Gouda Ice Cream: What Not to Do

by kirstin on November 12, 2009


Gouda ice cream

Gouda ice cream

Inspired months ago by titillating 140-character cheese and dessert discussions on twitter, Pastry Chef Plinio Sandalio of Houston’s Textile restaurant and I decided to collaborate on a gouda ice cream post. That is, he volunteered to supply a recipe and I would make it to the best of my dessert abilities.

Because cheese ice cream recipes on the net had been whispering sweet nothings to me for months, when I heard that I could have one of Plinio’s creations in my own  little, cheese-ripened hands, I said yes. Instantly.

Without further ado, here is a definitive list about what not to do when an outstanding pastry chef gifts you with the keys to a gouda ice cream palace, then, Plino’s five-star recipe.

goudaicecream1 copy

Gouda ice cream base

Gouda Ice Cream: What  Not to Do

1. Don’t worry about that the last time you used your ice cream maker, you weren’t sure if it was working properly. It was your grandmother’s. Of course it works.

Noord Hollander aged gouda

Noord Hollander aged gouda

2. Forget that the pastry chef told you he used a 3 yr old gouda and buy a 4 yr old cow’s milk gouda instead. Oops. A little intense. And don’t think about using a goat’s milk gouda, which would have lent a tangy, lively character to the sweet ice cream. Who needs a pesky flavor layer?

3. Depend upon your old strainer to extract the salty, caramelly gouda chunks from the custard base. Screw using a restaurant-quality chinois, cheese cloth, or butter muslin fabric. Everyone loves a chunky cheese ice cream. Yes?

4. Ignore the directions on the ice cream maker to freeze the results for at least an hour before consuming. It’s much more fun when the dessert melts before it arrives to your mouth. You gotta catch it dripping off the spoon that way, works off all that cream!

Gouda Ice Cream

1 1/2 cups sugar

1 1/2 cups milk

2 cups heavy cream

1/4 cup light corn syrup

1/2 tsp salt

pinch xanthan gum

12 oz aged gouda

Whisk all together in a large sauce pan and heat slowly over low heat. Do not boil. Continue cooking on low until the custard base is thick enough to lightly coat a wooden spoon. Remove from heat.

Blend mixture in a food processor or blender until very smooth. Strain through a fine chinois, or with a sieve lined with butter muslin to remove all chunks.

Chill completley.

Freeze according to ice cream maker’s instructions.

Eat

* I didn’t have time to play around with the recipe much, but because the flavor of aged gouda is so strong, all 12 oz isn’t really needed. You might be able to get by with only 6 or eight ounces. Let me know!

* Please leave updates on this post if you try this or variations of the recipe. I’d love to know how things went!

goudaicecream2*

Kirstin and Andrea's Test Services

Print This Post Print This Post

{ 1 trackback }

Tia Keenan: An Artist in an Artisan Cheese Revolution
February 12, 2010 at 2:16 AM

{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

Karen November 12, 2009 at 4:42 PM

Very cool Kirstin.

Reply

Jill November 13, 2009 at 6:44 AM

This looks awesome. I will definitely have to try it! I might even be able to get my Gouda-loving husband to taste it.

Reply

Its Not You, it's Brie November 13, 2009 at 4:24 PM

Jill-
Try something different and give me your feedback, I’m excited!

Reply

Dan November 14, 2009 at 10:10 AM

Kirstin,

Thanks for the recipe! (And the delicious enthusiasm!) I will definitely try a couple of variations and keep you posted.

Reply

handyface November 18, 2009 at 2:56 AM

Not a massive fan of Gouda, having grown up in Holland and been surrounded by it on a daily basis, but i’m planning on making some Stilton ice cream once they’re matured.

Having said that, it’s a fair way off (2-3 months) … might just try it with shop-bought in the meantime!

Reply

Brenda November 18, 2009 at 10:37 AM

Sounds delic! I once had manchego ice cream with a delicate quince syrup on top. Divine!

Reply

It's Not You, it's Brie November 18, 2009 at 11:28 AM

Handyface
According to Plinio, this recipe has worked with blue cheese ice cream and chevre. So it’s all yours if you’re a stilton fan!
Brenda- Sounds DELICIOUS! I marinate manchego at work and it would inspire me to toss some rosemary in the base. quince syrup. wow.

Reply

Leave a Comment

Previous post: Kreativ Bloggers: Seven Things

Next post: Links du Fromage