Ginger Chip Ice Cream

‘Tis the season for gingerbread and pies, but why not make a ginger ice cream to go with that pie?  Ginger Ice Cream and Pumpkin Pie were long lost lovers, you know. You should reunite them.

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I read a lot of ice cream recipes–including several ginger recipes before concocting one that cooked the eggs but did not require 4 to 6 egg yolks (but what was I supposed to do with all those whites?). I mashed up Ben&Jerry’s vanilla (from a cookbook) with the ginger recipes from the Epicurious and David Lebovitz. I also took inspiration from a dairy free recipe.

 

Here goes:

Ginger White Chocolate Chip Ice Cream – by The Ravens Landing

2 eggs

½ c sugar

1/8 c honey

2 c heavy cream

1 c milk

1 tsp vanilla extract

3 in chunk of fresh ginger root, coarsely chopped or grated

2 T water

½ c crystalized ginger, chopped

½ c white chocolate, chopped

Preparation

In 3-qt saucepan cook ginger, water, sugar and honey over moderate heat stirring occasionally (5 minutes). Add half heavy cream and half milk and bring to a simmer.

Whisk eggs until fluffy.

Add eggs to the warm cream and ginger mixture and cook over a low heat, stirring constantly and scraping the bottom with a heat resistant spatula until the custard thickens enough to coat the spatula (or, to 170 degrees if you have a candy thermometer). Add the remaining milk and cream and the vanilla extract. Chill thoroughly. It will take at least 3 hours, but you’re better off if you can leave it for a day or a night. You can speed the process by putting it in an ice bath.

Now, you could just put it in the freezer. You will have ice cream, but it will be thick and hard. This isn’t bad, just depends on what you want from your ice cream.

Once the mixture is thoroughly cooled, put it in an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s instructions. While churning, add the crystallized ginger and the chopped white chocolate.

Voila.

Brightening

Flowers are pretty great. It’s hard to keep them alive indoors since there isn’t a lot of direct light–the windowsill below is very popular as one of the few with direct light all morning. I recently found a leafy plant whose care tag said “ambient light” and another that read “minimal light” so I snapped them up and they are doing great. It’s very exciting.

At some point I decided that cut flowers were an OK splurge, and now I almost always have some cut flowers around. Usually astermeria since it has such a long life for a cut flower. Lilies, too.

And sometimes I fall for the miniature roses–they are usually only $4 and I find them very hard to resist, and very hard to keep alive because of the aforementioned dearth of direct light.

Right now I have a pair over the kitchen sink which are recovering from a months long battle with mites (neem oil finally did the trick!) and a new pair in the craft room with it’s bright light. So far they are doing well!

What about you, do flowers follow you home from the grocery store, too?

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