Basil with Meyer Lemon Curd

In all of the chaos of kicking off our IndieGoGo fundraiser this week,  we arrive at our favorite day.  Or as it has become over the last year – flavor day.

And as luck would have it, the flavor I chose for the week of the kickoff proved to be a bit of a challenge.

 

 

 

We had been wanting to use Meyer lemons in a flavor since they are in season and a facebook flavor-storming session with our good friend Molly McNeil (of Minnesota Peach fame) pushed it into the spotlig

 

 

I envisioned this flavor to be a green hued, deeply flavored sweet basil ice cream with ribbons of meyer lemon curd glowing through each scoop. Unfortunately I realized after my first incarnation that we weren’t quite ready to cross into pesto cream sauce with lemon ice territory, which was exactly where we ended up after the first round.

 

Sometimes these flavors take on a personality during development, almost like they are a living, breathing thing.  I’ve  caught myself almost talking to a flavor idea, demanding that it cooperate or tell me what would make it happy.  After some smooth talking, I finally found the right path, which included a few adjustments to find harmony.

 

 

 

First, the lemon curd.

 

 

 

Lemon curd is a great cake filling or baking ingredient, but thrown into ice cream in its basic form results in a hard, icy texture that doesn’t translate well.  So to fix, the curd was baked in the oven to caramelize the sugars and reduce out the water content.  The result is exactly the filling you get with a lemon bar, translucent with the melding of the sugar, butter, and eggs.  It incorporates into the ice cream beautifully.

For the ice cream, I initially steeped the cream in basil and threw in minced basil to finish. The result was an overwhelming sour basil flavor, which if actually treated like pesto might be good, but without the balance of a walnut or pine nut was too much on its own.  I’m not going to say Pesto is not workable because in all honesty its danced around our flavor list for awhile.  But for now, it would wait.

The right decision was keeping the basil out of the ice cream until right at the end, where it was minced and added to provide an accent flavor to the Meyer Lemon (which is truly the star of the show) and leave the clean cream flavor some room to breathe.

 

 

 

The final product.

 

 

 

Want to try some for yourself?

As we do every week, we’ll be giving away two pints of this flavor. Just leave a comment on our facebook page to be entered into the drawing. If you don’t have a facebook account, leave a comment right here on the blog. We’ll draw two winners on Friday afternoon (3/9/2012) at 4pm and will announce them on our facebook page (or email you if you’re comment resides here). Our only conditions are you must be able to pick it up here in Minneapolis, and be willing to give us a little feedback that can be shared with everyone else. Good luck!

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Update: IndieGoGo Fundraising – THANK YOU!!!

THANK YOU FOR YOUR LOVE AND SUPPORT!

Thank you to EVERYONE who supported our Indiegogo fundraising campaign. We are speechless! Thanks to you, we raised $13,274! We really can’t thank you enough. In the end we were unable to reach our goal of raising $35,000, but we are forging ahead with this adventure knowing that so many of you are behind us. We are now carefully weighing our options, and will do our best to keep all of you up to date in our next steps to getting our ice cream to everyone who wants it. Again, from the bottom of our hearts, THANK YOU!

 

 

Miso Black Sesame

Winter is the season for many things in Minnesota, one of them being soup. It got me thinking about somehow incorporating one of Winters great pleasures with one of Summers great pleasures…ICE CREAM!

I’ve been reading a new cookbook I received as a birthday gift, and it has inspired new ideas and thoughts pertaining to cooking that are refreshing. For those of us into cooking, I think it is common to get a new book, and obsess over it for a few weeks or even months. So that’s where I’m at, and although the book is not a cookbook of Asian influence, it opened my mind to work with something I hadn’t thought about in ice cream before…Miso.

 

This is white Miso paste, aka “shiromiso” purchased at United Noodles in Minneapolis. If you have never been or are interested in Asian cooking, United Noodles is the bomb digity. It’s the largest Asian grocery in the Midwest. Go there!

Traditionally Miso  is made from fermented rice, soybeans and/or barley mashed into a paste with salt. It originated in Japan and is used to season soups, sauces, vegetables, etc. If you’ve eaten at a Japanese restaurant you’ve likely seen Miso soup on the menu, if not slurped one down.

It’s flavor will be different depending on the type of Miso you buy, but the white Miso we used here has a sweet, salt, nutty flavor that is reminiscent of Parmigiano-Reggiano…deeeeelish.

 

 

 

 

Here we have Black Sesame Seeds, much like the more common variety of pale sesame. They get toasted and tossed in toward the end of the churn. They round out this flavor offering another dimension of nuttiness to the already nutty Miso.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Miso Black Sesame Ice Cream! It’s one of the great pleasures of all seasons in FrozBroz country.

 

Like to try some? As we do every week, we’ll be giving away two pints of this flavor. Just leave a comment on our facebook page to be entered into the drawing. If you don’t have a facebook account, leave a comment right here on the blog. We’ll draw two winners on Friday afternoon (3/2/2012) at 4pm and will announce them on our facebook page. Our only conditions are you must be able to pick it up here in Minneapolis, and be willing to give us a little feedback that can be shared with everyone else. Good luck!

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