin Van Leeuwen, and Peter Van Leeuwen
Mint Chip Ice Cream
We don't really understand why most mint chip ice cream comes in this odd shade of green that doesn't look like any plant, never mind mint. Our mint chip ice cream is a creamy white speckled with chocolate chips and is one of our best sellers. It's incredibly easy to make and is most certainly a crowd-pleaser. We recommend showing some restraint with the mint extract—after all, you can always add more—lest your ice cream wind up tasting like toothpaste.
By Laura O'Neill, Benjamin Van Leeuwen, and Peter Van Leeuwen
Earl Grey Tea Ice Cream
When we added Earl Grey ice cream to our trucks' offerings in 2009, New Yorkers went mad for it. Not surprisingly—black tea, combined with bergamot oil, cuts through the summer heat about as well as anything. We use a high-quality loose tea from our favorite tea brand, Rishi, which uses pure Italian bergamot citrus oil (and not bergamot flavoring), to make the most intensely fragrant Earl Grey tea ice cream.
By Laura O'Neill, Benjamin Van Leeuwen, and Peter Van Leeuwen
Lime, Ginger, and Lemongrass Sorbet
At Selamat Pagi, our Balinese restaurant, lime, ginger, and lemongrass are mainstay ingredients, appearing in many dishes. We were thinking about making a sorbet that reflected some of these ingredients and wondered what would happen if we threw all of them together. Our initial taste transported us back to the lush green hills of Bali, after which we were all too disappointed to find ourselves standing in our test kitchen. Along with lemon sorbet, this might be our go-to refreshment when we desperately need to cool off.
By Laura O'Neill, Benjamin Van Leeuwen, and Peter Van Leeuwen
Bitter Orange Ice Cream
One day when I was working at River Café in Brooklyn, I smelled an unfamiliar odor coming from the pastry kitchen. I opened the oven and saw charred pieces of orange wedges. Thinking something was wrong, I took them out of the oven and chucked them into the garbage. I recut fresh oranges and put them in the oven, saving the day. I was wrong—I got yelled at for the one-hour setback to the pastry chef's special that night. By roasting oranges and their peel at intense heat, you toast the essential oils, changing their flavor. It brings out the appealing natural bitter elements in an otherwise sweet fruit. This ice cream is amazing with almond, chocolate, vanilla, and other neutral-flavored desserts that could use something to jazz them up.
By Johnny Iuzzini and Wes Martin
Yogurt-Lime Sorbet
It doesn't come out of a soft-serve machine, and you can't twist it, but our version of fro-yo wins at everything else.
Cinnamon Toast Ice Cream
We were over the moon at how the little bits of toast retained their crunchy, buttery, and, well, toasty qualities in the midst of all the rich, creamy coolness.
Frozen Yogurt with Poached Peaches
No ice cream maker? Use store-bought frozen yogurt, or serve this over lightly sweetened Greek yogurt.
By Mona Talbott
Concord Grape Sorbet With Rosemary And Black Pepper
Rosemary, both herbal and floral, elevates the flavor of the Concord grape, while black pepper adds spiciness.
The Dude
By Brian Smith , Jackie Cuscuna , and Lauren Kaelin
Salted Crack Caramel
Far and away our most popular flavor.
By Brian Smith , Jackie Cuscuna , and Lauren Kaelin
Poached Seckel Pear with Pomegranate, Cabrales Cheese, and Szechuan Pepper Ice Cream
Here's another dessert that was inspired by a wine-tasting dinner. It's often hard to come up with a dessert that pairs well with wine, but this savory-sweet dessert does. At its center is a Seckel pear, a small, reddish pear with a slightly spicy flavor. It has a firm flesh that makes it perfect for poaching. In this dessert I poach the pears in pomegranate juice with some ground black pepper. A chunk of Cabrales cheese, a strong blue cheese from northern Spain, is sandwiched between the top and bottom halves of the pear, and a Szechuan Ice Cream is served with it, sitting on a diamond of baked almond cream.
By Francois Payard and Tish Boyle
Oops, I Dropped the Lemon Tart
This zabaione (zabaglione) and lemongrass ice cream dessert is adapted from Chef Massimo Bottura of Osteria Francescana in Modena, Italy. It is his unique take on a lemon tart, served upside down and smashed. According to Chef Bottura, "this dessert pokes fun at our daily striving for perfection and pristine beauty. I love the dynamics of a lemon tart but hate all the fuss—cream decorations and stubborn crusts. To get around all that nonsense, we purposefully crushed our tart. Of course, it isnt just a one-liner but full of flavored experience from the most fragile crust to the peaks of tart, sour, sweet, cured, and candied lemon on the plate."
This recipe makes 2 large tarts: You can make 2 and freeze 1 (keeping all elements separate in the freezer and assembling just before serving) or you can halve the ingredients.
By Massimo Bottura
Alexander McCream Spiced Pumpkin Ice Cream
For Halloween, we attempted to break the record for the world's loudest scream—the acknowledged "Scream of Ice Cream." To coincide with the attempt we created the world's first "ice cream soup," a bowl of steaming hot
pumpkin soup with a scoop of pumpkin ice cream dropped in the middle. I loved it, but it left everyone else in meltdown. In the end we ran out of time to stage the world-record
attempt, and killed off ice cream soup, but we kept spiced pumpkin ice cream alive.
By Matt O'Connor
Black Ice Licorice Ice Cream
As anyone who knows me will testify, my body is a temple. A Buddhist temple. Friends have cruelly suggested I had been in training for the following events in the London 2012 Olympic Games—the diabetics and the paralytics. In response, I thought I could kill two birds with one stone by undergoing an eight-day hunger strike outside the home of the prime minister in protest about the lack of equal parenting rights in the UK. By Day 6, an armed response team were protecting David Cameron's refrigerator and I would have killed for a quiche. I knew licorice had to be in the book after I began hallucinating about a character made from assorted licorice candies. The Prime Minister subsequently sent me a letter as slippery as his preelection commitments.
By Matt O'Connor
True Vanilla Ice Cream
There's nothing, um, vanilla about our homemade version of the classic. Of course, it also makes a great base for your favorite upgrades.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Chocolate-Malt Ice Cream
To make this easy ice cream, strain hot custard over semi-sweet chocolate and fold in malted milk balls once the custard has cooled.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Vanilla Ice Cream Base
By Laura Fyfe
Marmalade Ice Cream
A swirl of orange marmalade adds a welcome bittersweet note to vanilla ice cream.
Peach Sorbet
This refreshing dessert from Epicurious member Danita Sam Lai of Los Angeles is a crisp, delicious treat. Limoncello and Grand Marnier are optional but recommended, as the alcohol imparts a pleasing softness to the finished sorbet. Keep in mind that alcohol slows the freezing process, so freeze overnight before serving—unless you’re one of the many folks who likes a slightly slushier sorbet, in which case a few hours in the freezer will do nicely.