Mint is quite a unique flavour and I think that fact it was
usually always dyed a pale green colour helped with the attraction. Nowadays my
ice cream preferences have become a bit more sophisticated with hazelnut or
coconut and lime being some of my favourite (and hard to find) flavours.
Last weekend I ended up with two large tubs of yoghurt, having forgotten I’d already bought some, and in a moment of nostalgia I decided to turn one tub into mint choc chip frozen yoghurt.
I added brandy to the mix, not for flavour, but because I
had read that adding a little alcohol to homemade ice cream will help prevent
it from being too icy or freezing too solid, as it has a lower freezing point
than water. I think vodka would be ideal, but as I didn’t have any brandy did
the job perfectly. The resulting frozen yoghurt was smooth and creamy and
certainly seemed to melt a lot quicker than previous ice creams I’ve made –
this could be good or bad depending on how quickly you want to eat it.
Eating this ice cream brought back fond summer holiday memories of hot sandy beaches and playing with the water hose in the back garden. I also found the mint flavour really refreshing on a hot afternoon. One thing I discovered is that it is very important to chop your chocolate into very fine pieces. I left a few chunky bits in mine, thinking I was being generous and it would be nice to hit a big bit of chocolate, but in reality the chocolate was very firm and hard and I actually much preferred the smaller flakes of chocolate against the soft frozen yogurt, much better than the occasional big chunk that I had to crunch and chew.
Does anyone else have any ice cream flavours that bring back
memories of their childhood?
Mint Choc Chip Frozen Yoghurt
Ingredients
500g Greek yoghurt
1½ tsp peppermint extract
50g caster sugar
1½ tbsp brandy
1/8 tsp green food dye paste
60g dark chocolate, finely chopped
Method
Set your ice cream to freeze*
Set your ice cream to freeze*
Combine the yogurt, caster sugar, peppermint extract and
brandy together in a bowl. Mix until the sugar has dissolved. Taste and add a
little more sugar if you prefer it sweeter. (The mint and sugar should take
more pronounced that you would usually like, as the flavours lessen on
freezing.)
Take one tablespoon of the yogurt mix and combine it with
the green food dye paste until the paste is smooth and well combined. Then stir
this concentrated green yoghurt mix back into the rest of the yoghurt until you
have reached your desired strength of green. (I like using the pastes as these
are more concentrated and don’t add any extra liquid to your mix).
Pour the yoghurt mixture into your ice cream maker and churn
according to manufactures instructions. When it is starting to thicken and
holds its shape and the finely chopped chocolate and leave to continue freezing
and mixing until thick and softly set.
Transfer the ice cream to a plastic Tupperware container and place in the freezer to stiffen up for around 1 hour. If left longer, you may want to leave it to soften for 10-15 minutes before serving.
Note* If you don’t have an ice cream maker, simply pour the yoghurt mix into a plastic container and place in the freezer. Take it out every half and hour and give it a bit of a whisk to ensure an even freezing, until you’ve reached your desired consistency.
Transfer the ice cream to a plastic Tupperware container and place in the freezer to stiffen up for around 1 hour. If left longer, you may want to leave it to soften for 10-15 minutes before serving.
Note* If you don’t have an ice cream maker, simply pour the yoghurt mix into a plastic container and place in the freezer. Take it out every half and hour and give it a bit of a whisk to ensure an even freezing, until you’ve reached your desired consistency.
I loved mint choc chip ice cream too as a kid - I think that the green definitely lured me in. REcently I have experimented with choc chips in ice cream and they all seem too hard when cold - grating chocolate makes more sense - but my next ice cream is going to just have melted chocolate stirred through I think!
ReplyDeleteyum! mint choc chip was definitely always my fave growing up too and still is one of my faves! but I'll go with you on the coconut and lime front too! I love how creamy the frozen yoghurt looks!
ReplyDeleteAmazing colour and looks a lovely texture. Mint choc chip has always been my favourite too!
ReplyDeleteI agree...... there's something about mint choc chip which is quite addictive. I found that using grated chocolate shavings was definitely better too....
ReplyDeleteI think I liked 99's and fabs as a child
ReplyDeletei like to eat ice cream choc chip too~
ReplyDeleteRegards, www.lonelyreload.com (A Growing Teenager Diary)