Blood Orange Quark Ginger Shortbread

Its Blood Orange season which means for a very short time, they can be found in stores.  They are a favorite of many when they show up around this time of the year.  This is a flavor I’ve made before but have yet to post it on the blog. Now is as good as time as ever, right? The combination of the bright red orange with ice cream is hard to resist.

Blood Orange

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As you’ve seen us do for many other citrus flavors, the first step to this flavor involves juicing the blood oranges and reducing down with sugar to create a syrup to layer into the cream.  Think this Minnesota made Blood Orange syrup might be good on pancakes or waffles,  or some other dessert you have in mind?  You might be seeing more from us in this department in the coming months.

Blood Orange Syrup

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Next, the ginger shortbread.  Shortbread cookies are among my favorite, the richness and crunch is hard to beat.  For a little extra kick, these are peppered with diced candied ginger then baked off and broken up in preparation for being mixed into the ice cream.

Candied GingerGinger ShortbreadGinger Shortbread Cookies

 

 

 

 

 

 

This was the first flavor we experimented with using Quark cheese, and it turned us on to a fantastic ingredient  we’ll continue to use for many other flavors.  It first appeared on our blog in the Cranberry Compote Quark + Toasted Walnuts.  Its similar to cream cheese in texture, but a bit more tart and gives the ice cream an excellent cream flavor.

IMG_9538

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The quark is blended with the ice cream base, and the ginger shortbread is mixed into the cream during the churn.  At the end, rich swirls of the blood orange syrup are layered in with the ice cream as it is packed into the pint.  The end result is a cheesecake like ice cream, swirled with blood orange syrup and full of ginger shortbread crunch.

IMG_9562

 

 

 

 
You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest. 2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 2/22 at 4pm. Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

 

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Rose with Cinnamon Honey

Happy Valentines Day!! This week we really wanna say thanks to all who continue to follow us and dig what we’re doing. We love you! Will you be our valentine? Be mine. Hug me. Cutie Pie. Lets Kiss. Be True. Sweetheart. Love Me. Seriously though, love you. And since we love you, and it’s Valentines Day and all, we thought we would give you roses on this special day. Not roses though. Rose ice cream. Rose ice cream with cinnamon honey. Let’s get started…

Rose PetalsRose Petals Steeping in Cream

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rose buddies! It’s not really the season to find fresh rose buds suitable for cooking with, so we’re using dried. Don’t worry sweetie pie, the flavor is all there. For our rose ice cream base, we use plain organic cane sugar, and steep the rose buds in the cream. The buddies get strained out, and the mix is ready for the churn.

 

 

 

Nordeast Nectars Raw Honey

Cinnamon

Cinnamon Honey

 

 

 

 

 

Next, we make our cinnamon honey. For this batch we’re using our last jar of local honey from Nordeast Nectars. We heat to thin out so that we can easily incorporate the cinnamon. Done! The cinnamon honey gets layered into the pints during packaging.

 

 

 

Rose with Cinnamon Honey

 

 

Happy Valentines Day! We made you rose ice cream layered with cinnamon honey. The rose flavor is floral and earthy while the cinnamon honey balances the bouquet with a touch of sweetness and spice. For real though, we love you! Hearts, Frozbroz

 

You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest.  2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 2/15 at 4pm.  Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

 

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Georgia Walnut

The past few weekly flavors have been inspired by delusions of beaches and warmer weather; happy thoughts to escape the harsh reality of our midwestern winter.  While my frozen counterpart enjoys a nice warm weather vacation this week, I remain in the Cities, proudly and hatefully enduring sub zero temperatures which will only harden me and make me enjoy 30 degrees for the remainder of the winter so much more (right?).

This flavor represents the true meaning of Nordic endurance: pure indulgence that only a deep winter freeze can truly incite – something to dull the pain of frostbite, lack of sun and society.  Specifically important keys to this equation: Chocolate and Booze.

Background: A few years ago my Pops clued me in to one of his favorite new dessert finds, the Georgia Walnut Pie at the Harbor View Cafe in Pepin, Wisconsin.  Being the fiend for pecan pie that I am, a new nutty pie treat piqued my interest.  The Georgia Walnut pie is an incredibly rich concoction of chocolate, walnuts, cinnamon and butter – a chorus of flavors that will melt the elastic in your socks and cause momentary amnesia.  As soon as I had it, I knew it was an ice cream flavor.  Add in a last minute improv of bourbon and you’ve suddenly created the perfect company for your January misery.  Typically we tell people that our ice cream isn’t meant for large quantities because we don’t cut corners when it comes to sugar and fat.  For this week, all bets are off.

To bring this flavor full circle I chose to create a Bourbon Walnut jam of sorts, by slowly reducing crushed walnuts with brown sugar and water until the flavor of the walnuts is infused into a thick – jam like reduction.  It looks like a caramel because of the color from the brown sugar, but the sugar is never cooked to a point where it technically caramelizes.  What you end up with is Jam.

Walnut Bourbon Jam

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The bourbon finishes it off to give it a well rounded kick.  Or maybe a roundhouse kick.  You decide.

Walnut Bourbon Jam

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The ice cream base is essentially our 3x Chocolate spiced with Cassia Cinnaomon.

85% Cocoa, Fair trade chocolate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The ice cream is churned and the Bourbon Walnut Jam is layered and rippled throughout the pint.

Georgia Walnut

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest.  2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 1/25 at 4pm.  Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

 

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Coconut & Mangosteen Caramel

We’re entering the middle of January when the true doldrums of a Midwestern winter take hold, and you can’t help but dream of a warm paradise somewhere closer to the equator. With no sunny beach in my future for this winter, I get my kicks by enjoying the fruits (no pun intended) of such places to remind me of what I could have. Maybe its a bit sadistic, but I enjoy it.  As an aside, in the 90 odd flavors we’ve put up on this blog so far, we have yet to do one friendly to the dairy free and vegan audiences.  This marks our first flavor in both of those categories.

I first was introduced to the strange fruit through a short story in one of my college lit classes (the title of which I’ve forgotten) and have always been curious about it. Native to Indonesia and South America, for a long time they were illegal in the U.S. due to fears of harboring Asian fruit fly.  You can find them fresh now, but you’ll still have to do some hunting.  Since we weren’t able to get our hands on any fresh, we went the canned route (we’re making a caramel with them anyway) and picked them up with our coconut milk at our often lauded haunt – United Noodles.

Mangosteenmangosteen

 

 

Again with the little brains.  What does this mean?

 

 

For this flavor we chose to do a Mangosteen caramel that would be layered into the base and provide a truly tropical version of a coconut caramel.

ginger

 

 

 

Hinted with a bit of fresh ginger

 

 

 

The mangosteen was pureed and strained to remove the seeds and fibers, and then combined with the fresh ginger, sugar and boiled down into a nice flowable caramel.

Mangosteen Caramel CookingMangosteen Caramel

 

 

 

 

 

Next,  the coconut ice cream. Coconut milk works wondefully for a dairy free/vegan option because it has a high enough fat content to freeze without being icy.  With organic cane sugar and some organic vanilla, you’d never know the difference. (As long as you don’t loathe coconut).

Coconut Milk

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Finally after churning the coconut base, the Mangosteen caramel was layered in as the pints were packed.

Coconut Mangosteen Caramel

 

 

What we end up with is a deliciously creamy coconut ice cream with a bright, lightly fruity, mangosteen caramel.

 

 

 

 

You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest.  2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 1/11 at 4pm.  Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

 

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Maple Maple Swirl

Happy New Year y’all! The holidays are sadly behind us, but alas, a new FrozBroz flavor is right before us. As we’ve mentioned before, we take inspiration for our flavors from just about anything, anyone, anywhere. This week, it was a holiday gift idea from our buds Jill and Derrick Pulvermacher that had the stars aligning for our flavor: Maple Maple Swirl.

It turns out that Derrick’s father, Jerry Pulvermacher, produces a small lot of fantastic maple syrup every year with a few of his buddies in Plain, WI. Jill and Derrick thought it would be nice gift idea if we could create a flavor that featured Jerry’s maple syrup. How could we resist?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The maple syrup hand-off was made and history begins. About ten years ago Jerry and some of his friends started making maple syrup. It was the start of a hobby, and one that was likely a good excuse to have a few beers in the woods with the guys. In their first year they only tapped about 75-80 tress and produced 1-2 gallons just for themselves. The sap was originally cooked over a fire in an open pan. As time went on, demand increased as more people got their lips on their syrup. The guys tapped more and more trees each year, and about 5 years ago, they purchased an evaporator and started bottling and selling. In 2011 they tapped 350 trees and ended up with 160 gallons of syrup. That’s a lot, right? Well, I was pretty shocked to find out that it takes 50 gallons of sap to produce one gallon of maple syrup. You can do the math on that one. In 2012 they tapped 650 trees and only produced 165 gallons of syrup. If you remember, last years winter was mild, and Spring was warm. It’s a true snap shot of how climate change can really effect maple syrup producers. We have our fingers crossed for Jerry and his buddies down in Plain, WI because their maple syrup is liquid gold, and we hope they keep producing for years to come. If you’re in the area, you can find their syrup at local restaurants and cheese shops in and around Wisconsin Dells as well as the Wollersheim Winery.

For the ice cream, we wanted to slap Jerry right in the face with the intense maple flavor of his syrup. We decided we needed to flavor the ice cream base with the syrup, and also, make a reduction to swirl in as a sort of maple syrup caramel. As ice cream makers, the dilemma once again, is making sure that we aren’t adding too much water content to our mix, as the texture will become icy and undesirable.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To avoid that, we once again, boil the syrup down and reduce it to a thick caramel consistency.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The syrups sugars are now condensed enough that it flows off of a spoon more like honey than maple syrup. At this point, we set aside some of the reduction for layering into the pints during packaging, and we reduce the remaining syrup a little more before adding it straight into our ice cream base. The ice cream mix is heavily salted before churning.

 

 

Maple Maple Swirl

 

 

 

The result is a dense salty creamy maple ice cream layered with pockets of reduced Hilltop Sugar Bush Maple Syrup. Cheers, Jerry!

 

You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest.  2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 1/4 at 4pm.  Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

 

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