Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream
- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1quart heavy cream
- 5cups packed fresh mint leaves (about 4 ounces), coarsely chopped
- 1cup sugar
- 10large egg yolks
- 10ounces bittersweet chocolate, chopped
- 1cup whole mint leaves
Preparation
- Step 1
In medium saucepan, bring cream and chopped mint to a simmer. Turn off heat, and let steep 5 minutes. Strain out mint, and return cream to saucepan.
- Step 2
Add ¾ cup sugar to cream, and bring to a simmer. Whisk together egg yolks and remaining sugar. Remove cream from heat, and add a little to egg mixture to warm, stirring constantly to keep yolks from cooking. Pour egg mixture into cream, stirring constantly. Return custard to heat, and cook over low heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon, until mixture thickens enough to coat back of spoon. Remove from heat, and pour into bowl. Cool completely.
- Step 3
Strain custard, then chill until thoroughly cold, at least 4 hours.
- Step 4
Meanwhile, prepare mint chips. Melt chocolate in top of double boiler over simmering water. Cool slightly. Lay a 12-by-24-inch sheet of parchment paper on a work surface. Pour melted chocolate onto parchment, spreading evenly to cover entire surface. Lay mint leaves onto chocolate until half the surface is covered, being careful not to overlap. Lift parchment, and lay plain chocolate over mint-covered chocolate to cover. Place in refrigerator for 20 minutes to set.
- Step 5
Remove chocolate from refrigerator, and peel off parchment. Break chocolate into large pieces, and then roughly chop. Refrigerate until needed.
- Step 6
Freeze ice cream mixture in an ice cream maker, following manufacturer's instructions. Using a spatula, fold in chocolate mint chips by hand. Place in freezer for at least 2 hours before serving.
Private Notes
Comments
Agree there’s too much mint. Makes the ice cream a weird color too. And don’t like the pieces of mint leaves in the chocolate, the pieces get stuck in your teeth.
I think there’s too much mint. It may depend on the freshness of your mint. We did not enjoy the whole process and the final flavor was too strong. Comments “tastes like I’m eating grass.” And, maybe, there was too much chocolate.
Delicious. I followed the recipe as closely as possible -- except for the chilling times -- but did not use 5 cups of mint leaves because I didn't have that many in my garden. This impacted the strength of the mint flavor, of course, but it was still delicious.
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