My dear kids bought me an ice cream maker for Mother's Day—they know my favorite gifts are connected to the kitchen and food. To their delight, I’ve been experimenting with frozen healthy treats for the past few weeks, and they get to sit on the sunny steps outside our kitchen where they taste, comment and compare.
These recipes call for an ice cream maker. Not every kitchen has or needs one—I give instructions for making these fruit treats without one—but if you have the space in your kitchen these small appliances aren’t expensive (under $50), and will probably earn their keep.
When making frozen desserts at home you’ll be using pure fresh ingredients, and none of the stabilizers, gums, colors and preservatives that are often found in the in prepared versions from the frozen food section of your supermarket.
Here are a few of our favorites:
Lemon, Verbena and Geranium Sorbet
• 2 cups boiling water
• 1/2 cup sugar
• 5-8 leaves of rose geranium* (can be replaced by French tarragon or 1 teaspoon lavender flowers)
• 1 cup lemon juice
• 1 tablespoon minced fresh Lemon Verbena
• ½ teaspoon grated lemon peel (yellow part only)
*Another option is to replace rose geranium with 1 bottle of Ayala’s Herbal Water Lemon Verbena Geranium. If you do this, use just ½ cup of boiling water to melt the sugar.
To prepare:
Stir the sugar and rose geranium leaves in the boiling water until sugar is dissolved. Chill completely. Remove leaves just before making the sorbet.
Add the lemon juice, lemon Verbena and lemon peel.
Freeze in an ice cream maker according to manufacturer's directions 25-30 minutes.
If you do not have an ice cream maker
Place mixture in freezer-proof container
Freeze for one hour
Remove from the freezer and beat the mixture using an electric mixer
Repeat this entire process two more times (it’s worth it)
In case you’re wondering how I make the lemon zest spirals--it’s really easy, use a lemon zester in a circular motion around a washed lemon (see picture).
Very Berry Sherbet
Ingredients:
• 1 pound mixed berries. I like using a combination of sweet and tart berries: blueberries, strawberries, raspberries and blackberries. Frozen berries also work; let them thaw just a little before preparation
• 2-4 tablespoons sugar or agave (depending on berry sweetness)
• 1 cup milk (I use 2%)
To prepare:
Process all the ingredients coarsely in a food processor or blender.
Freeze in an ice cream maker according to manufacturer's directions, 20-25 minutes.
If you do not have an ice cream maker:
Place mixture in freezer-proof container
Freeze for one hour
Remove from the freezer and beat the mixture using an electric mixer
Repeat this entire process two more times
Watermelon Mint Slurpee
Ingredients:
• 1 pound sweet ripe watermelon
• 10 mint leaves, finely chopped
• Lime juice from half a lime
• a pinch of salt
To prepare:
Process all the ingredients in a food processor or blender.
Freeze in an ice cream maker according to manufacturer's directions for about 10-15 minutes. The consistency needs to be slurpable through a straw, so this one’s not supposed to completely freeze.
If you do not have an ice cream maker:
Place mixture in freezer-proof container
Freeze for one hour
Remove from the freezer and beat the mixture using an electric mixer
Repeat this entire process one more time
Serve in tall glass, with a wide straw.
Serving suggestions
These recipes serve 4-6 people
Sorbets may be served as a dessert or between courses to refresh the palate.
The texture of the sorbets varies by ingredients, preparation and temperature. These recipes are designed to be served immediately. If you do store the sorbet in the freezer, make sure you allow a short time to thaw before serving.
The dreaded brain freeze
Ice cream can teach us a very important healthy eating lesson—eat slowly. Although it’s always good advice to pace our meals, allow satiety to sink in and give ourselves time to really enjoy our food, ice cream, sorbets and other very cold foods often provide a very clear reminder to slow down: The dreaded ice-cream headache. This “brain freeze” not only causes us to momentarily stop our own eating, but if anyone else happens to cry out as they suffer this stinging pain, we all almost instinctively slow down in order to avoid it ourselves.
According to an editorial by neurologist Joseph Hulihan in the British Medical Journal, the ice cream headache is the most common cause of head pain, and affects a third of the population. It has no connection to other forms of headache. The pain begins a few seconds after gulping down cold foods or beverages--when really cold food touches the roof of the mouth--and peaks in 30-60 seconds. The good news is that it doesn’t last long.
Scientists aren’t sure about what causes this pain. One leading theory suggests that the cold food or drink may temporarily constrict blood vessels and cause pain in much the same way a migraine does. In any case, no need to worry. Hulihan concludes with:
“No treatment is usually required, and sufferers rarely seek medical attention. Since the posterior aspect of the palate is most likely to produce the referred pain of ice cream headache, avoiding contact of the cold food with this area can effectively eliminate the symptoms. Most people arrive at such preventive measures without the advice of doctors. Ice cream abstinence is not indicated.”
And you can always call on the classic trick to speed up recovery from brain freeze: press your tongue to the roof of your mouth until the pain subsides.
Your comments on summer treats or brain freezes are as always welcome.
Enjoy the warm weather in good health.
Dr. Ayala