Category Archives: Ice cream

Easy Easter Dessert Inspired by See’s Candies


Imagine my surprise when a sweet note (heh, pun intended) landed in my inbox complimenting this blog and offering me a sampling of any See’s Candies I want if I used them to create a recipe and then blog about it.

Game on. I recently passed by a See’s kiosk at Aventura Mall, a San Francisco friend leading the way, and we got to sample something delicious. I knew I’d find something to inspire me.

I chose Scotch Eggs and asked for jelly beans and a chocolate bunny to decorate. Not a problem; they were boxed and sent.

The box arrived. I opened it to check contents, but didn’t unwrap. Then I had to head out of town for some work (eating Vietnamese food for VISITFLORIDA.com/experts/dining). But I schemed up my recipe, finally deciding to make a “five minute ice cream pie”–great ice cream enhanced by great candy. I would use a chocolate crust, top that with dulce de leche as a nod to my current home in South Florida, top that with caramel swirled ice cream, top all with coconut and the See’s Scotch Eggs.

I shopped today and found dulce de leche mixed with coconut AND Samoa ice cream. Wow. Perfect. I got to work, first spreading the dulce de leche in the crust. Top that with the softened ice cream, pop all into freezer to harden. Then it happened. I unwrapped the scotch eggs only to find the few hours they’d spent waiting for me to get home had done some damage. March/April in South Florida is summer. It was probably 85 the day those candies arrived. I had better hopes for the chocolate bunny, which was wrapped in foil..but no. He too, was deformed. So minor change. Chop the eggs, swirl them into the ice cream, top all with the coconut and use the perfect, unmelted jelly beans as the finishing touch. It is all still inspired by those See’s Scotch Eggs. Yummy. Chocolate, caramel, marshmallow. What’s not to like?Easy Five-Minute Easter Pie with See’s Scotch Eggs
Serves 8 to 10

1/2 cup dulce de leche with coconut, softened slightly for easy spreading
1 chocolate cookie crumb crust
1/2 gallon Samoa cookie ice cream
6 See’s Scotch Eggs, chopped
1 cup shredded coconut tinted green
Handful See’s Jellybeans for garnish

Spread the dulce de leche gently in the bottom of the cookie crust. (If you press too hard, you’ll shatter the crust. Trust me on that.) Stir ice cream with the Scotch eggs. Spoon ice cream into crust, filling to top of crust. Freeze until solid. Top with shredded coconut and jelly beans. To slice, warm sharp knife under hot water; wipe dry then cut pie. Warm knife blade and wipe dry for each cut.

Rosewater and Pistachio Ice Cream


Still on my Middle Eastern kick–which, apparently, I’ve passed onto my daughter, Bryn. The rosewater ice cream caught her eye in that Persian grocery store (see my entry on groceries)…we came home with the rosewater that day. We were back at that same store this weekend, and when she asked about buying the ice cream? I said we had to make it. Of course, when we got home, I realized the rosewater was about the only thing we had in the cupboard that we needed. I didn’t have enough eggs, whole milk, cream or pistachios. So yesterday, I bought the rest of the ingredients, hauled out the trusty Cuisinart Ice Cream maker I bought at Costco last year and created today’s indulgence.

This is the real deal. If you look closely at the photo, you can see the flecks of saffron and the pieces of pistachio….

I had to make a custard with 6 yolks mixed with sugar and cream heated with saffron threads–cook it til thickened (and I made sure it heated to at least 160 degrees, which makes raw egg safe). I cooled it in an “ice bath.” (Here’s a professional culinary clue: have the ice bath ready BEFORE you need it. Otherwise, you might be calling your daughter to haul out the entire bin of ice from the the freezer and so you can place the bowl on top of all that ice. Not that I would know anything about that or anything..) I had to shell a ton of pistachios, because the only unsalted ones I was able to find came shell-on. Chop the pistachios, mix into cooled, strained custard. Freeze and eat.

Rosewater ice cream may be a little odd to Americans…I don’t think our taste buds equate foods with the floral, perfume-y scent and flavor of this ice cream, but it’s lovely. I like mine better than some I’ve tasted in the past, although I’m not sure why–I do think maybe the richness of the yolks complements the heady rose flavors better than those others (I’ve also seen a place that carries rose sorbet. I might have to try that, too..).

Here’s my recipe adapted a bit from several recipes I found on the web…

1 cup cream
1/2 cup half and half
1 heaping teaspoon saffron threads
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
6 yolks
1 cup superfine sugar
1/3 cup rosewater
1 cup pistachios, crushed to small pieces

Before starting, ready and ice bath by placing ice and water into a container large enough to hold the bowl you will be using to make the custard in…

1. Heat cream, half and half, saffron and vanilla to boiling. While that is coming to the boil, whisk yolks with sugar in a metal bowl.
2. Pour hot cream mixture into yolks in a slow, steady stream, whisking all the while. Don’t stop whisking. Let it cool a bit by whisking for another 3 to 4 minutes.
3. Bring pot of water to simmer. Place bowl with custard over the simmering water and cook until thickened while continuing to whisk NON STOP (you don’t want the yolks to curdle). Cook until thickened and a thermometer registers at least 160 degrees. Remove from heat and place bowl in waiting ice bath. Whisk until the custard is no longer warm.
4. Cool custard in refrigerator (overnight is best; I cooled it for about an hour because we wanted to eat the ice cream NOW.) When you are ready to make the ice cream, Strain the custard, stir in the pistachios and pour all into ice cream maker; freeze according to manufacturer’s directions.

Note: The easiest way to crush the pistachios is to place them in a re-sealable plastic bag and crush with a rolling pin. No chopping required.

Rosewater and Pistachio Ice Cream


Still on my Middle Eastern kick–which, apparently, I’ve passed onto my daughter, Bryn. The rosewater ice cream caught her eye in that Persian grocery store (see my entry on groceries)…we came home with the rosewater that day. We were back at that same store this weekend, and when she asked about buying the ice cream? I said we had to make it. Of course, when we got home, I realized the rosewater was about the only thing we had in the cupboard that we needed. I didn’t have enough eggs, whole milk, cream or pistachios. So yesterday, I bought the rest of the ingredients, hauled out the trusty Cuisinart Ice Cream maker I bought at Costco last year and created today’s indulgence.

This is the real deal. If you look closely at the photo, you can see the flecks of saffron and the pieces of pistachio….

I had to make a custard with 6 yolks mixed with sugar and cream heated with saffron threads–cook it til thickened (and I made sure it heated to at least 160 degrees, which makes raw egg safe). I cooled it in an “ice bath.” (Here’s a professional culinary clue: have the ice bath ready BEFORE you need it. Otherwise, you might be calling your daughter to haul out the entire bin of ice from the the freezer and so you can place the bowl on top of all that ice. Not that I would know anything about that or anything..) I had to shell a ton of pistachios, because the only unsalted ones I was able to find came shell-on. Chop the pistachios, mix into cooled, strained custard. Freeze and eat.

Rosewater ice cream may be a little odd to Americans…I don’t think our taste buds equate foods with the floral, perfume-y scent and flavor of this ice cream, but it’s lovely. I like mine better than some I’ve tasted in the past, although I’m not sure why–I do think maybe the richness of the yolks complements the heady rose flavors better than those others (I’ve also seen a place that carries rose sorbet. I might have to try that, too..).

Here’s my recipe adapted a bit from several recipes I found on the web…

1 cup cream
1/2 cup half and half
1 heaping teaspoon saffron threads
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
6 yolks
1 cup superfine sugar
1/3 cup rosewater
1 cup pistachios, crushed to small pieces

Before starting, ready and ice bath by placing ice and water into a container large enough to hold the bowl you will be using to make the custard in…

1. Heat cream, half and half, saffron and vanilla to boiling. While that is coming to the boil, whisk yolks with sugar in a metal bowl.
2. Pour hot cream mixture into yolks in a slow, steady stream, whisking all the while. Don’t stop whisking. Let it cool a bit by whisking for another 3 to 4 minutes.
3. Bring pot of water to simmer. Place bowl with custard over the simmering water and cook until thickened while continuing to whisk NON STOP (you don’t want the yolks to curdle). Cook until thickened and a thermometer registers at least 160 degrees. Remove from heat and place bowl in waiting ice bath. Whisk until the custard is no longer warm.
4. Cool custard in refrigerator (overnight is best; I cooled it for about an hour because we wanted to eat the ice cream NOW.) When you are ready to make the ice cream, Strain the custard, stir in the pistachios and pour all into ice cream maker; freeze according to manufacturer’s directions.

Note: The easiest way to crush the pistachios is to place them in a re-sealable plastic bag and crush with a rolling pin. No chopping required.