Thanks Allform for sponsoring this video! Click www.allform.com/adamragusea for 20% off the sofa of your choice! Our whiskey leather 3-seater with a chaise was easier to assemble than an icebox cake! #Allform
According to Glen of Glen and Friends, this is not quite correct. Some brown sugar is just granulated with molasses, but some is sugar before final refining. Since all my brown sugar is in a brown sugar saver container (bought from King Arthur and it really works), I can’t check the ingredients. And it likely depends on the store - I’m going to compare brown sugar from chain grocery, Trader Joe’s, and a local organic food chain.
@@correadoggsten idk I still think it’s more convenient and honestly the worst part about brown sugar is when it clumps up and gets hard making your own in really small batches eliminates that problem
For those that don't want to use malted milk powder to stabilize the whipped cream, you can use 1/8 to 1/4 cup of confectioner's sugar, depending on sweetness desired, per cup of heavy whipping cream, and leave out the granulated sugar. For me, the confectioner's sugar whips in better, and the bit of cornstarch in confectioner's sugar also stabilizes the whipped cream extremely well. I'll store any unused whipped cream in a sealed container in the fridge, and it remains like when I first made it for a week. I don't know if it would last longer than a week because it doesn't get a chance to sit around unused longer than that in my kitchen.
My family makes this every year for Christmas, we use a packet of gelatin to stabilize the whipped cream. You dissolve it in water then microwave until melted, then cool slightly and add to cream before whipping. It sets up great and will last for a bit outside the fridge while people are milling around. Malted milk powder sounds like a great flavor addition though.
instant pudding powder is another good stabilizer of whipped cream. The pre-gelled cornstarch in the instant pudding powder makes the final product more stable than regular cornstarch. Plus the instant pudding powder includes the sugar.
sub cookies with graham crackers, some of the cream with condensed milk and also layer mangoes and you got a Filipino classic, the mango icebox cake - “mango float”
My mom would make this while waiting for dinner to finish cooking. Since we had it for dessert, it wasn't in the refrigerator long enough to get soggy. The cookies were still a little crisp.
My favorite dessert recipe, my grandmother's Icebox Cake! no one I ever mentioned "Icebox cake" to, knew what it was. Hers was made with regular Graham Crackers with a cocoa whipped cream, my parents still make it for my birthday every year.
I just realized that my favorite birthday cake is technically an icebox cake- we call it eclair squares, it's graham crackers, cool whip, and chocolate frosting layers, set in the fridge a couple hours even as I get more "foodie" and make more things from scratch, you can't beat the classics lol
In my lifetime, this was basically *the* first cake I learned how to make with my grandma which helped to spark my love for basic cooking skill 💜 I’d beg for it always until she taught me so I could accomplish it myself. *Keep it easy* though! Store-bought plain oreo wafers + real whipped cream + create a big slathered log + refrigerator = miracle treat for yourself! Bonus points if you made a playhouse fort out of the fridge box.. in the basement :3
Adam, no idea if you read these comments, but I love how your cinematography has progressed over the years. These dolly shots and whip zooms are next level 🤓
@@callaflower221 Literally the only time I've EVER not measured baking powder was doing pancakes in a major hurry, swear him not measuring stuff drives me BONKERS
We were really poor as a kid and my angel of a Mum used to make this for us when my brother or I did well at school. It was such a special treat. I’m in uni now and sometimes I still make it when I’m homesick. What a wonderful recipe, I gotta try it soon!
Choco Ripple Cake soooo good, was thinking about it all this video. For a slightly less sweet version, you can alternate with Anzac biscuits and it's still amazing but with a bit of variation!
This brings back yummy memories 😋 I'm Australian, and we had this cake made with biscuits (cookies) that were called Chocolate Ripple biscuits. The cake was made in log form and cut on the diagonal, and was called, and great thought went into the name: Chocolate Ripple Cake!
I have been preaching the joys of this dessert for years! My fave version uses hard ginger cookies, dipped in sherry, coated with lightly sweetened vanilla whipped cream, topped with chocolate shavings. Second fave uses chocolate chip cookies, dipped in cold espresso.
One of our family favourites since forever has been a "cookie log". Chocolate chip cookies, dunked in OJ, sandwiched & smothered in whipped cream. I never knew it was so popular since no-one else I've met knew about it.
I like making this cake, but instead of all whipped cream, i whip the cream, then stir in mascarpone or cream cheese or creme fraiche. I think traditionally people would dip the cookies in some kind of liqueur (I've also heard of people using orange juice!) before adding the whipped cream, but if you're using Famous Chocolate Wafers you're gonna have to work fast, cuz they'll start to mush almost immediately! lol You can lightly brush them once it's on the stack, if you want, or just use a different kind of cookie, either Adam's homemade ones here, or something like a Chips Ahoy. Smearing a light layer of jam or preserves before the whipped cream is nice too (I usually thin the jam with a bit a water or milk). A layer of ganache over the whole thing (after it's set up in the fridge for a while) is a lovely & decadent addition! I first heard of this from The Stone Soup, a blog by a woman in Australia, & it's served me very well & even won me a couple prizes at family get-togethers! 😁😆🤣
My aunt made a Graham Cracker Icebox cake every year for Christmas, and her trick was to mix some French Vanilla Instant Pudding with the Whipped Cream (1:1). Topped with some chocolate icing, and it was delicious. When I made it I subbed out the icing for Nutella. The icing when cooled made a bit of a crunch texture and that was lost with the switch to Nutella but I think the flavor worked better.
I scrolled to the comments to see if I could pick up a hint, but no. I guess I'm doomed to wander the earth muttering 'talk to a whale?' to myself forever.
One of my favorite deserts to this day is what ive seen called chocolate lasagna. Is just layers of chocolate pudding whipped cream mixed with cream cheese. Then topped with whipped cream and mini chips. Its usually made witha oreo crust but my aunt always used pie crust. Love it either way
I feel like the sponsor was just to show off what I can only assume is your new puppy in which case well played, they're very cute and make me want a sofa
I made a malted vanilla bean ice cream with candied potato chips, malt ball bits, and a pretzel grit swirl recently; I love using the powder wherever possible.
@@thegoodwitchluzura Recipe in grams: - 200 cream - 100 milk - 21 sugar - 20 honey - 40 malted milk powder (sifted) - 1 tsp vanilla bean paste (plus half a bean scraped and steeped overnight) - 1/4 tsp salt - PB chocolate malt ball bits - Candied kettle chips - Pretzel Grit swirl Heat everything just until the sugar is dissolved then chill before churning. This makes about a pint but I doubled it to fit my machine better. To make the candied chips, combine sugar, butter, corn syrup in a 1:1/2:1/4 ratio. I used 100, 50, 25 grams. Melt in microwave until pretty warm and coat your chip pieces. Then bake at 300 F for about 15 min. To make the pretzel grit, I did the same thing just left out the corn syrup and added the sugar and some salt to 200 grams crushed pretzels. Then add melted butter and toss before baking at 325F until fragrant.
Malted milk in the whipped cream is a fantastic idea. A couple times my mum made a similar cake but you dip ginger nuts(gingery biscuits that are hard as rocks and amazing) in rum really quick and the build the cake with whipped cream like normal. Cause they're such hard biscuits they still have a little texture after the dip in rum and overnight soak in the whipped cream and its delicious cause rum and ginger blend so well.
No one's gonna believe me HOWEVER, For my final project for my highschool junior year in architecture, was to design something and make a 3d model of it, and my idea was a modular couch (where I only made one seat). It was a concept which I can't believe allform exists!
My mother used to make icebox cake. All it was, was layers of graham crackers and chocolate pudding and it is absolutely delicious. I think I'm going to make one, it's been a long time!
We call it Chocolate Ripple cake in Australia. Partly due to the fact that usually we use Arnott's Choc Ripple biscuits. Sometimes we dunk the biscuits (cookies) in coffee and some times a liqueur like a coffee liqueur just before coating them and usually laid out in a long log format.
In Australia these are called chocolate ripple cake because they're made with chocolate ripple biscuits, we also crumble peppermint crisp chocolate bars on top to add some texture and some depth with the crystallised mint.
Made an icebox cake out of these, but I'll also say that the cookies themselves are out of this world by themselves. Definitely making another batch when the holidays roll around and I need cookies for friends/family!
my grandma used to make these with us with those “healthy” oreo cracker things and cool whip. we called them igloos. this vid inspired me to go make one again. lots of good memories
I make this out of Chocolate Ripple. A biscuit, or cookie to the Americans, which is from Arnotts, a super popular biscuit maker here in Australia. This is my husbands favourite "cake" and once for Valentines Day I made it into a heart shaped stack instead of the usual log, by cutting a few in half. the log shape definitely soaks the cream better than the stack, but the stack is easier to make and make look pretty, ah choices! Now I think Im going to teach my kids these "cakes" over the coming school holidays lol
Thank you for this, you've answered a childhood question for me. They made one of these on that old PBS show Zoom and I could never remember the name of it.
in my house its known as "Chocolate Ripple Cake" because we've made wit Arnott's Chocolate Ripple since forever. We also do it horizontally. It's my Dad's favourite cake.
this is only the second “icebox” dessert i’ve heard about. i grew up eating lemon icebox pie (which i recommend heavily) so it’ll be cool to have another icebox dessert, definitely will be trying this
Strawberry Graham cake! Bag of berries, melted, blended smooth with one pack of strawberry gelatine. Mix into whipped cream (or cool whip). Layer that with graham crackers, many layers. I use parchment-lined loaf pans.
My mom makes this sometimes, she uses alternating plain/vanilla and chocolate butter biscuits from the store and covers them either in plain yogurt or sour cream. The biscuits are square, so the logs have kind of a funny shape, I'll have to make it with her again sometime
looks delicious. I would absolutely give this recipe a go looks way better than the traditional idea and seemingly a tad healthier . The aversion to turning on oven and heating up the house in the heat of summer I believe is why this ice box cakes became so popular. But I think this might be worth it.
Multi-generational staple of any family holiday dinner however , we lay the wafers sideways to create a "log" ,cover with the whipped cream and cut to serve on the diagonal to get the stripe effect. Just add abit of vanilla or "boozy" flavour you want to the cream . Discovered afew years ago that if you use spice cookies it comes out tasting like pumpkin pie.
In Australia we've always made this using cookies (or sugar-derby's as no one here calls them). We call it "Choc Ripple Cake" as it's commonly made with store bought Arnott's Choc Ripple Biscuits. Love ya work gusea!
Back in the early 70s, there were thes biscuits you could buy with that recipe on every package. We tried them once and they were awesome! We used Cool Whip, not cream...We Used Mr. Christie Chocolate Wafers. Man, does this bring back memories! I was 9/10 at the time!
This is ridiculously easy & amazingly good! You could even just use Famous Chocolate Wafers & Cool Whip and get a serviceable dessert tonight! (Of course, the homemade whipped cream is way better lol) You know, I just remembered that a local market sells cannoli filling in a piping bag...I wonder what it would be like if I made it with a layer of cannoli filling in between the whipped cream-coated cookies...
I may not be American or Canadian but I do like to add a few tablespoons of maple syrup to cream when I am whipping it. It's great with slices of fresh mango on what I call pancakes (being British) or what others may call crèpes.
I used to make these, but I prefer to put it in the freezer to firm up even more. The whipped cream gets firm, but never as hard as frozen ice cream. They are also alot easier to cut when thrown in the freezer.
Interesting recipe, I see it for the first time today. Either we didn't have it or this kind of cake has completely passed me by. Kind of reminds me of an inside-out mole cake. And I also didn't know the trick with the milk powder either, I always use cream stiffener, a ready-made product, one packet is good for the 200g standard cup of whipped cream which you can buy here everywhere.
In Australia we often use a "choc ripple biscuit" cookie for this rather than wafers. While it lacks the choc chips, it is quite a bit more like the cookies you baked. Not quite 'baby food' but would obviously lack the extra texture you added. We simply call it a 'chocolate ripple cake' rather than 'zebra cake'. I think we greatly prefer the sideways/log version when we prepare it.
Please make a tres leche cake Adam! I'd love to see your spin on the classic. Personally one of my favorite deserts. So the idea of you improving it sounds almost impossible.
I've been looking for new recipes for me to use my...uh... special butter, and you KNOW I'm going to try this one. Probably going to sub baking powder for baking soda because I've had some bad experiences with cheap baking powders inevitably clumping and leaving sour bits in the finished product. Never happened before the supply chain shifts, now I'm a bit more cautious.
Looks like mini graham cracker cakes. For anyone familiar, you make pudding, you could make only one kind or a mix of kinds that go well together (family tradition is chocolate and pistachio), you spread that over the crackers and stack them together into a log, which you then cover completely in pudding, and then cover the whole thing in cool whip or whipped cream. There's a lot of leeway with flavors, we've done chocolate graham crackers and mint pudding too, despite tradition, and just straight chocolate works fine too.
Love Adam's recipes, I don't think this one is for me. I think icebox cakes have a wonderful texture on their own, and cold mini chocolate chips tear up my mouth. If I want more contrast in my icebox cakes, I use some unsoaked cookies for crunch, but if the ratio of wafer to whipped cream is right, I get wafers with a pudding like texture that is still slightly firm and dry in the middle. They will sog out after another day or so, I just make sure there isn't any leftovers. Milk powder (malted or otherwise) in desserts is a baller move, regardless
The chocolate chips will have been melted in the oven, though, which means that they will not be nearly as hard to bite through. You could also just choose not to have them
I'm intrigued by the firmer cookies rather than the soft wafers but I 100% agree that cold chocolate chips are just not good. I can't stand chocolate chips in ice cream etc. It seems like a rare opinion considering how common they are in cold desserts but I want my chocolate chips warm in something fresh baked or not at all
Yeah he likes heterogeneity a lot more than I do. I don't need a that high of a contrast but a lot of people like for example, Ben n Jerry's for this reason.
My recent mod on what my family called chocolate wafer dessert... I replaced the wafers with ginger snaps and the whipped cream with pumpkin pudding (like the pie without the crust). Not enough different than just the eating the pudding by itself to be worth the effort. Maybe if I folded some whipped cream into the pudding it may have worked... i do love whipped cream on pumpkin pie.
When I was a kid, we would make something similar with graham crackers and chocolate pudding for the internal layers. I bet this would be good with a butterscotch pudding for the internal layers instead of just the whipped cream.
I'm gonna keep that malted milk idea in my back pocket! At my job, I help make foods for a variety of diets- including pureed foods. If a savory food is too watery, we use instant potato flakes to help thicken it to a more appropriate texture. I never really knew what could be used for thickening desserts (once they're in the food processor at least). I'm gonna have to try malted milk powder. It looks like it helps just a bit, which is sometimes all that's needed.
ive never heard of icebox cake before reminds me a lot of russian honey cake best cake ive ever had, and i made it, and it's the only cake ive ever made i.e. foolproof
Thanks Allform for sponsoring this video! Click www.allform.com/adamragusea for 20% off the sofa of your choice! Our whiskey leather 3-seater with a chaise was easier to assemble than an icebox cake! #Allform
You know it’s an Adam Ragusea video when he reminds you that brown sugar is just white sugar and molasses
And then gets the molasses all over the jar in the process of pouring, disproving the convenience of his method
Not a fan! Molasses has a really strong smell
I tried doing this, and too often put in too much molasses which is really gross.
According to Glen of Glen and Friends, this is not quite correct. Some brown sugar is just granulated with molasses, but some is sugar before final refining. Since all my brown sugar is in a brown sugar saver container (bought from King Arthur and it really works), I can’t check the ingredients. And it likely depends on the store - I’m going to compare brown sugar from chain grocery, Trader Joe’s, and a local organic food chain.
@@correadoggsten idk I still think it’s more convenient and honestly the worst part about brown sugar is when it clumps up and gets hard making your own in really small batches eliminates that problem
For those that don't want to use malted milk powder to stabilize the whipped cream, you can use 1/8 to 1/4 cup of confectioner's sugar, depending on sweetness desired, per cup of heavy whipping cream, and leave out the granulated sugar. For me, the confectioner's sugar whips in better, and the bit of cornstarch in confectioner's sugar also stabilizes the whipped cream extremely well. I'll store any unused whipped cream in a sealed container in the fridge, and it remains like when I first made it for a week. I don't know if it would last longer than a week because it doesn't get a chance to sit around unused longer than that in my kitchen.
damn
My family makes this every year for Christmas, we use a packet of gelatin to stabilize the whipped cream. You dissolve it in water then microwave until melted, then cool slightly and add to cream before whipping. It sets up great and will last for a bit outside the fridge while people are milling around. Malted milk powder sounds like a great flavor addition though.
instant pudding powder is another good stabilizer of whipped cream. The pre-gelled cornstarch in the instant pudding powder makes the final product more stable than regular cornstarch. Plus the instant pudding powder includes the sugar.
Right on, Tim. That is actually how I do my whipped cream as well. Works amazingly well and tastes great.
Adam needs to like or pin this
Another certified hood classic!
☃️
Fintan you are quite the character!
@@Maxdamageplus - My funny valentine, you have no idea…
Adam Ghettusea
@@guillermogilthemessenger Adam Washington Carter Brown King Jefferson Johnson DeRutherford Al-Ragusea
Do you seriously have a GRAND PIANO!?
Love it, Adam. It's great to see musicians actually able to buy Grand Pianos.
sub cookies with graham crackers, some of the cream with condensed milk and also layer mangoes and you got a Filipino classic, the mango icebox cake - “mango float”
So in other words a completely different recipe? 😂
@@toadsage Yes and it's good
My mom would make this while waiting for dinner to finish cooking. Since we had it for dessert, it wasn't in the refrigerator long enough to get soggy. The cookies were still a little crisp.
My mom used a recipe for this that adds mint to the whipped cream, instead of vanilla. It was delicious!
My favorite dessert recipe, my grandmother's Icebox Cake!
no one I ever mentioned "Icebox cake" to, knew what it was.
Hers was made with regular Graham Crackers with a cocoa whipped cream, my parents still make it for my birthday every year.
My family makes this too! We call is "Brindle" for some reason. The ideal preparation always seemed like a mousse to me
The traditional icebox cake has been my birthday cake for over 50 years.
That sounds great!
I just realized that my favorite birthday cake is technically an icebox cake- we call it eclair squares, it's graham crackers, cool whip, and chocolate frosting layers, set in the fridge a couple hours
even as I get more "foodie" and make more things from scratch, you can't beat the classics lol
It's called a refrigerator cake where I'm from and also uses graham crackers. Usually topped with mango
Not a wasted word - just A+ writing/editing, units in imperial and metric, commentary on how to mix things up, just fantastic.
In my lifetime, this was basically *the* first cake I learned how to make with my grandma which helped to spark my love for basic cooking skill 💜 I’d beg for it always until she taught me so I could accomplish it myself. *Keep it easy* though! Store-bought plain oreo wafers + real whipped cream + create a big slathered log + refrigerator = miracle treat for yourself! Bonus points if you made a playhouse fort out of the fridge box.. in the basement :3
Man that sounds fun
@@tgkisnotreal Yes, it is easy. But oreos have basically no flavor. Do it this way if you don't care about taste or texture.
i try to make as many of your recipes as i can and im sure im gonna try this one. Congrats on 2 mililion subs!
Adam, no idea if you read these comments, but I love how your cinematography has progressed over the years. These dolly shots and whip zooms are next level 🤓
Thanks for the star trek shout out! "Transparent aluminum!"
"Baking is a science"
Adam: *dumps random quantities of ingredients in a bowl*
Not an exact science, but science none the less
I’ve never seen someone not measure baking powder. We’re living in the edge today!!
@@callaflower221 Literally the only time I've EVER not measured baking powder was doing pancakes in a major hurry, swear him not measuring stuff drives me BONKERS
JUST THROW IT IN A POT AND BOIL IT!
@@Glacier_Nester honestly, sometimes it's too fiddly having to get out various measuring spoons and clean 'em. Easier to eyeball.
The Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home reference made me smile. Wonder if anyone else got it?
Upvote is for the puppy. Tell him I love him!
Also, thank you for being awesome and improving a favorite childhood classic of mine!
2:13 nice Star Trek IV reference. I can see the resemblance.
I was wondering what that was about!
We were really poor as a kid and my angel of a Mum used to make this for us when my brother or I did well at school. It was such a special treat. I’m in uni now and sometimes I still make it when I’m homesick. What a wonderful recipe, I gotta try it soon!
In Australia, we call this chocolate ripple cake. I love it.
And it's made out of proper chocolate biscuits from the get go!
Choco Ripple Cake soooo good, was thinking about it all this video. For a slightly less sweet version, you can alternate with Anzac biscuits and it's still amazing but with a bit of variation!
This brings back yummy memories 😋 I'm Australian, and we had this cake made with biscuits (cookies) that were called Chocolate Ripple biscuits. The cake was made in log form and cut on the diagonal, and was called, and great thought went into the name: Chocolate Ripple Cake!
i'm a simple gal, i see Adam Ragusea Cooking video, i like
OMG So many extra points for the Star Trek reference
I'm glad I'm not the only one who caught that! Not very many folks into the TOS movies I guess
2 million already??? Proud for you!
I have been preaching the joys of this dessert for years! My fave version uses hard ginger cookies, dipped in sherry, coated with lightly sweetened vanilla whipped cream, topped with chocolate shavings. Second fave uses chocolate chip cookies, dipped in cold espresso.
One of our family favourites since forever has been a "cookie log". Chocolate chip cookies, dunked in OJ, sandwiched & smothered in whipped cream. I never knew it was so popular since no-one else I've met knew about it.
I like making this cake, but instead of all whipped cream, i whip the cream, then stir in mascarpone or cream cheese or creme fraiche. I think traditionally people would dip the cookies in some kind of liqueur (I've also heard of people using orange juice!) before adding the whipped cream, but if you're using Famous Chocolate Wafers you're gonna have to work fast, cuz they'll start to mush almost immediately! lol You can lightly brush them once it's on the stack, if you want, or just use a different kind of cookie, either Adam's homemade ones here, or something like a Chips Ahoy. Smearing a light layer of jam or preserves before the whipped cream is nice too (I usually thin the jam with a bit a water or milk).
A layer of ganache over the whole thing (after it's set up in the fridge for a while) is a lovely & decadent addition! I first heard of this from The Stone Soup, a blog by a woman in Australia, & it's served me very well & even won me a couple prizes at family get-togethers! 😁😆🤣
My aunt made a Graham Cracker Icebox cake every year for Christmas, and her trick was to mix some French Vanilla Instant Pudding with the Whipped Cream (1:1). Topped with some chocolate icing, and it was delicious.
When I made it I subbed out the icing for Nutella. The icing when cooled made a bit of a crunch texture and that was lost with the switch to Nutella but I think the flavor worked better.
"Tries to talk to a whale..."
Had to think about it for five seconds, then I applauded to no one in my home office. Glorious ref.
I scrolled to the comments to see if I could pick up a hint, but no. I guess I'm doomed to wander the earth muttering 'talk to a whale?' to myself forever.
@@tinnagigja3723 Star Trek IV also known as “the one with the whales”
@@jammycooks Ah, it's been a while since I watched that one. Cheers :)
Man that Voyage Home reference made my day
One of my favorite deserts to this day is what ive seen called chocolate lasagna. Is just layers of chocolate pudding whipped cream mixed with cream cheese. Then topped with whipped cream and mini chips. Its usually made witha oreo crust but my aunt always used pie crust. Love it either way
I feel like the sponsor was just to show off what I can only assume is your new puppy in which case well played, they're very cute and make me want a sofa
Get this sofa*!
*Puppy not included
I made a malted vanilla bean ice cream with candied potato chips, malt ball bits, and a pretzel grit swirl recently; I love using the powder wherever possible.
Recipe?
@@thegoodwitchluzura
Recipe in grams:
- 200 cream
- 100 milk
- 21 sugar
- 20 honey
- 40 malted milk powder (sifted)
- 1 tsp vanilla bean paste (plus half a bean scraped and steeped overnight)
- 1/4 tsp salt
- PB chocolate malt ball bits
- Candied kettle chips
- Pretzel Grit swirl
Heat everything just until the sugar is dissolved then chill before churning. This makes about a pint but I doubled it to fit my machine better.
To make the candied chips, combine sugar, butter, corn syrup in a 1:1/2:1/4 ratio. I used 100, 50, 25 grams. Melt in microwave until pretty warm and coat your chip pieces. Then bake at 300 F for about 15 min.
To make the pretzel grit, I did the same thing just left out the corn syrup and added the sugar and some salt to 200 grams crushed pretzels. Then add melted butter and toss before baking at 325F until fragrant.
Malted milk in the whipped cream is a fantastic idea.
A couple times my mum made a similar cake but you dip ginger nuts(gingery biscuits that are hard as rocks and amazing) in rum really quick and the build the cake with whipped cream like normal. Cause they're such hard biscuits they still have a little texture after the dip in rum and overnight soak in the whipped cream and its delicious cause rum and ginger blend so well.
No one's gonna believe me HOWEVER, For my final project for my highschool junior year in architecture, was to design something and make a 3d model of it, and my idea was a modular couch (where I only made one seat). It was a concept which I can't believe allform exists!
My mother used to make icebox cake. All it was, was layers of graham crackers and chocolate pudding and it is absolutely delicious. I think I'm going to make one, it's been a long time!
We call it Chocolate Ripple cake in Australia. Partly due to the fact that usually we use Arnott's Choc Ripple biscuits. Sometimes we dunk the biscuits (cookies) in coffee and some times a liqueur like a coffee liqueur just before coating them and usually laid out in a long log format.
What's the deal with this telegram comment? I got one too on my comment. Dodgy Dodgy.
"Or tries to talk to a whale"... Now that's a quality reference!
In Australia these are called chocolate ripple cake because they're made with chocolate ripple biscuits, we also crumble peppermint crisp chocolate bars on top to add some texture and some depth with the crystallised mint.
Made an icebox cake out of these, but I'll also say that the cookies themselves are out of this world by themselves. Definitely making another batch when the holidays roll around and I need cookies for friends/family!
my grandma used to make these with us with those “healthy” oreo cracker things and cool whip. we called them igloos. this vid inspired me to go make one again. lots of good memories
2:04 "To hunt an entire species to extinction is illogical."
"Who said the human race was _logical?"_
I make this out of Chocolate Ripple. A biscuit, or cookie to the Americans, which is from Arnotts, a super popular biscuit maker here in Australia. This is my husbands favourite "cake" and once for Valentines Day I made it into a heart shaped stack instead of the usual log, by cutting a few in half. the log shape definitely soaks the cream better than the stack, but the stack is easier to make and make look pretty, ah choices!
Now I think Im going to teach my kids these "cakes" over the coming school holidays lol
Puppy!!!!! Adam's videos just got 100x better! 😍🐶
Thank you for this, you've answered a childhood question for me. They made one of these on that old PBS show Zoom and I could never remember the name of it.
I remember ZOOM! Came on after Sesame Street.
Loved Zoom!
in my house its known as "Chocolate Ripple Cake" because we've made wit Arnott's Chocolate Ripple since forever. We also do it horizontally. It's my Dad's favourite cake.
Yum! Reminds me of chocotorta from Argentina
I remember making this in log form when I was a kid! Man haven't thought about this cake in forever, so nostalgic 🥲
this is only the second “icebox” dessert i’ve heard about. i grew up eating lemon icebox pie (which i recommend heavily) so it’ll be cool to have another icebox dessert, definitely will be trying this
Adam your segways into ad breaks are so smooth I'm incapable of skipping over that portion of your video.
Strawberry Graham cake!
Bag of berries, melted, blended smooth with one pack of strawberry gelatine.
Mix into whipped cream (or cool whip). Layer that with graham crackers, many layers. I use parchment-lined loaf pans.
I loved this as a kid growing up, I'm going to give this recipe a go to bring back some childhood nostalgia!
My mom makes this sometimes, she uses alternating plain/vanilla and chocolate butter biscuits from the store and covers them either in plain yogurt or sour cream. The biscuits are square, so the logs have kind of a funny shape, I'll have to make it with her again sometime
looks delicious. I would absolutely give this recipe a go looks way better than the traditional idea and seemingly a tad healthier . The aversion to turning on oven and heating up the house in the heat of summer I believe is why this ice box cakes became so popular. But I think this might be worth it.
i audibly gasped when he crushed the extra cookies instead of eating them as chef's snacks
In Australia we use Chocolate Ripple biscuits (cookies) to make this cake. Delicious!
I want that in my body years ago. Malted cream and bonus texture? Brilliant.
Multi-generational staple of any family holiday dinner however , we lay the wafers sideways to create a "log" ,cover with the whipped cream and cut to serve on the diagonal to get the stripe effect. Just add abit of vanilla or "boozy" flavour you want to the cream . Discovered afew years ago that if you use spice cookies it comes out tasting like pumpkin pie.
That was delightful, even on my meshy first try. i really appreciated the extra touches for texture.
I opened TH-cam at the right time! Congrats on 2 million subs!
This is the birthday cake I have every year, I'm stoked for this
I love the Star Trek Voyage Home referance. 😆 🤣
In Australia we've always made this using cookies (or sugar-derby's as no one here calls them). We call it "Choc Ripple Cake" as it's commonly made with store bought Arnott's Choc Ripple Biscuits. Love ya work gusea!
I'm so glad you're highlighting this! My family has made this for as long as I remember and I think a more "grown up" version is a great alternative
Sacrilege!
Your kid coming by to sample the whipped cream was so cute!
Back in the early 70s, there were thes biscuits you could buy with that recipe on every package. We tried them once and they were awesome! We used Cool Whip, not cream...We Used Mr. Christie Chocolate Wafers. Man, does this bring back memories! I was 9/10 at the time!
If you were a 9/10 then, I couldn't imagine what you are now.
@@LingLingFromQLD 61...Do the math...
i definitely want to try this, and every other recipe you have ever made!
This is ridiculously easy & amazingly good! You could even just use Famous Chocolate Wafers & Cool Whip and get a serviceable dessert tonight! (Of course, the homemade whipped cream is way better lol)
You know, I just remembered that a local market sells cannoli filling in a piping bag...I wonder what it would be like if I made it with a layer of cannoli filling in between the whipped cream-coated cookies...
I may not be American or Canadian but I do like to add a few tablespoons of maple syrup to cream when I am whipping it.
It's great with slices of fresh mango on what I call pancakes (being British) or what others may call crèpes.
Adam: Leather gets nicer as you abuse it more
My cats: I don't think so
This is something my dad always wanted to teach me how to make so thank you Adam so much for this
This reminds me of black forest cake with a higher proportion of cream. My Nana's recipe makes bfc with a chocolate japonaise layers. Heavenly
Choc ripple cake! A classic at Australian Christmas tables in the heat of summer.
Very nostalgic, zebra cake is one of the first desserts I learned how to 'make' as a kid -- box of famous wafers and homemade whipped cream.
I used to make these, but I prefer to put it in the freezer to firm up even more. The whipped cream gets firm, but never as hard as frozen ice cream. They are also alot easier to cut when thrown in the freezer.
Interesting recipe, I see it for the first time today. Either we didn't have it or this kind of cake has completely passed me by. Kind of reminds me of an inside-out mole cake.
And I also didn't know the trick with the milk powder either, I always use cream stiffener, a ready-made product, one packet is good for the 200g standard cup of whipped cream which you can buy here everywhere.
The shots of Adam rolling a chocolate log are going to make for great ytp edits 👍
Would recommend making this in serving bowls or fruit salad cups in smaller portions
With whole cookies or crumbled?
For my own favourite variation, I alternate gingernut biscuits and chocolate ripple biscuits (Australians will know what they are!). Delicious!
In Australia we often use a "choc ripple biscuit" cookie for this rather than wafers. While it lacks the choc chips, it is quite a bit more like the cookies you baked. Not quite 'baby food' but would obviously lack the extra texture you added.
We simply call it a 'chocolate ripple cake' rather than 'zebra cake'.
I think we greatly prefer the sideways/log version when we prepare it.
I had this a bunch as a kid, always loved them! Didn’t realize it was so widespread.
This seems very similar to the Australian choc ripple cake, made with chocolate biscuits and whipped cream.
A classic! Gotta have a crushed up flake to sprinkle on the top haha.
I think it's the exact same but what he said about doing it in a cake pan lasagna style haha
Please make a tres leche cake Adam! I'd love to see your spin on the classic. Personally one of my favorite deserts. So the idea of you improving it sounds almost impossible.
I've been looking for new recipes for me to use my...uh... special butter, and you KNOW I'm going to try this one. Probably going to sub baking powder for baking soda because I've had some bad experiences with cheap baking powders inevitably clumping and leaving sour bits in the finished product. Never happened before the supply chain shifts, now I'm a bit more cautious.
Looks like mini graham cracker cakes. For anyone familiar, you make pudding, you could make only one kind or a mix of kinds that go well together (family tradition is chocolate and pistachio), you spread that over the crackers and stack them together into a log, which you then cover completely in pudding, and then cover the whole thing in cool whip or whipped cream. There's a lot of leeway with flavors, we've done chocolate graham crackers and mint pudding too, despite tradition, and just straight chocolate works fine too.
You madman!!! I have never seen someone make cookies in a measuring cup
"Sloppy summertime oreo snowball" is a phrase I won't forget as quickly as I'd like.
I immediately got that Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home reference. Where's my prize?
My dad loves this kind of cake, well balcarce cake, it has cream and sweet potatoes sweets in it.
Love Adam's recipes, I don't think this one is for me. I think icebox cakes have a wonderful texture on their own, and cold mini chocolate chips tear up my mouth. If I want more contrast in my icebox cakes, I use some unsoaked cookies for crunch, but if the ratio of wafer to whipped cream is right, I get wafers with a pudding like texture that is still slightly firm and dry in the middle. They will sog out after another day or so, I just make sure there isn't any leftovers.
Milk powder (malted or otherwise) in desserts is a baller move, regardless
Omg I LOVE cold chocolate chips!!!!!
The chocolate chips will have been melted in the oven, though, which means that they will not be nearly as hard to bite through. You could also just choose not to have them
I'm intrigued by the firmer cookies rather than the soft wafers but I 100% agree that cold chocolate chips are just not good. I can't stand chocolate chips in ice cream etc. It seems like a rare opinion considering how common they are in cold desserts but I want my chocolate chips warm in something fresh baked or not at all
I agree with all of this. I definitely want to try the malted milk powder cream but I will keep the store-bought wafers.
Yeah he likes heterogeneity a lot more than I do. I don't need a that high of a contrast but a lot of people like for example, Ben n Jerry's for this reason.
A great version is to use Oreo cookies layered with whipped cream and Freeze it. Frozen it maintains some texture and is amazing in the summer!
2:15 nice Voyage Home reference 🐳
Very nice Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home reference!
My recent mod on what my family called chocolate wafer dessert... I replaced the wafers with ginger snaps and the whipped cream with pumpkin pudding (like the pie without the crust). Not enough different than just the eating the pudding by itself to be worth the effort. Maybe if I folded some whipped cream into the pudding it may have worked... i do love whipped cream on pumpkin pie.
Congrats on 2M Adam! I love your vids
When I was a kid, we would make something similar with graham crackers and chocolate pudding for the internal layers. I bet this would be good with a butterscotch pudding for the internal layers instead of just the whipped cream.
Ooh, I love the original, with the store-bought wafers. This must be delicious! Will have to try it.
i remember reading the outsiders when I was younger, having no idea what an icebox cake even was. I just knew it sounded delicious.
Haha that quick star trek reference :D
I'm gonna keep that malted milk idea in my back pocket!
At my job, I help make foods for a variety of diets- including pureed foods. If a savory food is too watery, we use instant potato flakes to help thicken it to a more appropriate texture. I never really knew what could be used for thickening desserts (once they're in the food processor at least). I'm gonna have to try malted milk powder. It looks like it helps just a bit, which is sometimes all that's needed.
ive never heard of icebox cake before
reminds me a lot of russian honey cake
best cake ive ever had, and i made it, and it's the only cake ive ever made
i.e. foolproof