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Hungry in Brooklyn

My name is Shea Hess. And I'm Hungry in Brooklyn.

The goal of HungryinBrooklyn.com is to create, explore and document the local, organic, and sustainable food movement in Brooklyn and beyond. By posting recipes, videos, and throwing a signature monthly dinner in my Williamsburg apartment, I hope to spread the message of responsible cooking and consuming one ingredient at a time.


Email me: shea (at) hungryinbrooklyn (dot) com

  • Simple Vanilla Ice Cream

    Ice cream is by-far my favorite dessert, and it’s actually really easy to make at home provided you have an Ice Cream Machine. The beauty in making your own ice cream is that you control everything about it.  Buy the freshest cream from the farmers market, the best milk from grass-fed cows, organic and fair trade vanilla beans, farm-fresh eggs…you get the picture. When you have taken care to source perfect ingredients, then put those ingredients to use in a decadent dessert, it tastes that much sweeter. Gives new meaning to “guilt free.”  

    Here’s a quick demonstration on how to make the perfect vanilla ice cream, straight up. If you care to add anything to it-fruit, chocolate, marshmallow, cookie dough-do so in the last couple minutes of churning.  I served mine Paulie Gee style with Ovenly’s Spicy Bacon Caramel Corn, which I’ve been obsessed with ever since meeting them at Thrillist’s Bacon and Blues party last October.  It really is the perfect complex accompaniment to this super simple, classic ice cream. 

    HOMEMADE VANILLA ICE CREAM: 

    1 cup milk

    1 cup sugar

    1/4 teaspoon salt

    1 vanilla bean, scraped 

    6 egg yolks

    2 cups heavy cream

    1 1/2 tsp vanilla

    Heat the milk, sugar, scraped vanilla beans and pod, and salt over medium heat until warm. Whisk the six egg yolks and slowly temper the warm milk into the egg yolks, bit by bit until it’s all incorporated.  Be sure to take your time so that the warm milk does not cook the yolks.  Return the milk and egg mixture back to the pot and stir constantly over low heat until the custard reaches 170 degrees.  

    Set up an ice bath in a large bowl, and place a smaller nesting bowl inside it with a strainer over the top.  Pour the cream and vanilla through the strainer, and then the heated custard.  Stir to incorporate and refrigerate for at least 6 hours, though overnight is best. 

    Remove the vanilla bean pod, and freeze the ice cream in your ice cream machine according to the manufacturer instructions.  Put it back in the freezer to harden before serving.  Dig in and enjoy!

    Tagged: ice cream vanilla ovenly paulie gee milk cream eggs yolks oranic local sustainable simple

    Posted on February 22, 2011 with 1 note ()

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