Honey ice cream recipe (2024)

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Honey ice cream recipe (1)

I didn’t fallin love with chestnut honey right off the bat. When I took myfirst spoonful from the jar, I took a little too much and recoiled from the bitterness. While celebrated in some cultures, some of us are less-accustomed to bitter flavors. I can’t eat bitter melon, for example, but I have come to love chestnut honey, especiallywhen dribbledover toast with butter, fresh ricotta, or vanilla ice cream. In those cases, it’s magically transformed into ahoney experience different from you might have expected, its assertive flavor tamed by the creamy elements.

Honey ice cream recipe (2)

Chestnut honeyhas an unmistakable flavor, which could also be described as a little smoky, and kind of spicy, and you just might find yourself craving it over and over, like I do. Although I’ve learned that a little goes a long way. We get miel de châtaignier in France although I think Italian chestnut honey is the mostprominently available outside of Europe. Itcan be a challenge to find in the United States, unlikebuckwheat honey, which is more common because it’s made in America.

Honey ice cream recipe (3)

Both buckwheat and chestnut honey arebrusquely flavored, although each is different, and I’m hooked on the two.Europeans eat, and shop for, honey by variety – much more so than Americans. Some honeys aresaid to have health-giving properties and in France,they’re sold along with a spoonful of advice as towhich variety willhelp you with one of the ailments that you have.

And if you ask,theFrenchdiscussthem openly: I had a honey vendor ask me if I was constipated while I was perusing his honey selection at an outdoor market. Wasn’t sure that was the right place to be discussing my digestive tract, but you get into the habit of openly having those kinds ofdiscussions in France. Just like I’ve gotten into the habit of swipingdark honey on my morning toast after it gets a liberal swipe of salted French butter.

Honey ice cream recipe (4)

When he found out how much I love chestnut honey, my friend Rolando Beramendi of Manicaretti sent me a jar of chestnut honey that he exports, and addedthat he loved to make honey gelato from it. (He is a wholesaler, but the chestnut honey, and his other fine Italian products, are available from Market Hall Foods.)While chatting with Rolando – who is Italian – he asked me about Americans not having an affinity for wild, dark and bitter flavors. I thought about it, and we do like those flavors in some respects: We eatbitter greens like broccoli rabe and kale, as well as rye bread, rhubarb, lemon, beer, whiskey, buckwheat (and buckwheat honey), and barbecue, which isn’t bitter, but has smokey, woody, and earthy flavors.

Honey ice cream recipe (5)

Curiously, a few days before, we’d had lunch with an American friend of ours who lives in Italy and writes about Italian food, and the subject ofhow Italians don’t cravespicy foods, while we were spreadingspicy ‘Nudjaon bread at a pizzeria in Brooklyn. I’d never had it – boy, is that stuff good! – although they said you wouldn’t find the sausage-like spread that spicy in Italy. WhenI mentioned the red chile flakes and other spices sometimes found in Italian dishes, they both said that they arenot common. But in general, it’s hard to generalize about entire cultures, generally speaking.

Honey ice cream recipe (6)If you can’t get chestnut honey, you can use another strongly flavored honey for this ice cream, such as buckwheat honey, which is rare in France. (Most of it that’s available comes from Canada.) In France, pine honey (miel de sapin) is strong and quite tasty…and is a diuretic, in case anyone asks. Another good, strong French honey ismiel de bourdaine (buckthorn). Or you can go to your local honey shop or stand at the market and taste some samples…but prepare yourself for a little interrogation about your inner workings.

Honey ice cream recipe (7)

For those who have issues with homemade ice cream getting too hard, because of the honey, this ice creamstays soft and scoopable – even right out of the freezer. It’s nice just as is, but one could serve it with crumblednut orsesame brittle (there’s a recipe for that in The Perfect Scoop) on top, or toasted hazelnuts or almonds. You want to pair it with something to compliment the honey flavor, not compete with it. (Sorry chocolate!) Spring and summer fruits work really well, such as rhubarb, strawberries, apricots, plums or peaches, when in season.

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Honey Ice Cream

Adapted from The Perfect ScoopThe honey gives the ice cream a smooth texture, but be sure to add it after cooking the custard: honey is slightly acidic and can cause custards to curdle. Perception of sweetness changes if mixtures are cold, so you might want to taste the chilled ice cream custard before churning. If you’d like to add a tablespoon or two more of honey, you can. If it’s very thick, warming it slightly will help it incorporate.If you don’t have an ice cream maker, you can freeze this ice cream following the instructions here.

Servings 1 generous quart (1L)

  • 1 1/2 cups (375ml) whole milk
  • 1/4 cup (50g) sugar
  • pinch of salt
  • 1 1/2 cups (375ml) heavy cream
  • 5 large egg yolks
  • 6 cup tablespoons (90ml) strongly flavoured honey (such as chestnut or buckwheat), or 1/2 cup (125ml) mild-flavor honey
  • In a medium saucepan, warm the milk, sugar and salt.

  • Pour the cream into a medium bowl and set a mesh strainer on top. Nest the bowl in a larger bowl half-filled with ice and some cold water, to make an ice bath

  • In a separate bowl, whisk together the egg yolks. Once the milk is warm, slowly pour half of the warm milk into the egg yolks, whisking constantly. Scrape the warmed egg yolks back into the saucepan.

  • Over medium heat, stir the mixture constantly with a wooden spoon or heatproof spatula, scraping the bottom as you stir, until the mixture thickens and coats the spoon.

  • Pour the custard through the strainer, stir for a minute or so, until tepid, then mix in the honey.

  • Chill mixture overnight. The following day before churning, taste the custard and add additional honey, if desired, then freeze the mixture in your ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

Related Links and Recipes

Goat cheese custard with strawberries in red wine syrup

Honey-Roquefort ice cream

Tips on Buying an Ice Cream Maker

Making Ice Cream Without a Machine

Italian Chestnut Honey

The Easiest Chocolate Ice Cream Ever

What’s is gelato?

Honey in France (Honey Traveler)

Au Miel (A favorite honey shop in Paris)

La Graineterie du Marché (A favorite épicerie, with a good selection of honey, in Paris)

Markethall Foods(Manicaretti Italian products in the U.S.)

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Honey ice cream recipe (2024)
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