Ginevra Iversons Chocolate Hazelnut Ice Cream
- 3/4 cup hazelnuts
- 6 ounces gianduja (chocolate-hazelnut) paste (about 3/4 cup)
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1 cup half-and-half
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- Pinch salt
- 1 vanilla bean, split and scraped
- 6 egg yolks
- 2 cups heavy cream
- Melted bittersweet chocolate, for serving (optional)
- Heat oven to 350 degrees and spread hazelnuts on a rimmed baking sheet.
- Toast in the oven for 10 minutes, or until fragrant.
- Let cool for about 10 minutes (or until cool enough to handle but still warm) and rub the nuts in a dish towel to remove most of the skins (some will cling and thats O.K.
- ).
- In a medium bowl, melt together gianduja paste and butter, either over a pot with 1 inch of simmering water or in a microwave.
- Keep mixture warm.
- In a medium saucepan, bring the half-and-half, sugar, salt and vanilla bean to a simmer until the sugar melts, taking care not to boil.
- Stir occasionally.
- Place egg yolks in a small bowl.
- Slowly whisk in a 1/4 cup of the hot half-and-half mixture, whisking constantly and carefully so as not to scramble the yolks.
- Slowly pour the egg mixture back into the remaining half-and-half, whisking constantly.
- Heat the custard through, but do not simmer.
- If you see curdled clumps in your custard, pass through a fine strainer before continuing.
- While whisking constantly, slowly pour the warm custard into the warm melted chocolate (you want the two mixtures to be the same temperature).
- Once the chocolate custard is thoroughly combined and smooth, whisk in heavy cream.
- Cover custard and transfer to the refrigerator to chill for at least 2 hours.
- Pour chocolate hazelnut custard into an ice cream machine and chill according to the manufacturers instructions.
- Fold whole hazelnuts into ice cream, excluding any powder from the nuts (it just feels gritty on the tongue).
- Serve at once or freeze.
- To serve, drizzle with melted bittersweet chocolate.
hazelnuts, chocolatehazelnut, unsalted butter, sugar, salt, vanilla bean, egg yolks, heavy cream, bittersweet chocolate
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1015051 (may not work)