kerravonsen: Jarod investigating ice cream: Genius at work (icecream)
Kathryn A. ([personal profile] kerravonsen) wrote2010-11-06 09:42 pm

The Ice Cream: The Phantom Taster

Here be the weekend, and here be more ice cream!

Regarding Experiment #51, it was rather interesting eating the second half of it (the bit that was put in the freezer overnight) - it was still very gummy. I finally told myself that it was like a frozen strawberry marshmallow; from that point of view, it was yummy.


Experiment #52: Low-Fat Strawberry Ice Cream
Recipe:
* 1 punnet (250g) fresh strawberries
* 8 T Xylitol
* 1/2 t vanilla bean powder
* 100 ml skim milk powder

Chop the strawberries. Microwave on high for 2 minutes.
Add Xylitol. Puree.
Mix in the other ingredients.
Put in the refrigerator to cool.
Process in ice-cream machine.

Whys: I wanted to try the stewing idea again, but with fewer and simpler ingredients.
I added the Xylitol to the strawberries before pureeing them because Xylitol cools things down when it dissolves, so I thought it might cool down the strawberries a teeny bit faster.

Result: Creamy soft-serve texture (but it didn't stick to the sides this time, which is good). The volume was low because I hadn't added any water to the mixture. The taste was mildly strawberry with an odd sort of aftertaste; perhaps it was the Xylitol?

Verdict: Nice texture, not so good in taste.

Lessons: (a) Cooking the strawberries is still a good idea. (b) Try a mix of Xylitol, Erythritol and Splenda next time. (c) More strawberries, less milk.

Stevia in icecream making is what makes it hard

(Anonymous) 2011-06-14 12:57 am (UTC)(link)
I've read that Stevia will make the ice cream hard as a rock and so need to add it at the end when the ice cream is nearly done. Which means it will probably not be blended in thoroughly throuout the mixture. I want to experiment with Erythritol or xylitol. Have any of you done this since this thread was started? If so what was your result? It sounds like, from this thread, that you may be able to cut down on the amount of these two in comparison to table sugar.