Just a comment on the ice bath. I am a chemist in training, and we also often need supercooled ice baths for reactions. My tip is, that you should add (cold) liquid water to the bath as well. It decreases the salt concentration somewhat, BUT without the water there, you have chunks of salty ice and a ton of air. Air is bad at thermal conductivity, so it doesnt do much that your salty ice is very cold if it cant effectively draw the heat away from the bowl. Tl,dr: add a liquid phase to ice baths
I am going off 8th grade science class here but I though the whole reason the salt is introduced is because salt water has a lower freezing point than fresh water so the salt water gets super chilled from the ice. I mean you aren't wrong with the bowl just sitting on the ice chunks, but my point is that...isn't it the properties of the salt water that create the cold needed, not the water simply helping get the whole bowl cold? Sorry I edited this like 8 times I hope you see what I am getting at.
@@sweetbabycheeses734 Well, as the ice melts, it is creating a salt water, but it will all be sitting on the bottom instead of up around the sides as well. Edit: I see what you are saying now, and yeah you are right. But doing both will get the best cold result is what I think Barnabás was saying.
Less air = greater conduction. More water will displace the air and net more surface area to exchange heat as well. The microscopic air bubbles in ice cream also works the same way, but in reverse, and is the reason it holds shape fairly well on a hot day.
Makes perfect sense to me. I've noticed that my ice cream maker doesn't freeze until there's a good brine in the bucket. Now I always mix up 2 batches and churn back to back using the same brine and this saves on my rock salt and ice cost 😊
"It's rare you can enjoy something so pure just 3-4 ingredients"... Man I agree with you so much!! "Gotta add some sprinkles..." Sprinkles: 100 ingredients
@@Bart-dg6qv Here in norway all milk is pure milk, pastourised but pure, no additives of any sort, and the cows eat grass, i didnt realise how good it was until i tasted milk in the US, it tasted absolutelly horrible. Its a shame, any dairy lover desereves quality milk.
I’m making this tomorrow, thank you,,,,, edited two days later, are you kidding me, this turned out perfect, made vanilla the first batch then off to the grocery store to buy strawberries, second batch freezing as I type! This is outstanding, if you’ve ever wanted to make your own homemade ice cream try this, it’s really really good! Thanks so much for this, it’ll be a hit when we can finally entertain the family. Stay safe everyone
I think it's because Xantham gum isn't exactly a pantry ingredient most people have on hand, and this video is supposed to be a simple and accessible recipe.
I’ve used this method several times and I’ve always been happy with the results. My favorite thing to do is during the second blending step to throw a piece of cake of my choice into the mix. My mom‘s favorite cake is coconut cake, and I made her coconut cake ice cream for her birthday a couple years ago, better than anything Ben and Jerry ever cranked out.
ur a dope child !!! so cool. i randomly got an ice cream craving thanks to my friend and i want to try to make it at home ill use that tip to make ice cream for her!!
When I was in second grade, my teacher had us do this with metal coffee cans. You get a big coffee can, a small coffee can, your ingredients, and the ice and salt. Put your ingredients in the small coffee can and seal it up really tight, then pack in the ice and salt around it inside the bigger coffee can. Seal that up and then just roll it around for a while. No hand mixer, no stirring... you can just roll it around on the floor or something, give it a few shakes. Whatever's fun. About 15-20 minutes later, you're left with ice cream. It's pretty soft, even by "soft serve" standards... but it's still ice cream. Super quick and easy.
Quick tip: If you happen to not have cream, a diluted cream cheese and milk solution works fine! You could make cheesecake flavored ice cream with it, I tried it, and it tastes very good! You could just mix around 3 tablespoons of cream cheese for every cup of milk in your solution.
You can throw a brick of cream cheese and ice and water in a blender and add a can of condensed Banana, Orange, Pineapple or Passion Fruit, Orange, Pineapple or Mango, Orange, Pineapple , or Guava, Orange, Pineapple -- any of those Dole fruit juice concentrates that doesn't contain sugar -- and tell people it's a yogurt smoothie and doesn't contain sugar and then you'll have to 'fess up, that it's full of dairy fat, but it's so good, they'll drink it anyway. Don't have to go to all the work of making ice cream. But usually those concentrated fruit juices say, on the side, "Contains 10% fruit juice," so most are a waste of money. This is also a good way to use up bananas, since a banana that looks like garbage is probably the most delicious, fresh-tasting thing to add to a smoothie. Also fresh lime juice is good.
I whisked egg whites by hand before because I didn't feel the need to buy a mixer. I stood there whisking for about 30 minutes, it only took so long because I had to take breaks from whisking lmao
A tip for anyone reading The french style is better for acidic fruits, because I tried to do it the philadephia style with tamarind and it curdled super badly, but I tried it with the french method and it did not curdle and tasted fabulous
I'm so happy that you actually give metric measurements aswell. It's my major problem whenever I see anything cooking related online. And that's despite me not actually making 99.9% of the stuff I see online.
Ah yes, we Americans with our revolutionary-era measurements. Metric scales up and down with relative ease. Here's a good one for ya - uncut timber is measured as DBH - Diameter at Breast-Height. I.e., "look, there is a 14" DBH oak tree". It is the tree's diameter, at an arbitrary 4 1/2 feet above ground. Pretty exacting if you ask me. :).
I decided to challenge the tropical gods and the current heatwave by making the first method as it turns out I had almost exactly half the amounts of ingredients in my fridge that needed to be used up. Honestly, I never achieved the same thicker consistency as in the video (plenty whipped, well mixed but the ice still melted faster than I liked and it's all more thick liquid than thick cream clots in the second round) but I followed all the steps and 7 hours later I couldn't wait after dinner and tried some, and it had the exact consistency of handmade artisanal ice cream so SUCCESS! Don't worry if it doesn't look like it's in the video, as long as it's cold enough and you give it enough time!
I'm very lucky in the fact that my grandparents actually own a homemade ice cream shop, which means that we pretty much always have great tasting ice cream. Funnily enough, my grandfather on the other side of the family owns a sugar bush, so we always have maple syrup (I'm Canadian), and we have a couple of backyard chickens so we always have eggs. Take that, shopping list!
Does anyone know if plastic will work for the inner bowl. I dont have a small metal bowl and i dont want to buy one because i will only use it for ice cream
Made the "Philadelphia" version and it, shockingly!, turned out pretty good! Let's just say I learned a few lessons for the next time I make this. However, the overall end product after 24 hours in the freezer, was pretty close to a middle range ice cream and definitely worth the time to experiment with! With a little practice, I could definitely improve the quality. Did a basic vanilla as well as a batch with toasted walnuts - that was VERY popular with my partner! Looking forward to experimenting with chocolate and a sea salt caramel. Yum! Thanks Adam!!
@Hythoria lol! "Shockingly" because my attempt went only roughly like Adam's and it still ended up pretty close to ice cream after 24 hours. It wasn't a dis on his recipe/process, and entirely being delightfully surprised at the end result. I have since made a chocolate version and learned a few lessons from that too. Lol! Like don't forget the vanilla, and that he was right about the ice.
@@alanmcentee9457 but... If outside is cold enough to keep snow frozen and since you chill your mix beforehand, why would you sprinkle salt over that snow? Get your extension cord or whatever and just whip no?
@@mistaowickkuh6249 Salt makes the snow melt which drops the temperature of the mixture. Also by partially melting the snow, it allows more surface contact between the cold snow and the mixing bowl. If it is that cold out you probably don't need the ice, but I would still use it.
This worked well. I actually used a glass bowl for the inner bowl, plastic for the outside bowl. I added water to the outter bowl while the glass bowl was inside (used a jar to add a little more weight to glass bowl) and froze the whole thing over night. I did not have any issues with anything melting since I made a cast of ice. I also placed my glass container that I was going to use to store ice cream in the freezer so it could help keep cold once I transferred over.
@@michelledelaloye8555The salt is only to help with the melting point, if you do what this person did I guess you get much longer lasting ice as you'd be preparing one huge ass block of ice. I thought of the same thing, it's a great way to cut down the time, as we don't all have ice block crusher fridges and making so many cubes is a chore.
Tip for if you wanna make this even simpler (first method) you can use sweetened condensed milk instead of sugar & evaporated milk since it's both really sweet and isn't watery. It would then be 500ml cream, 250ml condensed milk and 1-2 tsp vanilla extract (optional but it makes it better), you can add a tbsp or two of milk while it blends (be careful not to turn it into a milkshake) if you want to make it less thick/softer. Beware tho depending on your condensed milk brand this can be very sweet so I would suggest not going over 250ml (for this scale) and to make sure you've left it covered in the freezer for over a day (2 days is perfect) cuz you don't want it turning into ice cream soup on a hot day. The yeild is just under a liter. I'm using ml cuz cup size depend on country, and you of course don't need to follow these measurements exactly.
I think this'll give a more caramel-y flavor as well, as many processes to make the condensed milk does sort of cook the milk and sugar, and the flavor diff is noticable (taste it when you open the can, you'll see) the same process also could affect the freezing process, as you mention when you reccomend more freezing time. All of this Adam kind of goes into with his brownie ski recipe, so see those if you want some idea about what the sugars might do. tl;dr, the sugar just ends up giving a different flavor to pure cream and straight sugar, but not a bad one! so give it a shot if you're down :>
@@micahsuboat1233 Glad to hear 😊 I would suggest not keeping it in the freezer for too long (if it can last lmao) because the moisture in the ice cream evaporates then crystalizes aka freezer burn after a while without the added preservatives (I think, I'm by no means an expert). From my experience it starts becoming grainy/less smooth after about 3 weeks, but the brands you use and storing method might change this duration. While eating freezer burnt ice cream is safe (although it might not be as enjoyable) letting it stay like that for too long can end up damaging the container you use to store it, especially if it wasn't made to store ice cream or any other frozen semi liquids for extended periods of time.
@@RozehKakes Condensed milk does not make it taste more caramel-y; evaporated milk can give that toasty caramely taste. I made some at 9pm last night using a can of condensed milk and 1 tbsp vanilla and just whipping the pint of cream first. It was delicious and even turned out just a bit too sweet, but froze easily overnight with no ice crystals. The recipe even said it would be done after 4 hrs but I had already gone to bed by then. I didn't do any of that salt/ice method- the only work was whipping the cream in the beginning. Highly recommend!
Did this with coconut milk and coconut cream and sugar. I then added almond and vanilla extract. At the end I added some ground almonds and dark chocolate ganache with a pinch of shaved sweetened coconut. Plant based almond joy!
I wanted to tell you that I tried the French-Style Ice Cream with 1/2 cup chocolate syrup added and it was sublime! It was creamy, soft but not too soft and utterly delicious. It was one of the best ice creams I've ever made and eaten. Thank you for this recipe. I'm going to try it again very soon before the summer is finished. Muchas gracias, senor!
I did the first recipe without help of a electric mixer and I just discovered that I have insane stamina and muscle resistance,I'm very happy....also I'm popeye.
Just a tip for icing the bowls. I use stainless metal bowls because metal transfers and maintains cold temperature much better than any other material. I use one large bowl to hold the ice, and the size of the mixing bowl can be for the amount of ice cream you intend to make. I wanted the mixing bowl to be more stable and the ice to surround the entire bowl. -For the ice container I use a large 7 qt stainless bowl and a 5.5 to 6 qt stainless bow for the mixing bowl. -I fill the ice bowl with water and salt, mix thoroughly, then I submerge the mixing bowl into the water until the water is about 1/4"-1/2" below the rim of the mixing bowl. -I weighted the mixing bow down so it does not float...I have a small diameter 5lb steel cylinder wrapped in tin foil. -Once the water is frozen I remove the weight and the mixing bowl is completely encased and locked in ice. The mixing bowl does not move and the entire bowl is FRIGID COLD and stays very cold during entire process. I keep the bowls prepared for future use and placed in freezer.
I appreciated that this wasn't another version of the "whipped cream and condensed milk no churn ice cream" that I've seen everywhere. not that there is anything wrong with that, it's just nice to know about other options
It is effectively the same ingredients though, sweetened condensed milk is just evaporated milk that has been cooked with more sugar for longer... and he used heavy cream (effectively whipped cream) evaporated milk and sugar (condensed milk) and vanilla. Which you could add to the whipped cream and condensed milk recipe too
@@ShinningCrys I see what you are saying when it comes to the first recipe, however the second recipe uses completely different ingredients. That's the advantage. You can use different techniques such a custard based ice cream.
@@grapefruitpineapple7667 Which is good. I personally find the heavy cream recipe leaves a whip cream film on the mouth and tongue after eating, which I’m not a huge fan of….
When I was a kid we did the same thing, but we put the ingredients in a small metal coffee can. Then placed that one in a larger metal coffee can with ice a salt. Just roll it between two people back and forth. Burns calories and fun for kids and also a sweet treat for all the hard work!
Does anyone know if plastic will work for the inner bowl. I dont have a small metal bowl and i dont want to buy one because i will only use it for ice cream
Most people: watching to learn how to make ice cream. Me: watching because this guy talks with the confidence and smoothness that I could only dream of.
@@RedRoseSeptember22 i didnt see the ingredients in the description til after so i did it wrong mine had to much cream but if you do it right it taste very much like ice cream
Adam, you are a genius nerd cook, in the most positive and complimentary way I can express myself! This recipe worked perfectly, never bought ice cream anymore! Like you said, "it's rare you can enjoy something so pure"! You've got some fans here at home (btw, we live in Brazil)
This works just incredibly well, thanks a ton for sharing. I actually didn't even have bowls like this, but instead had a medium bowl and a pot to hold the ice, so I couldn't even submerge the bowl in the ice very far. So instead of mixing and having one 45-minute freezing period, I had two 30-minute freezing periods, but it still worked great. Also, my hand mixer has the "wire" type of beaters (rather than your flat metal beaters), which added MUCH less air into the mix on the lowest settings, so the cream never "whipped" and there was no collapse after the freezing period. I think you might find that they work better for this method, I recommend that you try it out if you get the chance. Also wanted to confirm to anyone reading, that for the philly-style recipe, using plain milk plus 60g (1/2 cup) powdered milk is a viable substitute for evaporated milk. Definitely helps make a good texture.
If every video on youtube could be this thorough and straight to the point in a well spoken and professional matter....... thank you, you did an amazing job!
We used to make this style of ice cream every 4th of July in our giant ice churner (essentially what Adam has made...a big wooden ice bucket with a metal inner container and an inner paddle turned by a motor on top). Everyone always loved it. I hadn't thought about how to reproduce it without the machine but I might just have to make it now.
This recipe makes the most amazing, delicious icecream! I used coconut palm sugar, and on top of the vanilla notes, I can also taste caramel notes. Sooooo good!! Thanks for simple, easy recipe!
Loved the video as usual Adam! I’ve made peach ice cream every summer for the past few years now and I’ve come up with a couple of tips. For starters, I add a splash of liquor to every ice cream I make (per fellow Georgian Alton Brown’s advice). For peach ice cream I add peach moonshine (for chocolate ice cream I add a coffee rum), maybe an ounce or two per pint. It helps make the ice cream less crystalized because it has a lower freezing point than water. Another thing I do is when I make peach ice cream, I was always mad that I would discard the peach skins. Instead, I decided to add the peach skins to the saucepan when the cream is heating up to extract all the peach flavor possible. Also, this was a problem for me, but adding the peaches at the beginning of the churning process means that all the peach pieces settle at the bottom. I add the peach sugar syrup at the beginning of the churning process but add the peach pieces at the end of the churning process. Also, make sure you’re getting overly ripe peaches. Same theory with banana bread, the texture won’t be so obvious so get peaches with really really peachy flavor, less peachy texture.
Does anyone know if plastic will work for the inner bowl. I dont have a small metal bowl and i dont want to buy one because i will only use it for ice cream
Oh, they know. They just don't care. They're trying to teach you to do things in a certain way. If they're any good, they'll try to teach you to do the same thing in several different ways, one at a time, but teachers are a mixed lot; there's good ones, tired ones, bad ones, and worse.
@@thomasjenkins5727 sometimes the teacher is also right, a lot of the time the "shortcut" methods/ different ways that students find themselves only work in very specific situations. however a lot of the time it's simply because they were taught a specific way and that's what they're being tested on, which is not the type of thinking that should be promoted in maths classes
@@thomasjenkins5727 My math teacher is totally fine with “different route, same destination”, as long as it gets you to the correct answer, it’s fine Edit: I agree that it depends if it’s a good teacher or not, I just didn’t see the “read more” part
I've been doing the Philadelphia style for years. I use sweetened condensed milk instead of sugar and evaporated milk. It makes it creamier. For pistachio ice cream use pudding and crushed pistachios.
@@anonymoussurfer8319 its possible to make ice cream using extremely cold nitrogen or dry ice but be really fucking carefull don't put it too much because its hurt as hell biting into dry ice
I love this video, and I’ve used this method twice with success. Like tortillas and bread and many other things I’ve learned to make at home, ice cream is one less mass produced product I will buy at the store from now on! That being said, I was handed down a small ice cream churning machine and it’s a world of difference in the amount of effort I need to put in. A quick glance online at used for sale postings shows plenty of these simple devices going for $10-20. I say if you enjoy making ice cream at home after trying the two bowls method, do yourself a favor and invest in a machine.
Love your voice. And you're super smart while explaining the 'chemistry' behind all your processes. "Different route to the same destination" has become my new favorite Expression!
@@k1d_mischief591 I think they changed it to 8 minutes at some point but it might only be for videos after the 8 minutes update thing though im not 100% sure it's 8 minutes now
@@greasycheese9050 I've Always Wanted To Learn Video Editing. I Love Watching Good Content. The Quality Of Moist I Mean Most Layman Videos Is Indicative Of The Laziness You Mentioned. #GoodContentWantedByAll #NoLazinessAllowed 😁
It's not a common term among normal people, but in the food industry, that's what an eggless ice cream is generally called in the U.S. [EDIT] The OP has edited their comment to say that they were joking that they didn't know about the term.
I just made a chocolate peanut-butter ice cream using cocoa powder and some cheap peanut butter, and it is literally the greatest thing I have ever tasted.
This recipe works so well Adam. This is you at your best. Just disseminating quality knowledge in an entertaining, and easy to follow format. I make the Philadelphia style ice cream with a little more than 1/2 cup lemon juice from my tree to flavor it. Perfect for the summer, everyone loves it. This and your sweetened condensed milk brownie guide are the goat AR videos
Hi, I am so happy that I found your video again. I made the ice cream last year and added mangoes to first version. Was soooo delicious. I am making it again. Thank you.
Super! Thank you so much! Sharing my 4-ingredient ice cream for Keto friends, process FROZEN slices strawberries until they look like strawberry dust, then add that same heavy cream to the food processor bowl along with 2-3 packets Splenda Stevia and a pinch of salt. No extra freezing or stirring, almost instant soft-serve strawberry ice cream, almost no carbs. (Same with frozen blueberries or raspberries.)
Hey Hey... Thank you so much for your recipe... Just followed everything step by step and made a mango ice cream. Definitely worth the effort and super delicious. I added a pinch of salt to alleviate the taste of my ice cream.. it does make a difference. Thanks again.
Im working in an icecream-manufacture and it’s super interesting with what kind of tricks people come up to diy their icecream. Think I will try this one sometime. :)
I’ve found that THE EASIEST way to make ice cream is taking frozen fruit straight from the freezer, putting it in a bowl, adding a bunch of milk and processing it. I recommend raspberries or strawberries but you can just freeze a banana or and other fruit and use it whenever you want. This only takes two minutes to make. I found this out because I wanted to make myself a milk shake and I only buy frozen fruit as it lasts longer... Definitely was not disappointed xD
Love when only facts and not idle chitchat are given. So many people think we need their life history before they get to the subject on hand. Thanks for video
4:53 "gotta get some sprinkles because I am a child" and your friends with the peach tree wave #bestparts. Great vid on ice cream. My personal favorite snack!💗
In Colombia this is actually how you make ice cream in some regions especifically Pasto, although I’m not from there so I’m not sure if they do it exactly like this It’s called “Helado de Paila”
2:55 when I went to El Salvador as a kid I saw the same guy that made my mom ice cream with a hand crank cart. He was an old man with one enormously large Popeye like arm and his coconut ice cream is still the best ice cream I ever had
This is the very very very best recipe on the tube. I have been looking for this. I don’t want to buy a machine so I just gave up. Not because I can’t afford one. Because I hear they. Break down and I need to make fresh ice cream every week for my business. Thank you so much for posting this. I think this is the only recipe that shows the French style with chunks in it without a machine
There's an even easier way! No need for the two bowls. Whip up the heavy cream until it starts forming peaks, then add in slightly less sweetened condensed milk than the heavy cream, no sugar, but all the rest of your flavors and mix ins, then whip it just until everything is evenly combined. Freeze for at least a few hours, preferably 24 but no less than 4
That sponsor transition was super smooth, just like using Square Space.
That comment transition was super smooth, just like using square space
@@gabb5 that reply was super smooth, just like using square space
That comment transition was also super smooth, just like using Square Space
Squid can’t help but point out how smooth the transition between your comment was.. just like using square space!
JIMEE's comment was rather intuitive, just like using Square Space.
"Its so rare to buy a product this pure."
Okay Walter White.
Lmao
Walter White Wine
99% pure ice cream, all he needs now is to dye it blue
Now I want to see a show about Heisenberg selling gourmet ice cream made illegally with raw milk and non-pasteurized eggs.
Now I wanna see what happens when a fly gets into his kitchen.
Just a comment on the ice bath. I am a chemist in training, and we also often need supercooled ice baths for reactions. My tip is, that you should add (cold) liquid water to the bath as well. It decreases the salt concentration somewhat, BUT without the water there, you have chunks of salty ice and a ton of air. Air is bad at thermal conductivity, so it doesnt do much that your salty ice is very cold if it cant effectively draw the heat away from the bowl.
Tl,dr: add a liquid phase to ice baths
I am going off 8th grade science class here but I though the whole reason the salt is introduced is because salt water has a lower freezing point than fresh water so the salt water gets super chilled from the ice. I mean you aren't wrong with the bowl just sitting on the ice chunks, but my point is that...isn't it the properties of the salt water that create the cold needed, not the water simply helping get the whole bowl cold?
Sorry I edited this like 8 times I hope you see what I am getting at.
@@sweetbabycheeses734 Well, as the ice melts, it is creating a salt water, but it will all be sitting on the bottom instead of up around the sides as well.
Edit: I see what you are saying now, and yeah you are right. But doing both will get the best cold result is what I think Barnabás was saying.
Less air = greater conduction. More water will displace the air and net more surface area to exchange heat as well.
The microscopic air bubbles in ice cream also works the same way, but in reverse, and is the reason it holds shape fairly well on a hot day.
I’m not a chemist but knew this from my efforts quickly chilling champagne at a bar 😂
Seriously , works well for cans of coke/ beer.
Makes perfect sense to me. I've noticed that my ice cream maker doesn't freeze until there's a good brine in the bucket. Now I always mix up 2 batches and churn back to back using the same brine and this saves on my rock salt and ice cost 😊
This is the best demo I’ve ever seen- this guy absolutely does not waste any time trying to be cute or witty or over explaining-this is great
Except he uses a machine to make it despite his title. I mean lmfao wat.
@@themollerzThe machine is optional, you can use a whisk 😃
@@themollerzhe meant no ice cream machine.
@@snfriedm still misleading to someone who have not watched the video yet
@@dragoon260it says no ice cream machine in the title but you don’t necessarily need a hand mixer to do this either you could use a whisk
"It's rare you can enjoy something so pure just 3-4 ingredients"... Man I agree with you so much!!
"Gotta add some sprinkles..."
Sprinkles: 100 ingredients
You could try to make your own sprinkles 😂
@@dia.96 104 ingredients
@@Bart-dg6qv Lol my local star market has this regular store brand heavy cream and the ingredient is just heavy cream.
@@Bart-dg6qv Here in norway all milk is pure milk, pastourised but pure, no additives of any sort, and the cows eat grass, i didnt realise how good it was until i tasted milk in the US, it tasted absolutelly horrible.
Its a shame, any dairy lover desereves quality milk.
There are no sprinkles. Only Jimmies!
It sounds like Adam talks in *bold* when he narrates his cooking
Then what font voice did he use for extra emphasis on certain parts? Or during the "NO!" screams 😂
Yea
@@freezysyahz Bold and italics.
freezysyahz All caps and italics
@@freezysyahz the NO! Is a font size 26, not a style.
8:24 That transition was smooth as silk.
Seriously. It made me swoon 😂
Almost as smooth as using Squarespace
I was halfway into the ad when I understood what just happened to me.Damn
smooth as honey, which also happens to be the sponsor of this video
I’m making this tomorrow, thank you,,,,, edited two days later, are you kidding me, this turned out perfect, made vanilla the first batch then off to the grocery store to buy strawberries, second batch freezing as I type! This is outstanding, if you’ve ever wanted to make your own homemade ice cream try this, it’s really really good! Thanks so much for this, it’ll be a hit when we can finally entertain the family. Stay safe everyone
you used method one or two?
Alternative title: Why I season my ice, NOT my icecream.
This meme never gets old
So smouth
@@FSSmash cold******
why i wash the bathroom, not myself
But he did season the icecream
I wish you experimented with Xanthan gum, considering that’s apparently what makes store bought ice cream so smooth.
Ya I have xanthan gum
@@jacobramirez4894 mmm, Xanthan.
I think it's because Xantham gum isn't exactly a pantry ingredient most people have on hand, and this video is supposed to be a simple and accessible recipe.
I might in the future. Only so much you can do in one vid.
You dare blaspheme the supreme galactic overlord Xanthan's name?
Jeez this guy is articulate and straight to the point.... I love it. He earned my subscribe.
I’ve used this method several times and I’ve always been happy with the results.
My favorite thing to do is during the second blending step to throw a piece of cake of my choice into the mix.
My mom‘s favorite cake is coconut cake, and I made her coconut cake ice cream for her birthday a couple years ago, better than anything Ben and Jerry ever cranked out.
ur a dope child !!! so cool. i randomly got an ice cream craving thanks to my friend and i want to try to make it at home ill use that tip to make ice cream for her!!
Great ideas! my husband and kids love coconut ice cream. May I have the ingredients list ? Thank you.
When I was in second grade, my teacher had us do this with metal coffee cans. You get a big coffee can, a small coffee can, your ingredients, and the ice and salt. Put your ingredients in the small coffee can and seal it up really tight, then pack in the ice and salt around it inside the bigger coffee can. Seal that up and then just roll it around for a while.
No hand mixer, no stirring... you can just roll it around on the floor or something, give it a few shakes. Whatever's fun.
About 15-20 minutes later, you're left with ice cream. It's pretty soft, even by "soft serve" standards... but it's still ice cream. Super quick and easy.
Your teacher was ahead of his or her time.👍
Its actually on old school method. No pun intended.
I did the exact same thing in second grade!
i stopped throwing away coffe cans and boy am i glad i did
@@Michael-nz2un You two had the same teacher!
"Can you do this with a whisk? Sure, go for it popeye"
* war flashbacks to 20 yr old me trying make literally everything by hand *
so you use your fingers to whisk cream?
how jacked were/are you?
@@nostalgia_junkie one of my arms is super beefy from ice cream making. But it's okay, I like heterogeneity in my arm strength.
@@reed627 XD me too!!
adam stinson underrated comment
“Here in the US we call this a Philadelphia style ice cream.”
me an American: *what*
I’m from Pennsylvania and I have never heard of this term
glad we’re all on the same page and I’m not just dumb
Never have I ever heard of Philadelphia style ice cream.
I think maybe we aren't supposed to know these forbidden secrets.
You can literally just google this term and its also called New York or American Ice Cream as well lol
Quick tip:
If you happen to not have cream, a diluted cream cheese and milk solution works fine! You could make cheesecake flavored ice cream with it, I tried it, and it tastes very good!
You could just mix around 3 tablespoons of cream cheese for every cup of milk in your solution.
add some Philadelphia to your philly styled ice cream😋
Yum strawberry cheesecake icecream
You can throw a brick of cream cheese and ice and water in a blender and add a can of condensed Banana, Orange, Pineapple or Passion Fruit, Orange, Pineapple or Mango, Orange, Pineapple , or Guava, Orange, Pineapple -- any of those Dole fruit juice concentrates that doesn't contain sugar -- and tell people it's a yogurt smoothie and doesn't contain sugar and then you'll have to 'fess up, that it's full of dairy fat, but it's so good, they'll drink it anyway. Don't have to go to all the work of making ice cream. But usually those concentrated fruit juices say, on the side, "Contains 10% fruit juice," so most are a waste of money.
This is also a good way to use up bananas, since a banana that looks like garbage is probably the most delicious, fresh-tasting thing to add to a smoothie. Also fresh lime juice is good.
“Could you do it with a whisk? Sure go for it Popeye!” 🤣🤣🤣🤣
feel bad for the people who dont know popeye
lol 🤣
I whisked egg whites by hand before because I didn't feel the need to buy a mixer. I stood there whisking for about 30 minutes, it only took so long because I had to take breaks from whisking lmao
Sometimes, you have to make life easier on your self and get at least an electric hand mixer.
Felt like a Dr. Seuss twist! 🤣
"You can churn any icecream using this method. It's almost as simple and easy as.... Squarespace " Most fluid transition to an ad I've ever heard lol
Linus tech tips has just as good or better Segways
@@Potato_pigeon segue*
@@Krawna Huh, that’s how it’s supposed to be spelled? interesting
@@jbbajangamer yeah I found it weird too. spelled it wrong for the longest time
A tip for anyone reading
The french style is better for acidic fruits, because I tried to do it the philadephia style with tamarind and it curdled super badly, but I tried it with the french method and it did not curdle and tasted fabulous
So. Tomatoes.
@@somefishhere And Oranges and tamarind and pineapple and a million other fruits that are acididic.
Wait doesn’t milk only curdle when you add acid and then heat it up
@@justtheletterV274 idk how else to describe something becoming yogurt before my very eyes so
Thank you for that. 😮
I'm so happy that you actually give metric measurements aswell. It's my major problem whenever I see anything cooking related online. And that's despite me not actually making 99.9% of the stuff I see online.
Ah yes, we Americans with our revolutionary-era measurements. Metric scales up and down with relative ease. Here's a good one for ya - uncut timber is measured as DBH - Diameter at Breast-Height. I.e., "look, there is a 14" DBH oak tree". It is the tree's diameter, at an arbitrary 4 1/2 feet above ground. Pretty exacting if you ask me. :).
I cant even be mad at the sponsor transition it was just smooth criminal level smooth
A great segue is masterfully written and presented.
He’s a pro
almost as smooth as transitioning from your current website builder to squarespace. squarespace is an intuitive, easy to use
Annie are you ok, are you ok Annie?
I love how this skilled cooking youtuber just has dino nuggets in his freezer
STOP
@@airplaneymation5171 why
@@belgianfried he is in every video comments @The Horizon GET OUT OF MY TH-cam
@@airplaneymation5171 that's kinda rude
Its essential my guy
His voice has the perfect amount of angelic where I want to pay attention but not fall asleep.
Thank you for not wasting a ton of time introducing yourself or telling weird stories, and quickly getting to the points
7:53 "chocolate chips, cookie crumbles... Go nuts"
Yeah nuts are indeed the best
Unless you’re allergic, then they’re death in a sugary coating :P
@@lilacwitch69 -nobody is allergic to my nuts- yeah allergies can be really dangerous
@@lilacwitch69 that's nuts! :D
As long as you don't also put bolts in it, it's generally quite fine.
Nuts in ice cream are horrible, it's like eating a rock
Gotta have some sprinkles because I am a *child*
I never related to something more in my life
Underrated comedy gold right here folks.
In Philadelphia area we call them Jimmys
Nazi
Never related to something less than that
sameeee
YES THE "I am a child" MADE A COMEBACK!!
I decided to challenge the tropical gods and the current heatwave by making the first method as it turns out I had almost exactly half the amounts of ingredients in my fridge that needed to be used up. Honestly, I never achieved the same thicker consistency as in the video (plenty whipped, well mixed but the ice still melted faster than I liked and it's all more thick liquid than thick cream clots in the second round) but I followed all the steps and 7 hours later I couldn't wait after dinner and tried some, and it had the exact consistency of handmade artisanal ice cream so SUCCESS! Don't worry if it doesn't look like it's in the video, as long as it's cold enough and you give it enough time!
You should wait at least 12h. 24h is ideal.
I'm very lucky in the fact that my grandparents actually own a homemade ice cream shop, which means that we pretty much always have great tasting ice cream. Funnily enough, my grandfather on the other side of the family owns a sugar bush, so we always have maple syrup (I'm Canadian), and we have a couple of backyard chickens so we always have eggs. Take that, shopping list!
Wind Turbine the diabetes combo but dude that is so awesome ngl thats actually really awesome
I´m not sure if this is a weird TH-cam translation thing, but isn´t your username german?
Trygon Usernames don’t get translated on youtube.
Can we trade lives?
Does anyone know if plastic will work for the inner bowl. I dont have a small metal bowl and i dont want to buy one because i will only use it for ice cream
Made the "Philadelphia" version and it, shockingly!, turned out pretty good! Let's just say I learned a few lessons for the next time I make this.
However, the overall end product after 24 hours in the freezer, was pretty close to a middle range ice cream and definitely worth the time to experiment with! With a little practice, I could definitely improve the quality. Did a basic vanilla as well as a batch with toasted walnuts - that was VERY popular with my partner! Looking forward to experimenting with chocolate and a sea salt caramel. Yum! Thanks Adam!!
@Hythoria lol! "Shockingly" because my attempt went only roughly like Adam's and it still ended up pretty close to ice cream after 24 hours.
It wasn't a dis on his recipe/process, and entirely being delightfully surprised at the end result.
I have since made a chocolate version and learned a few lessons from that too. Lol! Like don't forget the vanilla, and that he was right about the ice.
Adrian you’re a dickhead
Hey, I had a question. How much time did you beat the ice cream for the second time?
Coffee almond fudge is my jam. I use cafe listo for the base. Then use the Nestle expresso chips and maoe a gnosh for the fudgy bit.
@@chinnudanturi9730 go for anywhere longer than 3 minutes, use the video as a guide to what your ice cream should look like
It’s -25C in Canada this weekend and I’ve been doing ice cream outside with just a metal bowl, a snow bank, and a whisk. Yay for cold!
When I made ice cream, I would go outside and pack snow into my bucket and sprinkle the salt over that.
@@alanmcentee9457 but... If outside is cold enough to keep snow frozen and since you chill your mix beforehand, why would you sprinkle salt over that snow? Get your extension cord or whatever and just whip no?
@@mistaowickkuh6249 Salt makes the snow melt which drops the temperature of the mixture. Also by partially melting the snow, it allows more surface contact between the cold snow and the mixing bowl.
If it is that cold out you probably don't need the ice, but I would still use it.
@@alanmcentee9457 bet you could use thawing salt for the real cost saving.
Never even thought about that. Might try it someday here in Sweden.
This worked well. I actually used a glass bowl for the inner bowl, plastic for the outside bowl. I added water to the outter bowl while the glass bowl was inside (used a jar to add a little more weight to glass bowl) and froze the whole thing over night. I did not have any issues with anything melting since I made a cast of ice. I also placed my glass container that I was going to use to store ice cream in the freezer so it could help keep cold once I transferred over.
So you didn't use salt at all? How it turned out?
@@michelledelaloye8555The salt is only to help with the melting point, if you do what this person did I guess you get much longer lasting ice as you'd be preparing one huge ass block of ice. I thought of the same thing, it's a great way to cut down the time, as we don't all have ice block crusher fridges and making so many cubes is a chore.
This is brilliant!
Tip for if you wanna make this even simpler (first method) you can use sweetened condensed milk instead of sugar & evaporated milk since it's both really sweet and isn't watery. It would then be 500ml cream, 250ml condensed milk and 1-2 tsp vanilla extract (optional but it makes it better), you can add a tbsp or two of milk while it blends (be careful not to turn it into a milkshake) if you want to make it less thick/softer. Beware tho depending on your condensed milk brand this can be very sweet so I would suggest not going over 250ml (for this scale) and to make sure you've left it covered in the freezer for over a day (2 days is perfect) cuz you don't want it turning into ice cream soup on a hot day. The yeild is just under a liter.
I'm using ml cuz cup size depend on country, and you of course don't need to follow these measurements exactly.
I think this'll give a more caramel-y flavor as well, as many processes to make the condensed milk does sort of cook the milk and sugar, and the flavor diff is noticable (taste it when you open the can, you'll see)
the same process also could affect the freezing process, as you mention when you reccomend more freezing time.
All of this Adam kind of goes into with his brownie ski recipe, so see those if you want some idea about what the sugars might do.
tl;dr, the sugar just ends up giving a different flavor to pure cream and straight sugar, but not a bad one! so give it a shot if you're down :>
This is a whole other recipe and method. Kinda confusing for the beginner
Thank you ,best ice cream I’ve ever had!appreciate the recipe
@@micahsuboat1233 Glad to hear 😊 I would suggest not keeping it in the freezer for too long (if it can last lmao) because the moisture in the ice cream evaporates then crystalizes aka freezer burn after a while without the added preservatives (I think, I'm by no means an expert). From my experience it starts becoming grainy/less smooth after about 3 weeks, but the brands you use and storing method might change this duration. While eating freezer burnt ice cream is safe (although it might not be as enjoyable) letting it stay like that for too long can end up damaging the container you use to store it, especially if it wasn't made to store ice cream or any other frozen semi liquids for extended periods of time.
@@RozehKakes Condensed milk does not make it taste more caramel-y; evaporated milk can give that toasty caramely taste. I made some at 9pm last night using a can of condensed milk and 1 tbsp vanilla and just whipping the pint of cream first. It was delicious and even turned out just a bit too sweet, but froze easily overnight with no ice crystals. The recipe even said it would be done after 4 hrs but I had already gone to bed by then. I didn't do any of that salt/ice method- the only work was whipping the cream in the beginning. Highly recommend!
Did this with coconut milk and coconut cream and sugar. I then added almond and vanilla extract. At the end I added some ground almonds and dark chocolate ganache with a pinch of shaved sweetened coconut. Plant based almond joy!
Thank you 😊
You're weak
Thanks
Awesome, thanks! 👌 My garbage bin loved it! Definitely making it for him again when I get the chance!
@@jsdlr488 but you didn't even make it, shrug emoji
send this to mcdonalds so that they don't have to keep making excuses that they can't give you ice cream cause the machine is broken
Y E S
That’s actually a good idea
smart idea
where i come from ice cream is always available
wait why is the machine always broken though? i heard they have to clean it out frequently throughout the time
I wanted to tell you that I tried the French-Style Ice Cream with 1/2 cup chocolate syrup added and it was sublime! It was creamy, soft but not too soft and utterly delicious. It was one of the best ice creams I've ever made and eaten. Thank you for this recipe. I'm going to try it again very soon before the summer is finished. Muchas gracias, senor!
Did you use the chocolate syrup instead of the sugar or in addition to the sugar?
I did the first recipe without help of a electric mixer and I just discovered that I have insane stamina and muscle resistance,I'm very happy....also I'm popeye.
👏🏾
You edited that and still misspelled Popeye lol
NuminfEEt
How did you do that, I couldn't do it :(
"Popey"
Just a tip for icing the bowls. I use stainless metal bowls because metal transfers and maintains cold temperature much better than any other material. I use one large bowl to hold the ice, and the size of the mixing bowl can be for the amount of ice cream you intend to make. I wanted the mixing bowl to be more stable and the ice to surround the entire bowl.
-For the ice container I use a large 7 qt stainless bowl and a 5.5 to 6 qt stainless bow for the mixing bowl.
-I fill the ice bowl with water and salt, mix thoroughly, then I submerge the mixing bowl into the water until the water is about 1/4"-1/2" below the rim of the mixing bowl.
-I weighted the mixing bow down so it does not float...I have a small diameter 5lb steel cylinder wrapped in tin foil.
-Once the water is frozen I remove the weight and the mixing bowl is completely encased and locked in ice. The mixing bowl does not move and the entire bowl is FRIGID COLD and stays very cold during entire process.
I keep the bowls prepared for future use and placed in freezer.
I’m an ice chewing addict and I couldn’t imagine giving up my entire freezer of ice for anything less than an emergency. This is perfect, thank you!
I appreciated that this wasn't another version of the "whipped cream and condensed milk no churn ice cream" that I've seen everywhere.
not that there is anything wrong with that, it's just nice to know about other options
It is effectively the same ingredients though, sweetened condensed milk is just evaporated milk that has been cooked with more sugar for longer... and he used heavy cream (effectively whipped cream) evaporated milk and sugar (condensed milk) and vanilla. Which you could add to the whipped cream and condensed milk recipe too
@@ShinningCrys I see what you are saying when it comes to the first recipe, however the second recipe uses completely different ingredients.
That's the advantage. You can use different techniques such a custard based ice cream.
@@grapefruitpineapple7667 Which is good. I personally find the heavy cream recipe leaves a whip cream film on the mouth and tongue after eating, which I’m not a huge fan of….
The french style ice-cream with this technique was made by my grandpa. That was so delicious. Thank you for remembering all this nice memory
This guy’s speaking voice and direction is amazingly. You deserve many awards for being this no BS and direct when teaching something
Hey how are you doing hope you are having a wonderful and blessed day?
If you get bored while mixing it just turn on music as loud as possible and sing along to it and it is the most fun you’ll ever have
Lol
Probably good to play a 9 minute song like Jesus of Suburbia.
IM THE SON OF RAGE AND LOVE
THE ICE CREAM OF SUBURBIA
its better to coif terrapines, hah
I love that you always explain why certain steps are done and give extra information, instead of just going through the steps
When I was a kid we did the same thing, but we put the ingredients in a small metal coffee can. Then placed that one in a larger metal coffee can with ice a salt. Just roll it between two people back and forth. Burns calories and fun for kids and also a sweet treat for all the hard work!
Sprinkles on vanilla ice cream is perfection regardless of age.
"Spread that cold evenly in the mixture"
Thermodynamics: yes but actually no
i like this comment a lot
Pretty cool comment
Does anyone know if plastic will work for the inner bowl. I dont have a small metal bowl and i dont want to buy one because i will only use it for ice cream
@@tylerd3352 It won't work very well. I got a metal bowl from the dollar store. Want to guess how much? 😊
@@tylerd3352 I've tried using plastic and it doesn't do very well, metal is the optimal way to go but glass seems to work fine too. Hope this helps.
Most people: watching to learn how to make ice cream.
Me: watching because this guy talks with the confidence and smoothness that I could only dream of.
Truly...he reminds me of an NPR dude, but it is a relief to hear him just get on with it and not underestimate our intelligence...aahhhh
i made this and it took 3 hours!!
@@starlite4641 Was it good?
@@RedRoseSeptember22 i didnt see the ingredients in the description til after so i did it wrong mine had to much cream but if you do it right it taste very much like ice cream
Adam, you are a genius nerd cook, in the most positive and complimentary way I can express myself! This recipe worked perfectly, never bought ice cream anymore! Like you said, "it's rare you can enjoy something so pure"! You've got some fans here at home (btw, we live in Brazil)
This works just incredibly well, thanks a ton for sharing. I actually didn't even have bowls like this, but instead had a medium bowl and a pot to hold the ice, so I couldn't even submerge the bowl in the ice very far. So instead of mixing and having one 45-minute freezing period, I had two 30-minute freezing periods, but it still worked great.
Also, my hand mixer has the "wire" type of beaters (rather than your flat metal beaters), which added MUCH less air into the mix on the lowest settings, so the cream never "whipped" and there was no collapse after the freezing period. I think you might find that they work better for this method, I recommend that you try it out if you get the chance.
Also wanted to confirm to anyone reading, that for the philly-style recipe, using plain milk plus 60g (1/2 cup) powdered milk is a viable substitute for evaporated milk. Definitely helps make a good texture.
If every video on youtube could be this thorough and straight to the point in a well spoken and professional matter....... thank you, you did an amazing job!
Exactly like Dr. Berg. :)
Grown man- “Gotta get some sprinkles cuz I am a child.” (The sarcasm kills me) 😂
Lol 😂
Ha this made me giggle too x
Me. 2. I love ice cream with SPRINKLES.
🍨🍦🍧🍨🍧🍦
Loved that part!
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🍆🍆🍆😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🧓🏿🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😱🤣🤣🤣
We used to make this style of ice cream every 4th of July in our giant ice churner (essentially what Adam has made...a big wooden ice bucket with a metal inner container and an inner paddle turned by a motor on top). Everyone always loved it. I hadn't thought about how to reproduce it without the machine but I might just have to make it now.
This recipe makes the most amazing, delicious icecream! I used coconut palm sugar, and on top of the vanilla notes, I can also taste caramel notes. Sooooo good!! Thanks for simple, easy recipe!
Oh cool I have some coconut sugar I don't know if it's coconut palm but I'm going to check it out and I'm also going to try it with monk fruit.
Loved the video as usual Adam! I’ve made peach ice cream every summer for the past few years now and I’ve come up with a couple of tips. For starters, I add a splash of liquor to every ice cream I make (per fellow Georgian Alton Brown’s advice). For peach ice cream I add peach moonshine (for chocolate ice cream I add a coffee rum), maybe an ounce or two per pint. It helps make the ice cream less crystalized because it has a lower freezing point than water. Another thing I do is when I make peach ice cream, I was always mad that I would discard the peach skins. Instead, I decided to add the peach skins to the saucepan when the cream is heating up to extract all the peach flavor possible. Also, this was a problem for me, but adding the peaches at the beginning of the churning process means that all the peach pieces settle at the bottom. I add the peach sugar syrup at the beginning of the churning process but add the peach pieces at the end of the churning process. Also, make sure you’re getting overly ripe peaches. Same theory with banana bread, the texture won’t be so obvious so get peaches with really really peachy flavor, less peachy texture.
Does anyone know if plastic will work for the inner bowl. I dont have a small metal bowl and i dont want to buy one because i will only use it for ice cream
I've made fresh peach ice cream with bourbon added. Incredible, and I don't even like bourbon.
@@tylerd3352I suspect not. But you can try.
I wish he could explain that different route to same destination thingy to my math teachers.
Oh, they know. They just don't care. They're trying to teach you to do things in a certain way. If they're any good, they'll try to teach you to do the same thing in several different ways, one at a time, but teachers are a mixed lot; there's good ones, tired ones, bad ones, and worse.
@@thomasjenkins5727 Thanks daddy Thomas where do we start?
@@thomasjenkins5727 sometimes the teacher is also right, a lot of the time the "shortcut" methods/ different ways that students find themselves only work in very specific situations.
however a lot of the time it's simply because they were taught a specific way and that's what they're being tested on, which is not the type of thinking that should be promoted in maths classes
@@thomasjenkins5727 My math teacher is totally fine with “different route, same destination”, as long as it gets you to the correct answer, it’s fine
Edit: I agree that it depends if it’s a good teacher or not, I just didn’t see the “read more” part
I've been doing the Philadelphia style for years. I use sweetened condensed milk instead of sugar and evaporated milk. It makes it creamier. For pistachio ice cream use pudding and crushed pistachios.
Can u share more Info. Maybe a more detailed recipe. I’ve tried this version but I failed and the icecream didn’t freeze well..
8:25 that smooth transition from the video to squarespace picture is way underrated.
Tried this method and my icecream turned out amazingly smooth n without any ice crystals. Will definitely try it with other flavouring as well!!!
If you would use dry ice or liquid nitrogen, it would be really smooth too :D
@@88Timur88Bahmudov88 I can't tell if you're kidding or if you're being serious
@@anonymoussurfer8319 its possible to make ice cream using extremely cold nitrogen or dry ice but be really fucking carefull don't put it too much because its hurt as hell biting into dry ice
@@anonymoussurfer8319 Some recipes you pour liquid nitrogen directly into the ingredients and mix
@@anonymoussurfer8319 hes russian
Here is your white wine report of the day:
No white wine mentioned or seen in video
This has been your white wine report
thanks
Thanks
Sorley Walker *long live the empire
There's no rule that says that you can't make white wine ice cream.
Sorley Walker ah I see what you’re saying
I have so much appreciation and respect that you include mls and grams!!! Thank you from Scotland!! 😁🙏
"Ha, joke's on you, I can make Ice Cream in a bag!" - Every former middle school science student
Middle school? Me and my siblings have used both methods since we were kids
Heh, indeed, though for anyone wondering, that method is super messy, doesn't work very well, and offers a small yield. Stupid middle schoolers.
@@aragusea as you told me, we should all be put in medically induced comas until middle school is over
@@aragusea They're learning
And it gets your ice cream all salty. Gross.
Made for the first time, everyone loves it!!! going to try Caramel and Cherry today thank you!!!
*Sees dinosaur chicken nuggets in his freezer*
Me: Ah so I see you're a man of culture.
What kind of monster would choose non-dinosaur nuggets when dinosaur nuggets are an option?
Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha
Haha
Actually no
Im a vegetarian do
I love this video, and I’ve used this method twice with success. Like tortillas and bread and many other things I’ve learned to make at home, ice cream is one less mass produced product I will buy at the store from now on! That being said, I was handed down a small ice cream churning machine and it’s a world of difference in the amount of effort I need to put in. A quick glance online at used for sale postings shows plenty of these simple devices going for $10-20. I say if you enjoy making ice cream at home after trying the two bowls method, do yourself a favor and invest in a machine.
Love your voice. And you're super smart while explaining the 'chemistry' behind all your processes. "Different route to the same destination" has become my new favorite Expression!
I love your style of tutorials, I didn’t get bored for a second and every second had substance, please keep doing more!!
Me: "Ooh I can actually make this!!!"
Also me: "Am I going to do it though?"
Me: *actually starts using my brain
"Probably not." *Continues watching
Half of the pleasure is taking in an awesome video and knowing that you Could, I think :)
@@sarahritt.creates I agree, I was just making a joke, but I totally agree!
@@basilhoney I get the joke, too ;) ..AND it sounds like a familiar experience!
Yuuup
Me: I'll plaaaan on it. (and prolly won't get around to it) but I'll save the vid just in case
@@Reesanicole83 If you go for it, you're in for a treat! :D
Thank you Sir! Store bought ice cream has so many bad ingredients now I'm compelled to try this.
I Wish Everyone Did Their "How To..." Videos Like This! I Love Love Love The Quick Paced Instructions & Video! EXCELLENT!
But he didn’t reach that 10 min mark 😢rip he made no money off this
@@k1d_mischief591 I think they changed it to 8 minutes at some point but it might only be for videos after the 8 minutes update thing though im not 100% sure it's 8 minutes now
This is the best how to video for
Ice cream I’ve watched!
@@greasycheese9050 I've Always Wanted To Learn Video Editing. I Love Watching Good Content. The Quality Of Moist I Mean Most Layman Videos Is Indicative Of The Laziness You Mentioned. #GoodContentWantedByAll
#NoLazinessAllowed
😁
Love the confidence, his voice, his humor is perfect. Makes me want to try the recipe.. thank you.
"In the US it's called a Philadelphia style ice cream"
Me a Philadelphian: Uh Yes🤔
Also I know it's been called that, I was just being sarcastic😂
I also never heard that one as a Philadelphian
It exists
It's not a common term among normal people, but in the food industry, that's what an eggless ice cream is generally called in the U.S. [EDIT] The OP has edited their comment to say that they were joking that they didn't know about the term.
Adam Ragusea people in the food industry arent normal people?
@@takingnone1780 oooo, under-rated comment!
I just made a chocolate peanut-butter ice cream using cocoa powder and some cheap peanut butter, and it is literally the greatest thing I have ever tasted.
thanks for reporting this! I was wondering whether I need some cocoa creme / milk or can just use powder
This came at a perfect time, thanks so much
same
Pretty much
“Can you do this with a whisk? Sure go for it Popeye”
* Immediately looks for spinach in my fridge *
It's supposed to be canned.
@@shadeteermt Maybe he likes his canned spinach stone cold.
I did this with a whisk, it proved, I am not Popeye
if youre not making ice cream every day, ice cream salt is also good for cleaning your bong (depending on how large it is)
ah yes, adam, the famous stoner
This recipe works so well Adam. This is you at your best. Just disseminating quality knowledge in an entertaining, and easy to follow format.
I make the Philadelphia style ice cream with a little more than 1/2 cup lemon juice from my tree to flavor it. Perfect for the summer, everyone loves it.
This and your sweetened condensed milk brownie guide are the goat AR videos
Yesterday: looking for an ice cream recipe.
Today: Adam Ragusea comes out with an ice cream recipe.
Me: Coincidence I think not.
Really I was too
I was looking for it a week ago. And without Adam's guideline, I made frozen cream instead of ice cream. Maybe I'll try again later.
Summer is coming IT's OBVIOUSLY NOT A COINCIDENCE
Finally, an easy ice cream recipie.
Shutup the vid is 9 minutes and you posted 1 minute into it being posted
Joaquin he said finally meaning the title said “2 bowl ice cream” next time read the comment correctly
@@Joaquin-xq5wo stfu he just said a good ice cream recipe Stfu you 3 year old
@@Joaquin-xq5wo If it's by Adam, I know it's gonna be simple and easy, he has good recipies.
@@jennyneon he has a point tho, you never know if it's easy after you watch the video you butthurt
the first no machine ice cream recipe I’ve seen. every other TH-camr is like “you need a machine” but apparently no
I think there's another one made with condense milk but not sure if the result is the same
@UC_acSafpSGBdKBEVLI5bX3w No, a stand mixer is expensive. A hand mixer like that costs like $10.
Gemma Stafford has a no ice cream machine recipe.
all those youtubers forgot Ice Cream was invented long before the ice cream machine
@@connorholt2979 You seem to be forgetting about non-motorized ice cream churns, which is how a product like this was traditionally made.
Hi, I am so happy that I found your video again. I made the ice cream last year and added mangoes to first version. Was soooo delicious. I am making it again. Thank you.
"...that is almost as simple and easy as Squarespace!"
What a transition...
This dude talks like he’s got an appointment somewhere after recording
What do you mean, like he talks fast? Because I am over here rejoicing in not having to listen at 2x speed. Some TH-camrs talk so.
Slow.
Phoenix Quirin It’s not disturbing to me... That’s just what I pictured when I’m hearing him talk
😂😂😂
I love it. Gets straight to the point.
Lay off the pot
“Gotta get some sprinkles because I am a child” 😂come on man ain’t no age limit on a beautiful rainbow of sugar
Super! Thank you so much! Sharing my 4-ingredient ice cream for Keto friends, process FROZEN slices strawberries until they look like strawberry dust, then add that same heavy cream to the food processor bowl along with 2-3 packets Splenda Stevia and a pinch of salt. No extra freezing or stirring, almost instant soft-serve strawberry ice cream, almost no carbs. (Same with frozen blueberries or raspberries.)
If I put it all in the blender will it work?
Hey Hey... Thank you so much for your recipe... Just followed everything step by step and made a mango ice cream. Definitely worth the effort and super delicious.
I added a pinch of salt to alleviate the taste of my ice cream.. it does make a difference.
Thanks again.
Im working in an icecream-manufacture and it’s super interesting with what kind of tricks people come up to diy their icecream. Think I will try this one sometime. :)
I’ve found that THE EASIEST way to make ice cream is taking frozen fruit straight from the freezer, putting it in a bowl, adding a bunch of milk and processing it. I recommend raspberries or strawberries but you can just freeze a banana or and other fruit and use it whenever you want. This only takes two minutes to make. I found this out because I wanted to make myself a milk shake and I only buy frozen fruit as it lasts longer... Definitely was not disappointed xD
That's a smoothie.
@@kamcorder3585 Not really. It's not liquid. It's a thick tough paste🤷
@@mlem1042 A thick smoothie
@@kamcorder3585 If that's what you'd like to call it then sure. A thick cold smoothie.
That's a frozen smoothie. Ice-cream must contain cream. Hence the name.
Love when only facts and not idle chitchat are given. So many people think we need their life history before they get to the subject on hand. Thanks for video
4:53 "gotta get some sprinkles because I am a child" and your friends with the peach tree wave #bestparts. Great vid on ice cream. My personal favorite snack!💗
Who would buy a no-ice-cream machine?? What a ripoff, Smh
- This was posted by the Comment-Before-Watching gang
“No Machine”. *Laughs in refrigerator*
Mike oxlong
@ehud kotegaro well he said you can use a handheld whisk
hahaha. we love you, refrigerator. greetings from egypt, 41 degrees (celsius ;-) )
the refrigerator just uses compressed gas to remove heat and expand to make it colder
@Giovanni César Amorim número 7 it’s a machine if it wouldn’t operate without electricity
In Colombia this is actually how you make ice cream in some regions especifically Pasto, although I’m not from there so I’m not sure if they do it exactly like this
It’s called “Helado de Paila”
2:55 when I went to El Salvador as a kid I saw the same guy that made my mom ice cream with a hand crank cart. He was an old man with one enormously large Popeye like arm and his coconut ice cream is still the best ice cream I ever had
Thank you so much for the metric versions as well!! looking forward to attempting this
I thought it said “No washing machine needed”
kanora_veera I mean you’re not wrong
He means an ice cream machine.
I thought it said no cream cheese needed 😂😂😂😭
@@heatherjasper97 Are you sure? I thought he meant rube goldberg machine
bruh I use washing machine to make ice cream 😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
This is the very very very best recipe on the tube. I have been looking for this. I don’t want to buy a machine so I just gave up. Not because I can’t afford one. Because I hear they. Break down and I need to make fresh ice cream every week for my business. Thank you so much for posting this. I think this is the only recipe that shows the French style with chunks in it without a machine
" I need to make fresh ice cream every week for my business."
If you have an ice cream business, buy a machine.
There's an even easier way! No need for the two bowls. Whip up the heavy cream until it starts forming peaks, then add in slightly less sweetened condensed milk than the heavy cream, no sugar, but all the rest of your flavors and mix ins, then whip it just until everything is evenly combined. Freeze for at least a few hours, preferably 24 but no less than 4
I don't know why this was recommended to me but I ain't complaining
I did this with egg nog and sugar. Two ingredients, turned out delicious!
Isn't adding sugar to egg nog like adding lard to bacon?
@@wavion2 if it works I suppose.
Thanks
I don't know why, but I learn English so very fast by hearing you talk. That's great. Really like your cooking!