Home-Churned Ice Cream
- 2 recipes Boiled Custard, chilled (page 215)
- 1 pint fresh fruit, such as fresh Georgia peaches, peeled, pitted, and mashed
- 6 cups whole milk
- 20 pounds crushed ice
- 3 pounds rock salt
- Wash the can, lid, and dasher of a tall 1-gallon electric or hand-cranked ice cream churn with hot soapy water.
- Rinse with cool water.
- In a bowl, mix the custard with the fruit.
- Set the dasher into the freezer can and pour in the fruit and custard.
- Add milk to within 3 inches of the top of the can or to the fill line marked on your freezer can.
- Put the lid on the can and place it in the freezer pail, making sure to center the can on the raised can rest in the bottom.
- Put several handfuls of ice around the can to hold it upright.
- Attach the motor or hand crank.
- Start the motor of an electric churn and begin packing the space around the can with ice and salt, starting with about 4 inches ice and then adding about 4 ounces (1/2 cup) rock salt.
- Continue adding ice and salt in this manner until the ice reaches the top but does not cover the top of the can.
- Add 1 cup cold water to help the ice begin to melt.
- The freezer pail should be placed in a large pan or sink so the salt water that drains out does not damage surfaces.
- Make sure the drainage hole stays open.
- Freezing takes 20 to 30 minutes.
- Add more ice and salt as needed.
- An electric churn will stop when the ice cream is frozen.
- If the motor stalls too soon, unplug it and check to be sure no ice is caught between the bottom of the can and the freezer.
- Do this by using your hands to force the can to turn and then restart the churn.
- A hand churn takes about the same amount of time; you will know it is frozen when the churn becomes very difficult to turn.
- Wipe away any ice and salt from the lid of the can and carefully remove the lid.
- Pushing down on the can, carefully pull out the dasher, scraping any clinging ice cream back into the can.
- At this stage, the ice cream is soft.
- Put the provided cork stopper into the hole in the lid and replace the lid.
- Harden the ice cream by adding more ice and salt to the freezer bucket, completely covering the can and securely corked lid.
- Cover the freezer with a heavy towel or newspaper layers and store the churn in a cool place until ready to serve.
- If you are not serving the ice cream within 1 hour, remove the towel and pack more ice and salt in the freezer pail.
- Dispose of the salt water in an area away from grass or plants.
- Scrub and rinse the pail thoroughly to avoid rust.
custard, fresh fruit, milk, crushed ice, rock salt
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/home-churned-ice-cream-389102 (may not work)