That name is quite the mouthful, eh? Let's add on to it and make it Smooth-Crunchy-Creamy-Chunky-Luscious-Cinnamon-Oatmeal-Praline-Chocolate-Chunk-Incredible Cream.
And after all that I have to admit that string of descriptors goes nowhere in describing how utterly divine, just how perfect it is. Thank you, David Lebovitz, for equipping me with the tools to make it.
disclaimer...this absurd number of egg yolks is for a double batch
This ice cream has three components: 1. A custard base, which means it uses a ton of egg yolks and remains soft and creamy in your freezer, rather than getting icy and hard like ice creams that use only cream and milk. 2. Oatmeal Pralines- toasted old fashioned oats tossed with hot caramel an sprinkled with sea salt, cooled in a sheet pan and smashed to bits with a heavy object. 3. Chocolate chunks- I recommend chopping up bar chocolate in slivers and chunks. I used ghiradelli baking dark, but I think semisweet would be just as good, if not better.
Order of prep:
1. Make custard, place in ice bath in fridge.
2. Make Oatmeal Pralines, set out to cool.
3. Chop chocolate, place in bowl in the freezer.
4. When custard is totally chilled (at least three hours later), churn in ice cream maker.
5. While churning, smash the praline to bits and place in bowl in freezer.
6. When ice cream is churned, put it in a bowl or tupperware and fold in the praline bits and the chocolate.
7. Cover bowl. Freeze for several hours (I recommend overnight) to soften pralines and firm ice cream.
8. Enjoy your hard earned ice cream. Try to share with your friends and family, and try not to stick your whole face in the bowl when you take it out of the freezer. Feel free to sneak a spoonful every time you pass the freezer.
Cinnamon Ice Cream, from The Perfect Scoop
Makes about 1 quart. I doubled it, and it still only lasted 2 days. There were 7 people though.
1 cup whole milk
3/4 cup sugar
Pinch of Salt
Ten 3-in cinnamon sticks, broken up. I used 2 tablespoons of Saigon Cinnamon instead.
2 cups heavy cream
5 large egg yolks
Warm the milk, sugar, salt, cinnamon sticks and half the cream in a pot. Once warm, let steep for an hour to infuse the milk with the cinnamon. If you're using ground cinnamon, skip this step.
Heat the milk mixture, remove the cinnamon sticks and discard. Prepare your icebath- fill a large bowl with ice and a bit of water, and put a smaller bowl inside the big bowl. Pour the remaining cream in that smaller bowl. Have a strainer on hand to make sure there are no eggy bits in your ice cream.
In a separate bowl, whisk together the egg yolks. Whisk the hot milk into the egg yolks a little bit at a time until the egg yolks are the same temperature as the milk mixture. Whisk the hot egg mixture into the milk mixture.
Stir constantly over medium heat until the mixture thickens and coats the spatula. DON'T BOIL. You can also tell it's done when you can feel it starting to coat the bottom of the pan. If you think its coating the spatula, it probably is.
Pour the custard through the strainer into the cream in the icebath bowl. Stir until cool. Cover and refrigerate until thoroughly chilled, then churn according to the instructions that came with your ice cream maker.
Oatmeal Pralines, also from The Perfect Scoop
3/4 rolled oats (not instant)
1/2 cup sugar
Pinch of coarse salt
First, toast the oats. You can either do this on a sheet pan in the oven, or, if it's a hot summer day and you don't feel like turning on the oven, you can toast them in a wide skillet on the stove top, stirring constantly. Like so:
Place a sheet of aluminum foil on a baking sheet.
Spread the sugar evenly in the bottom of a medium, heavy bottomed pan. Cook over medium heat and cook attentively. When you see the edges liquify, stir carefully to get the rest of the sugar to melt. Be aware that if you don't stir, the bottom can burn while the stop is still white. Once the caramel is deep golden, remove from heat and dump the oats in. Stir the oats to coat with the caramel, then scrape them onto the aluminum foil on the baking sheet. Spread them out as evenly as possible. Sprinkle with salt and let cool and harden.
Once cool, break up into pieces and put in a heavy duty plastic bag. Whack them into bits with a rolling pin or other heavy blunt object.
The pralines will be very hard, but will soften in the ice cream. I recommend mostly small bits, like the size of a fingernail.
Stir together ice cream, pralines and chocolate, freeze for a bit and enjoy!
Make it this weekend and tell me how you liked it!
I've made this ice cream now several times and it's now one of my tried and true ice cream recipes! Thanks so much! Making the praline now for an apple crisp ice cream...
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