Category Archives: Ice Cream

Maple Walnut Ice Cream (with bonus scrambled eggs!)



During Ramadan, I got the wild idea that I would like to make ice cream for our entire office. All 60 of them. I have the kind of ice cream maker that you freeze the core, which means I had to make batches of the flavors I chose over several days. I made Dorie’s vanilla ice cream (the very best vanilla ice cream), and her chocolate ganache ice cream (my favorite chocolate ice cream). And this recipe from The Perfect Scoop jumped out at me, mostly because I love maple and walnuts are good for you, so this is practically health food!

The recipe has you start out by making the wet walnuts, which are walnuts toasted in the oven and then boiled in maple syrup. Then you build the custard. And that is where my little world fell apart. The recipe calls for heating the custard over medium heat until it thickens. Medium heat on my cooktop is pretty hot, and against my better judgment, I didn’t reduce the heat and the custard went from thickened to scrambled eggs in the amount of time it took me to reach for the strainer. I panicked and furiously shook and stirred the congealed mass in the strainer until enough came through the strainer to stabilize and thicken the cream and maple syrup mixture.
It froze up nicely, softer than some other ice creams I’ve made recently, probably due to the high maple syrup content. Still, the maple flavor couldn’t compete with the walnut flavor, which dominated in a not so pleasant way. I like my maple walnut a little more maple-y, so if I make this one again, I’ll cut back on the walnuts.

Hitting the (Caramel) Sauce

Cathy, this one’s for you.
OK, let’s get started. Start with a cup of sugar (or two cups or 3/4 of a cup, or ten cups). Totally up to you how much you want to make. Smaller quantities burn easily, so don’t take it below 1/2 cup of sugar.
This is your tool of choice
Heat the cup of sugar in a medium saucepan (I used a small one, here, but as you will see later, that makes it a little exciting). If you’re going with ten cups, size up on the pan. Before you begin, have an equal amount of heavy cream near the stove.

Melting oh-so-slightly around the edges
Can you tell what I’m making?
Use medium-low heat at first, and as the sugar starts melting around the edges, stir it up. You don’t need to stir constantly at first, but definitely don’t leave the kitchen. After all, you’re cooking sugar. It demands respect.
The sugar will get chunky, then melt into a light caramel chunky liquid.
Stir more frequently as the melting is progressing (which will happen quickly depending on how hot your stove is).
The chunks will melt away. Keep stirring, and wait until the sugar gets deep brown.
It may foam on the surface, but use your stirring to peek into the caramel to determine its color.
Once it’s deep brown, remove the pan from the heat and CAREFULLY pour in the whipping cream.
The mixture will fiercely bubble up and may seize.
This boiled up dangerously close to the top of the (too small) pan, so I put the camera down to make sure I didn’t need to grab the fire extinguisher.
No worries! Return it to the heat, and stir (with your fork or with a heat proof spatula) until the caramel is completely smooth.
Pour into a heatproof container (like a measuring cup or this milk bottle). Cool on the counter for a bit before refrigerating.
That’s it, you’ve made caramel! It’s an aggressive, bitter caramel, so if you like a mellower caramel, don’t take the sugar to the edge of burning like I do. When you’re trying it for the first time, don’t worry if you don’t let it get brown enough. With time, your sugar confidence will grow and you’ll learn how to take it to the edge to get that wonderful bitter flavor. This is an easy recipe, and doesn’t require brushing the sides of the pan with water as sugar crystals don’t form. The possibilities are endless, but we love it on vanilla ice cream. It’s equally good served with cheesecake, profiteroles, or if put in a squeeze bottle, you can use it to decorate dessert plates (not that I do that).
And clean up? A breeze. Let your screaming hot pan cool off, then let it sit with water in it for an hour or more. The caramel melts away and the pan is easily cleaned with no sticky mess.

Dorie’s Chocolate Ganache Ice Cream


This week, my fellow Tuesdays with Dorie bakers are making the Espresso Cheesecake Brownies, selected by Melissa at Life in a Peanut Shell. She makes the most amazing creations! I tried to get these done before taking a blogging break for Ramadan, but the days and hours evaporated. I do plan to make these and will post about them after Ramadan is over.

All is not lost because one thing I did fit is was Dorie Greenspan’s Chocolate Ganache Ice Cream. I can truly say (and report from others) that this was the most chocolaty ice cream I have ever had. It starts out with making the eponymous ganache, a mixture of cream and chocolate (I used Valrhona Guanaja 70%). Then you make the custard, fold it all together, and chill it in the refrigerator until it’s cool enough to churn in your ice cream maker. Since it’s practically solid after chilling in the fridge, it doesn’t take a long time to turn it into ice cream.
Make sure you leave a little in the bowl for sampling!
If you love chocolate, you need to make this. It’s easy, incredibly delicious, and since it’s so rich, a little goes a long way. Because of its high chocolate content, it needs to sit out on the counter to soften up before serving. Although it’s tempting to sneak a taste, the flavor will be better if it isn’t frozen solid. I mostly served mine unadorned, because topping it with hot fudge was, yes, way over the top.
*******PLEASE NOTE: Lethally Delicious is on hiatus for the month of Ramadan. I won’t be actively blogging, but if you leave a comment, I will visit you. I’ll return around Sept. 22nd, refreshed after the blessed month of fasting and prayer. Peace.

TWD – Caramel Swirl and Coconut Macadamia Ice Creams


Lynne of Cafe LynnyLu chose this week’s Tuesdays with Dorie recipe, vanilla ice cream. When the recipes were announced, I thought the bookends of the month, the first and last recipes, were a natural together. I planned to make the Tribute to Katharine Hepburn Brownies and serve them with scoops of vanilla ice cream.
Then peer pressure took over.
I started thinking, what will my fellow TWD-ers do with this recipe? It’s practically a blank canvas, and Dorie’s playing around suggestions encourage us to take off in many directions, including mix ins and swirl ins. I could have done one of those, but I had to do something different so that maybe you would stop here and go “Wow! Look what Leslie did with this! I never thought of making it with sriracha.”

OK, maybe not that different. So I decided to make my caramel sauce (recipe to come), which is ridiculously easy, and swirl it in after the ice cream chilled some.
I made this ice cream on the same day I made the brownies. The high that day was 102, we don’t have air conditioning, and I appreciated this one didn’t require turning the oven on.

Until I decided toasted macadamias and toasted coconut would be perfect compliments to the rich vanilla base. The oven went back on.

The custard base was super simple. The star players were heavy cream and whole milk with a vanilla bean (its vanilla caviar, as Gail Gand would say, stripped out and added to the mixture). Egg yolks added richness and stabilized the mixture; the custard was cooked until it thickened slightly. Once cooled, the custard is churned in an ice cream maker.

As I poured the churned mixture, still soft and bursting with flecks of vanilla, into two separate containers, I put aside the dasher to taste once the ice cream was safely in the freezer.
Oh. My. I wanted to climb in the freezer and be with it, it was that good. Better, yes indeed, than the Bouchon vanilla ice cream I made a few years ago. So good, I didn’t want to serve it with the brownies. Or add anything that would take away from its pure vanilla flavor. But I did.

The caramel was swirled in after the ice cream froze for a half hour. I may have been a little heavy handed with the caramel, but I knew the vanilla base could stand up to the aggressive bite of the bitter caramel sauce.

Then I chopped the toasted macadamias and added them and the toasted coconut to the other half of the base. Mix lightly and back in the freezer for both flavors.


Then wait. Waiting is hard.
Sneak a bite…

After tasting the caramel swirl, I knew the coconut macadamia could never live up to it. The caramel was rich and almost bitter from being taken practically to the edge of burning before the cream was added. No namby pamby sweet caramel for me. It lends a complexity that the vanilla plays up without competing with it. This ice cream is some of the best I have ever eaten.

Sneak a bite of the other flavor…

Impossible. The saltiness of the macadamias (which I accidentally left in the oven a bit too long, until they were brown) and the sweet toasted coconut with the rich vanilla backdrop made a flavor as subtle and complex as the caramel was in-your-face.
Not to overstate it, but this recipe blew me away. As written, it’s the very best vanilla ice cream you could ever hope to eat or make. But when you let your imagination carry you away, it’s transformed from the star to a supporting role. Your flavors can shine because the foundation is solid.
I never thought I could make great ice cream, but Dorie has taught me I can make a lot of great things. All it takes is the right teacher, and letting your mind wander until you find the flavors that speak to you.
If you’d like the recipe, check out Lynne’s blog. Or better yet, buy the book. We’re cooking from Baking From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan. It’s filled with amazing, fun and even some challenging recipes that will increase your baking repertoire.

TWD – Caramel Swirl and Coconut Macadamia Ice Creams


Lynne of Cafe LynnyLu chose this week’s Tuesdays with Dorie recipe, vanilla ice cream. When the recipes were announced, I thought the bookends of the month, the first and last recipes, were a natural together. I planned to make the Tribute to Katharine Hepburn Brownies and serve them with scoops of vanilla ice cream.
Then peer pressure took over.
I started thinking, what will my fellow TWD-ers do with this recipe? It’s practically a blank canvas, and Dorie’s playing around suggestions encourage us to take off in many directions, including mix ins and swirl ins. I could have done one of those, but I had to do something different so that maybe you would stop here and go “Wow! Look what Leslie did with this! I never thought of making it with sriracha.”

OK, maybe not that different. So I decided to make my caramel sauce (recipe to come), which is ridiculously easy, and swirl it in after the ice cream chilled some.
I made this ice cream on the same day I made the brownies. The high that day was 102, we don’t have air conditioning, and I appreciated this one didn’t require turning the oven on.

Until I decided toasted macadamias and toasted coconut would be perfect compliments to the rich vanilla base. The oven went back on.

The custard base was super simple. The star players were heavy cream and whole milk with a vanilla bean (its vanilla caviar, as Gail Gand would say, stripped out and added to the mixture). Egg yolks added richness and stabilized the mixture; the custard was cooked until it thickened slightly. Once cooled, the custard is churned in an ice cream maker.

As I poured the churned mixture, still soft and bursting with flecks of vanilla, into two separate containers, I put aside the dasher to taste once the ice cream was safely in the freezer.
Oh. My. I wanted to climb in the freezer and be with it, it was that good. Better, yes indeed, than the Bouchon vanilla ice cream I made a few years ago. So good, I didn’t want to serve it with the brownies. Or add anything that would take away from its pure vanilla flavor. But I did.

The caramel was swirled in after the ice cream froze for a half hour. I may have been a little heavy handed with the caramel, but I knew the vanilla base could stand up to the aggressive bite of the bitter caramel sauce.

Then I chopped the toasted macadamias and added them and the toasted coconut to the other half of the base. Mix lightly and back in the freezer for both flavors.


Then wait. Waiting is hard.
Sneak a bite…

After tasting the caramel swirl, I knew the coconut macadamia could never live up to it. The caramel was rich and almost bitter from being taken practically to the edge of burning before the cream was added. No namby pamby sweet caramel for me. It lends a complexity that the vanilla plays up without competing with it. This ice cream is some of the best I have ever eaten.

Sneak a bite of the other flavor…

Impossible. The saltiness of the macadamias (which I accidentally left in the oven a bit too long, until they were brown) and the sweet toasted coconut with the rich vanilla backdrop made a flavor as subtle and complex as the caramel was in-your-face.
Not to overstate it, but this recipe blew me away. As written, it’s the very best vanilla ice cream you could ever hope to eat or make. But when you let your imagination carry you away, it’s transformed from the star to a supporting role. Your flavors can shine because the foundation is solid.
I never thought I could make great ice cream, but Dorie has taught me I can make a lot of great things. All it takes is the right teacher, and letting your mind wander until you find the flavors that speak to you.
If you’d like the recipe, check out Lynne’s blog. Or better yet, buy the book. We’re cooking from Baking From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan. It’s filled with amazing, fun and even some challenging recipes that will increase your baking repertoire.

Blondie Hot Fudge Sundaes…Blame Pamela



When I saw Pamela at Cookies with Boys had made these blondies, and they were so good she was almost speechless, it got my attention. When she said she would make them with vanilla ice cream and hot fudge the next time, I knew how I was spending my evening.

The recipe for the blondies came from Bon Appetit, and although it was straightforward, I had to mix it up a little bit. I decided to make them with browned butter instead of just plain melted butter, thinking the browned butter and brown sugar would be reminiscent of these cookies.

Don’t bother. The brown butter flavor was lost in these since butter was not a predominant ingredient. These were so good and so easy to make! I love the sweet and salty flavor profile and have loved peanuts with ice cream since I was a kid. I will definitely play around with them more next time, but not with browned butter.

Next, I attacked the ice cream part of Pamela’s vision. Dorie Greenspan’s vanilla ice cream is my go-to recipe for vanilla ice cream. I’ve made it so many times, and made so many flavor variations (check back next week for some of them), that I almost know the recipe by heart. It has the most intense vanilla flavor in the very best vanilla base. This time, I didn’t have a vanilla bean so I used some vanilla bean paste. While the cream was steeping, I tackled the hot fudge.

I have used the same hot fudge recipe for the last 18 years, since I was a toddler thirty-something. I cut it out of Gourmet and it is the very best hot fudge recipe I have ever tried. That statement may be misleading since I stopped trying new hot fudge recipes after I found it! It’s unctuously smooth and has a great mouth feel and huge punch of chocolate. I used Valrhona chocolate and cocoa, but that’s an indulgence that childless people like me can afford. We don’t have braces and college educations to worry about, so the disposable income goes for chocolate.

Rich Hot Fudge Sauce

3 oz bittersweet chocolate, chopped
1 1/3 sticks butter, cut into bits (I do chunks, but I’m lazy)
1/2 c unsweetened cocoa powder, sifted
1/2 c sugar
1/2 c packed dark brown sugar
2/3 c heavy cream

In a heavy saucepan melt the chocolate and the butter over moderately low heat, stirring, then stir in the cocoa powder, butter, sugars and the cream (I usually mix the sugars and the cocoa together in a bowl with a fork, bypassing the sifting, and let the sugars melt in before adding the cream). Bring the mixture just to a boil, stirring, and simmer it until it is smooth and the sugar is dissolved (it should be glossy). Pour it into a 2 cup measuring cup or microwave safe decorative pitcher (I use either a small glass milk bottle or porcelain pitcher.) To reheat, microwave for about 15 seconds, swirl it around and repeat until it is quite warm but not hot.

Still grainy
It’s almost a ganache, so it’s pretty firm when cold, so you can scoop it out and roll the balls in cocoa and pretend they’re truffles. They’re not firm for very long so eat up.

Once all of the components were made, it was time to sample the winning combination Pamela envisioned. I cut the blondies in small squares, topped then with smallish scoops of vanilla ice cream and poured on a little hot fudge.
This combination will blow your mind. It is so perfect with the creamy, chewy, salty and sweet flavors. I took the entire operation to work (these were dangerous to have in the house!) and they were a big hit at work too. Thanks, Pamela, for bringing these blondies to my attention. If you become as addicted to these as we did, blame Pamela.