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Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream Recipe

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Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream

"This is the best mint chocolate chip ice cream I've ever had in my whole life." This, straight from the mouth of my nine-year old nephew, who, since mint-chocolate-chip is his favorite ice cream flavor, has probably had more mint chocolate chip ice cream in the last year than any of us have had in the last twenty. Needless to say, hearing such a declaration when you've gone the extra effort to make ice cream from scratch is rather gratifying, don't you think?

We have a couple of mint patches growing in our yard, though I never thought to use the mint we grow for ice cream until now. The taste of the ice cream using fresh mint really is out of this world, so if you can get your hands on fresh mint, I highly recommend using it for this ice cream.

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Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream Recipe

Note that if you do not have fresh mint, you can make this mint chocolate chip ice cream recipe with peppermint extract. Skip steps 1 and 2, instead heating 1 cup of milk with 1 cup of cream and the sugar and salt until steaming. Continue with step 3. Add 2 teaspoons of peppermint extract in with the chilled custard mixture in step 6.

Ingredients

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  • 3 cups of fresh mint leaves (not stems), rinsed, drained, packed
  • 1 cup milk
  • 2 cups heavy cream (divided, 1 cup and 1 cup)
  • 2/3 cup sugar
  • A pinch of salt
  • 6 egg yolks
  • 6 ounces semisweet chocolate or dark chocolate, chopped fine, keep in the freezer until used

Method

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1 Put the mint leaves in a heavy saucepan with the 1 cup of milk and 1 cup of the cream. Heat until just steaming (do not let boil), remove from heat, cover, and let stand for 30 minutes. Reheat the mixture until steaming, remove from heat and let stand for 15 more minutes.

cooling cream in ice bath
2 While the mint is infusing in step 1, prepare the remaining cream over an ice bath. Pour the remaining 1 cup of cream into a medium size metal bowl, set in ice water (with lots of ice) over a larger bowl. Set a mesh strainer on top of the bowls. Set aside.

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3 Strain the milk cream mixture into a bowl, pressing against the mint leaves with a rubber spatula in the sieve to get the most liquid out of them. Return the milk cream mixture to the saucepan. Add sugar and salt to the mixture. Heat until just steaming again, stirring until sugar has dissolved. Remove from heat.

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4 Whisk the egg yolks in a medium sized bowl. Slowly pour the heated milk cream mixture into the egg yolks, whisking constantly so that the egg yolks are tempered by the warm mixture, but not cooked by it. Scrape the warmed egg yolks back into the saucepan.

5 Return the saucepan to the stove, stirring the mixture constantly over medium heat with a wooden spoon, scraping the bottom as you stir, until the mixture thickens and coats the spoon so that you can run your finger across the coating and have the coating not run. This can take about 10 minutes.

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The custard base does not coat the back of the spoon, it is not ready.

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The custard base coats the back of the spoon. You can run your finger across the coating and have it not run. It is ready and should be removed from heat immediately, and poured through the sieve over the ice bath to stop the cooking.

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6 Pour the custard through the strainer (from step 2) and stir into the cold cream to stop the cooking.

7 Chill the mixture thoroughly in the refrigerator (at least a couple of hours) or stir the mixture in the bowl placed over the ice bath until thoroughly chilled (20 minutes or so). Freeze the mixture in your ice cream maker according to the manufacturer's instructions.

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8 Once the ice cream has been made in the ice cream maker it should be pretty soft. Gently fold in the finely chopped chocolate. Put in an airtight container and place in the freezer for at least an hour, preferably several hours. If it has been frozen for more than a day, you may need to let it sit at room temperature for a few minutes to soften it before serving.

Note that there is no alcohol in this recipe. A few teaspoons of some spirits such as rum or bourbon will help keep the ice cream soft over several days. Even the alcohol in vanilla extract will help. If you have no added alcohol in a homemade ice cream recipe, we recommend that you eat it up quickly, in a day or two; beyond that point the ice cream will quickly get very very hard.

Makes 1 quart.

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Posted by Elise on Sep 1, 2007 and indexed Chocolate, Ice Cream, Mint

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Comments

I have a large amount of dried, finely chopped peppermint leaves for tea... can they be used for this recipe? If so, how much do you recommend I use? Thanks!

Posted by: Jason on September 1, 2007 7:16 PM

Hi Elise, this looks absolutely great. Are the egg yolks necessary in the recipe? I ask because my girlfriend is allergic to eggs but is a die-hard ice cream eater. I'd love to try and make this sometime, but the egg yolks would interfere with that. Any suggestions for a replacement?

Posted by: Josh on September 2, 2007 5:01 PM

Hi Jason - regarding your question of whether or not dried peppermint tea leaves could be used in this recipe, I would say go for it. What you are doing with the fresh mint leaves is basically just an infusion anyway. Like making mint tea with the milk and cream. As for the amount? I have no idea. Think of how much of those tea leaves you would need for one very strong cup of tea and multiply that by 3, for the 3 cups of liquid in this recipe. That would be a place to start.

Hi Josh - I always make ice cream with egg yolks because they act as an emulsifier and keep the homemade ice cream from getting too icy. That said, it's more difficult this way. You need to cook a custard first, and most people don't bother. If you look up most homemade ice cream recipes online, you'll find that they don't require eggs. Also, the recipes in the book that probably came with your ice cream maker will have mostly recipes that don't require eggs. So, I would do some research and then try to mold this recipe to one that doesn't use eggs.

Posted by: Elise on September 2, 2007 6:57 PM

Hi Elise,

I happened upon your website on a day when I've been struggling to make gelato (I'm trying to get that smooth creamy texture like the gelato at my favorite gelateria). Your article is so informative & GREAT with the beautiful step-by-step photos! I will try your recipe as it is, but am also interested in how you'd adapt it to make gelato ... 2 cups milk, 1 cup cream perhaps?

Car

Posted by: Car on September 2, 2007 9:59 PM

Josh,

If you check the New York Times online videos, you'll find one about making ice cream with corn starch that was posted about a week ago. Just click the Video, Style, and finally Dining and Wine links to find it.

The guy who stars in these pieces--Mark Bittman, who bills himself as The Minimalist Cook--is quite entertaining. Can't wait until Simply Recipes goes all video!.

Posted by: Kevin on September 4, 2007 11:31 AM

Thanks Kevin! All I need is the dream kitchen, set up as a recording studio, a camera person, a lights person, and an editor. Then we'll be good to go. ;-)

Josh, you might want to check this recipe that David Lebovitz posted for Pistachio gelato. It uses corn starch as a stabilizer.

Posted by: Elise on September 4, 2007 11:46 AM

I am wondering if any kind of mint (peppermint/ spearmint) can be used, or if one type works/tastes better?

I love all of your recipies by the way, just made the stuffed zucchini last week.

Posted by: Sarah on September 4, 2007 12:38 PM

Hi Elise,

Does the recipe actually call for 3 cups of mint leaves, or is that a typo? I'm about to make this and with it measured out and ready to go it just seems like a HUGE amount!

Thanks!

Posted by: Erin on September 4, 2007 5:50 PM

Hi Sarah - I think whether you use peppermint or spearmint depends on your preference and what's available. We grow spearmint, so that's what I used.

Hi Erin - Yes, 3 cups of fresh mint leaves. Not a typo. The mint leaves will collapse like fresh spinach does when they're cooked.

Posted by: Elise on September 4, 2007 6:11 PM

Really good, Really easy - works with low fat milk. Everyone really loved it. put in some chopped up candy canes also. takes more coloring to get a nice greenish color.

Posted by: Edwin H. Kluge Jr. on September 4, 2007 6:18 PM

I'm growing some chocolate mint and I bet it'd be absolutely perfect for this recipe!

Posted by: Amy on September 7, 2007 12:14 AM

I adore the fresh, clean, sweet taste of mint chocolate chip ice cream, and was delighted to come across your recipe using fresh mint leaves. However, the end result was not what I expected. The ice cream had a very "earthy" taste to it and left a waxy film on our teeth and on our spoons. Our guests commented that they tasted "leaves" rather than that clean, mint flavor we were hoping for. I would not recommend this ice cream recipe without first warning the cook about what to expect.

Wow, that's weird. I have no idea what might have caused that. Earthy taste? Waxy? What kind of mint leaves were you using? This is certainly not our experience. Also note that there is a different flavor between spearmint and peppermint. Most "mint" flavor that we are used to comes from peppermint. Most mint that we grow is spearmint. Somewhat different flavor. ~Elise

Posted by: Ice Cream Lover on September 13, 2007 6:52 AM

Mint chocolate chip ice cream is my favorite - made this for company last night and it was a hit. I only put it in the freezer for a few hours after making it and it ended up more like gelato than ice cream. We loved the fresh mint flavor.

Posted by: erinh on September 16, 2007 8:14 AM

This is sensational. I followed the recipe exactly and was delighted with the results.

Posted by: SM on March 28, 2008 8:45 PM

2 teaspoons of MY personal peppermint extract would be WAYYYYY too much! More like 2 drops.

Some people have access to much stronger peppermint extract than others. The recipe calls for what you would typically find as peppermint extract in the supermarket. Use what works for you. ~Elise

Posted by: Anonymous on March 31, 2008 12:26 PM

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