Homemade ice-cream. Yum!

I tried two ice-creams recently. The first one, a cookies and cream ice-cream was a request from the children, it is their current favourite.  The other one was trying to reproduce a Maggie Beer ice-cream, a salted caramel chocolate ice-cream.

Also, let me tell you about the 5 min cheat ice-cream we can all make at home at the last minute and which works a treat!

One tip upfront: make sure your ice cream mix is very cold before churning, this will result in a smoother ice cream and will then be more enjoyable.  I use an ice-cream machine to churn the ice-cream. I find this method much more reliable!

Cookies and cream ice-cream

This is my kids current favourite.  Adults also love it.  This ice-cream is so simple, it is just a matter of mixing cream, milk, vanilla and sugar and it is ready to be churned! The cookies pieces are added afterwards, between churning and freezing.  Try it, it is worth it! Recipe HERE.

Salted caramel chocolate ice cream

This requires a bit more steps than the above but remains simple to make.  I like mine quite strong in chocolate. In the recipe HERE, I point out to a few adaptations to tastes.  I love the result: a rich complex chocolate ice-cream.

You can use the custard base of this recipe for a “plain” chocolate ice cream (don’t forget to add the cream to the custard base).

The 5 minutes berries ice-cream

It is more a sorbet than an ice cream. I have not tried adding some cream, it would be interesting to try. You will need a 500 g bag of frozen berries: mixed or raspberries or strawberries or what may be in your freezer. You will also need some sugar cane syrup or some icing sugar. And a blender. In the blender place the frozen berries and start blending.  If using sugar cane syrup, add until the right texture is reached. If using icing sugar, place three tablespoons of sieved icing sugar with the fruits and blend, adding a little water at the time to help with the consistency (also check if you need to add more sugar).  The liquid volume will be somewhere between 1/2 cup and 1 cup and will depend on the berries.

Serve immediately or place in the freezer for a little time if making an hour ahead or so.

 

Carrot galette derived from an Ottolenghi recipe

This carrot, lemon and thyme galette is derived from the Butternut, orange and sage galette from Yotam Ottolenghi “Flavour” book.  The later recipe is widely available online, a link which has the original photography is HERE.

When I made the original recipe the galette was not given an ovation by the younger generation, so I pastry of this recipe. This carrot galette Ottolenghi inspired version is quite delicious.

Note that the dought is excellent and can be used for other galettes.

Ingredients:

Pastry:

  • 100 g of plain flour
  • 30 g whole-wheat flour (else use plain flour)
  • 20 g of dry polenta and 1/4 cup of water
  • 1 1/2 tsp of sugar
  • 3/4 tsp flaked sea salt
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper
  • 20 mL olive oil
  • 80 g unsalted butter, fridge cold and cut into 1.5 cm cubes
  • 60 mL ice-cold water

Galette filling:

  • 4 large carrots, peeled and cut into 5 mm rounds
  • 2 tbsp of olive oil
  • a few sprigs of thyme
  • One head of garlic (keep the skins on), top fifth cut off to just expose the cloves
  • 1 large shallot or a couple of smaller ones (160g), skin on
  • 1/2 lemon juice and half the juice of an orange (omit the orange and replace by water if you don’t have any)
  • 30 mL maple syrup
  • 125 g  of mascarpone
  • 1 small egg beaten
  • salt, pepper, thyme
Method:

Pastry

  1. Mix together both flours, the polenta and water,  sugar, salt, pepper and olive oil in a large bowl.
  2. Add the butter and incorporate by lightly squashing each cube between your fingers. Don’t over-work; you want chunks throughout the dough. Add the water and use your hands to gather the dough together — it will be quite sticky. Transfer to a well-floured work surface and roll into a 28 x 18 cm rectangle, dusting the rolling pin, surface, and pastry as you go.
  3. Fold the longer ends toward each other so they meet at the centre and roll out once. Fold the shorter ends the same way, roll out once, then fold in half to make a square.
  4. Form the dough into a 14 cm wide circle, wrap tightly with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for 30 minutes.

Galette

  1. Preheat the oven to 220°C fan-forced. Line one large baking sheet with parchment paper. Toss the carrots with the 2 tbsp olive oil, 1 tbsp of thyme,  1 tsp salt, and plenty of pepper. Spread out on the prepared baking sheet.
  2. Drizzle the garlic head and shallot with a little oil, wrap individually in aluminum foil, and add to the sheet. Roast the carrots for 25 minutes, or until golden brown, and remove from the oven. Continue to roast the garlic and shallot for 15 minutes more, then set aside. When cool enough to handle, squeeze the garlic and shallot from their papery skins and finely chop.
  3. Decrease the oven temperature to 200°C. Line a baking sheet with baking paper. Transfer the dough to a well-floured surface and roll out to a 12-inch (30 cm) circle, dusting your rolling pin as you go. Gently lift the dough onto the prepared baking sheet and refrigerate for 30 minutes.
  4. Put the orange juice, lemon juice and maple syrup into a small saucepan on medium- high heat and cook for about 10 minutes, or until the liquid reduces to the consistency of a thickened, sticky maple syrup.
  5. Put the mascarpone into a bowl. Extract the cooked shallot and cooked garlic from their shells, add lemon zest and a few drops of lemon juice.  Season with a pinch of salt and plenty of pepper and stir everything together well.
  6. Spread the mascarpone mixture over the dough, leaving a 4 cm rim around the edge. Cover with the carrots, then drizzle with the syrup. Fold the pastry up and over the vegetables, brush the pastry with the egg, and bake for 30 minutes, until golden brown. Let cool for 20 minutes, then scatter with a bit of thyme before serving.

Sunday night diner

Sunday night diner is the wrap up of the weekend and the last step before the start of the new week. It has this homy comfortable feeling. Yes, but…

We, or rather my daughters started a silk rope class on Sunday afternoon.  They love it! I find it great too. By the time we come home it is often after 6 pm , sometimes after 7 pm. So, not willing to cook much at this stage of the day, I devise a quick meal.  One that came back a few times recently is a bean and sausages bake.  Dessert tonight – yes, there is always dessert – was a flan patissier.

The bean and sausage bake

You can rarely do easier and it require strictly no cooking skills.  All you need are cans of beans, tomato sauce and sausages! Pretty simple! Still need the recipe? Click HERE.

sunday evening bake

A flan patissier for dessert

Flans patissiers need to be made in advance preferably as they taste better warm or cold.  I made mine this morning before heading across Scotland Island through bushland on gorgeous little tracks.  Flan patissier are a typical French dessert, it is like a (homemade) baked custard.  Quite nice.

The recipe is HERE.

flan