ButterYum — a tasty little food blog

View Original

Bruno's Authentic French Vanilla Ice Cream

So it’s officially the last week of summer and I can’t let the season end without sharing this recipe that comes from a classically-trained French Pastry Chef, who was given the recipe by an authentic Glacier (a professional ice cream maker in France). Sheet gelatin and commercial kitchen techniques result in the creamiest, most amazing French Vanilla Ice Cream imaginable. It’s Michelin star-worthy.

Please note - the ice cream base should be made a day before processing in your ice cream maker.

See this social icon list in the original post

Items used to make this recipe:

(affiliate links)


Authentic French Vanilla Ice Cream

makes 1 quart

Printable Recipe

Ingredients

  • 500g whole milk

  • 180g granulated sugar

  • 30g glucose or light corn syrup

  • 30g dry milk powder

  • 8g vanilla bean paste

  • 2g salt (see notes below)

  • 100g egg yolks (about 5)

  • 4g gelatin sheets

  • 300g heavy cream

Directions

  1. Soak gelatin sheets in a few cups of cold water for 5-10 minutes, then remove sheets and gently squeeze out excess water; set aside until needed.

  2. In a medium saucepan over medium heat, combine milk, sugar, glucose (or corn syrup), and salt together until the temperature reaches 113F (45c).

  3. Using an immersion blender, add dry milk to the warm milk mixture, then add the egg yolks and continue blending with the immersion blender until the mixture reaches 185F (85c); remove from heat.

  4. Use the immersion blender to add the gelatin sheets, followed by the cream and vanilla.

  5. Pour mixture into an airtight container and refrigerate for at least 24 hours to allow the flavors to mature.

  6. Process according to your ice cream maker’s instructions and serve right away or transfer mixture to a freezer-safe container for longer storage.

  7. To serve, allow frozen ice cream to soften at room temperature for 15-20 minutes before scooping.

Notes

  • Gelatin Sheets - don’t be too concerned with the “bloom strength” of the sheet gelatin you use for this recipe. Just be sure the total weight is equal to 4 grams.

  • Standard digital scales are great for weighing most ingredients, but they’re not so great when weighing very minimal amounts. When weighing just a few grams, like the salt in this recipe, it’s best to use a precise digital gram scale. If you don’t have a digital gram scale, you’ll have to approximate. For reference, 1 teaspoon of table salt weighs 5.69g so you’d need approximately 1/3 teaspoon table salt for this recipe (the volume would differ if using kosher salt).

  • For the best flavor, be sure to refrigerate the ice cream base for 24 hours before processing in your ice cream maker.

adapted from Bruno Albouze