But the boys wouldn't let me pack away my new freezer bowl just yet.
They wanted chocolate ice cream.
And who could blame them? It's pretty fundamental stuff - basic and honest, guaranteed to please just about anybody. Of course, I couldn't just make any chocolate ice cream - it had to rich and velvety; slightly sweet but not - heaven forbid - cloying or sugary. I wanted it to be adult and proudly proclaim, 'Yes! I am home-made ice cream! I can't be found in the shops!'
Also, I wanted to use up my Ghirardelli 60%. I have written before that I dislike having chocolate in the house - it causes too much temptation and competitive unpleasantness. To be fair, the Kid Squid prefers milk chocolate and doesn't generally go for the darker varieties: Lindt 'classic recipe' is his dessert-island choc of choice. Sir, on the other hand, goes for bittersweet every time - unless Dairy Milk is on offer. You know how you should never stand between a hippo and his watering hole in the morning, lest you get yourself stampeded into oblivion? It's the same thing with Sir and Cadbury's signature sweet: the wisest course is to get out of his way when he hears its Siren Song. I myself am not a huge cacao fan (difficult though that might be to believe) although I do like white chocolate on occasion (I know, I know) and praline-filled marbled seashells.
None of us goes for the really challenging single-origin straight-from-the-tree product (you know the stuff: 120% cacao harvested only in Northern Ghana when the moon is full, lovingly pre-digested by wombats and crafted by indigenous peoples into hand-made cassava-leaf-wrapped bars that cost $27 each). Nope, reasonably good supermarket chocolate is fine with us - but most supermarket chocolate ice cream is definitely not. Haagen-Dazs Five isn't bad if you can afford the second mortgage on your house to pay for it - but let's face it, a second mortgage isn't worth what it used to be.
Faced with this new challenge, I hunted around for a likely-looking recipe and found one in the big Yellow Gourmet cookbook. I didn't have the exact ingredients in the house, so I made do with what I had on hand and adapted the procedure accordingly. At the end of the first phase, I had a rich chocolate custard that was as thick as pudding: the Squid licked the beaters and the spatula quite clean and then asked for a bowlful for dessert. Since he was sick and sniffly, poor lamb, I allowed it just this one, admitting in the process that the custard was scrumptious just the way it was. With some whipped cream, booze, and maybe some fresh fruit and sugared nuts scattered round and about it would be good enough for company.
Frozen into ice cream it became thick and unctuous and rich beyond belief. No kidding - it tasted like it came straight out of the ground from a substratal seam of pure burbling dark deliciousness. It was a little too much for the Squid, actually, who preferred it in its chilled semi-liquid state. Sir was having none of it, however, and declared the ice cream intense, toothsome, creamy and triumphant.
And very, very tasty.
Elemental Chocolate Ice Cream (adapted from the big yellow Gourmet cookbook)
- one and one-half cups of sugar
- one cup of unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder
- good pinch of salt
- three cups of heavy cream
- two cups of half-and-half
- 6 egg yolks
- eight ounces of bittersweet chocolate, chopped into tiny bits
Beat the egg yolks until they are pale and creamy. Dribble in the hot cream mixture, beating all the while. When that's done, pour it back into the pan. Heat it up, stirring constantly, until it coats the back of your best wooden spoon (usually around 170-175 deg F).
Remove the pan from the heat and whisk in the chocolate bits until they are all melted.
Strain the mixture into a clean bowl set inside another bowl filled with ice. Cool the custard, stirring occasionally. At this point, it is a delicious thick pudding that may be enjoyed as is.
If you still want ice cream, put the bowl in the fridge, uncovered, for an hour. Then cover it and chill overnight. The next day, freeze it in your ice cream maker and put it in the freezer to harden (several hours or overnight). You'll get about two quarts of a very adult frozen confection.
3 comments:
With no particular relevance to this article - I thought you gluten-tolerant readers might like to see today's "specials" are Arnolds:
Seafood Potjie
Prawns, Calamari, Line fish and Mussels in a white wine Sauce
95
Gemsbok Wellington
Oryx steak, grilled and wrapped in pastry
Served on a bed of roasted vegetable, red wine sauce and Duxelle
115
Vegetable Stack "Napoleon"
Layered, char grilled vegetables in season, stacked with a herbal reduced bechamel, served on a roasted tomato sauce with basil pesto, topped with fresh green herbs.
60
Grilled Kudu Loin
Loin of Kudu rolled in roasted cumin and sea salt, grilled to medium rare . Served on a stack of roasted potatoes and with a berry sauce.
110
Stew for 2
This old favourite is back a steaming pot of stew served with two sides of german spätzle. This meal for two includes a bottle of our house red wine.
Ask which stew the chef has on the boil!
99
Slow roasted tender Pork Belly
Pork Belly roasted for 5 hours on low temperature. Served with a dark Rooibos tea sauce,on a mountain of mashed Parsnip root. Accompanied by grilled vegetables.
85
[Prices in Rand: divide by 7 to get dollars => stewfor2 with wine == $15]
I would go for the g/f pork belly with parsnip mash, myself, although the kudu also sounds delicious. But spätzle! How I miss spätzle. I will need to do some experiments when the cooler weather sets in ...
I received an almost quart of Amy's chocolate ice cream for that special day, 19 June. Wow! It is really great! Real chocolate that makes a statement.
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