Read Is There a Nutmeg in the House? Online
Authors: Elizabeth David,Jill Norman
Tags: #Cooking, #Courses & Dishes, #General
3. FROM ELIZABETH RAFFALD’S
THE EXPERIENCED ENGLISH HOUSEKEEPER
, 1769.
To make
ICE CREAM
Pare, stone, and scald twelve ripe apricots, beat them fine in a marble mortar, put to them six ounces of double refined sugar, a pint of scalding cream, work it through a hair sieve, put it into a tin that has a close cover, set it in a tub of ice broken small, and a large quantity of salt put amongst it, when you see your cream grow thick round the edges of your tin, stir it, and set it in again till it grows quite thick, when your cream is all froze up, take it out of your tin, and put it into the mould you intend it to be turned out of, then put on the lid, and have ready another tub with ice and salt in as before, put your mould in the middle, and lay your ice under and over it, let it stand four or five hours, dip your tin in warm water when you turn it out; if it be summer, you must not turn it out till the moment you want it: you may use any sort of fruit if you have not apricots, only observe to work it fine.
Note
The text has been copied from the eighth edition of 1782,
p. 249
. I understand that it does not differ from the text of the first edition. It is the fourth of forty recipes in Chapter X, devoted to Creams, Custards and Cheesecakes; and is the only ice cream in the collection.
Petits Propos Culinaires
No. 1, 1979
Making Ice Cream
Some of the most delicious ice creams I have ever eaten were the ones made by Suleiman, my Sudanese cook in Cairo. He used an ancient ice bucket borrowed from goodness knows where. It made a fearful clatter, as of tons of coal being flung into the kitchen, as he whirled the handle round. It was of no consequence, because the old ice pail, in common with much other scarce kitchen equipment, went the rounds in war-time Cairo and nearly everybody was familiar with this characteristic background noise at dinner-parties. We knew it heralded the appearance of some confection as delectable as any that ever came from Gunters of Berkeley Square or Florians in Venice, in the days when ice creams really were ice creams, and a special treat for parties and holidays rather than something you buy along with the groceries and detergents from the shop on the corner.
Ice creams, real ones that is, are made with several different basic mixtures, of which the two main ones are either pure thick uncooked cream, fruit pulp and sugar syrup, or a custard made from milk or cream and egg yolks plus fruit pulp or some basic flavouring. These latter tend to freeze to a better consistency than those made of raw cream, but when fresh uncooked fruit such as strawberries and raspberries is being used the eggs, I find, detract rather from the flavour of the fruit. On the other hand, as a basis for flavourings such as lemon or coffee the rich custard is ideal. There is, of course, a big difference in price between milk and single cream; the advantage of the cream is that it makes a better-textured ice and that it cooks to a custard with the eggs in a very short time, much quicker and more efficiently than milk. In any case, if you are using milk, use rich full cream milk.
When made of the right ingredients and presented in their simplest form, unadorned with such things as chocolate and fudge sauces or fussed up with extra fruit, cake and the like, ice creams make an excellently digestive and welcome finish even to the heaviest meal.
Refrigerator ices have never, I think, entirely the consistency or professional finish of those made in the old-fashioned bucket, but if they are carefully made they can nevertheless be most delicious, and a revelation to anyone who has never known any but commercial ice creams.
IMPORTANT POINTS ABOUT REFRIGERATOR ICES ARE:
Nowadays most people who make ice cream regularly have an ice cream maker. All of the recipes in this chapter can be made successfully in such a machine, following the manufacturer’s instructions. I have included Elizabeth’s notes on how to freeze ices in ice trays for those who don’t have a machine. They work well.
JN
LEMON ICE CREAM
450 ml (¾ pint) of single cream or milk, the yolks of 3 large or 4 small eggs, 125 g (4 oz) of soft white sugar, the juice and grated peel of 1 large lemon.
Grate the peel of the lemon into the cream or milk. Pour over the egg yolks beaten with the sugar. Stir over low heat until you have a thin custard. Strain through a fine sieve and stir until half cooled.
When quite cold add the strained juice of half the lemon.
Turn into the ice tray, cover with foil, and freeze at maximum freezing point for 2½ to 3 hours. Enough for 4, and a most refreshing and lovely ice.
COFFEE ICE CREAM
This is a luxury ice cream: expense, time, trouble, but immensely good, and delicate in flavour.
600 ml (1 pint) of single cream, 150 ml (5 fl oz) of double cream, 125 g (4 oz) freshly roasted coffee beans, the yolks of 3 eggs, 90 g (3 oz) pale brown sugar, a strip of lemon peel, a pinch of salt, 1 tablespoon of white sugar.
Crack the coffee beans very slightly with a pestle in a marble mortar. Put them in a saucepan with the single cream, the lemon peel, brown sugar and well-beaten egg yolks, and salt. Cook over very gentle heat, stirring until the mixture thickens, then, off the fire, continue stirring until the mixture has partially cooked. Strain through a fine sieve.
Immediately before freezing, fold in the double cream, lightly whipped with the white sugar. Turn into the freezing tray of the refrigerator, which should already be turned to maximum freezing point, cover and place in the freezing compartment. It will take about 3 hours to freeze; and whether or not you need to turn it sides to middle once or twice during the process depends upon your refrigerator. Enough for 4.
RASPBERRY ICE CREAM
An ice cream with a most intense and beautiful fresh raspberry flavour.
500 g (1 lb) raspberries, 125 g (4 oz) red currants, 125 g (4 oz) sugar, 150 ml (¼ pint) of water, the juice of half a lemon, 150 ml (5 fl oz) of double cream.
Pick the raspberries over very carefully and discard any that are the slightest bit mouldy. This is essential, for even one mouldy one may spoil the taste of the whole mixture. Pick the red currants from the stalks. Press all the fruit through a nylon or stainless steel sieve (a wire sieve discolours the fruit).
Make a syrup from the sugar and water by boiling them together for 5 minutes. When it is quite cold, and not before, add this syrup to the fruit pulp. Squeeze in the lemon juice.
Immediately before freezing, whip the cream very lightly, just until it is heavy and thick, and fold it into the fruit.
Turn into the ice tray, cover with foil and freeze at maximum freezing point for 2½ to 3 hours. Enough for 4.
House & Garden
, July 1959
APRICOT ICE CREAM
625 g (1¼ lb) of ripe apricots, 250 ml (8 fl oz) of water, 90 g (3 oz) of sugar, the juice of half a large lemon, 300 ml (½ pint) of double cream. Optionally, add 2 or 3 tablespoons of apricot brandy.
Wipe the apricots – there will be 20 to 24 apricots – with a soft cloth, put them in an ovenproof dish with the water. No sugar at this stage. Cover the pot. Cook the apricots in a low oven, 170°C/ 325°F/gas mark 3, for about 35 minutes or until they are soft. When cool, strain off the juice into a saucepan. Add the sugar, and boil to a thin syrup.
Stone the apricots, keeping aside a few of the stones. Purée the fruit. Pour the cooled syrup into the purée. Add the lemon juice. Crack 3 or 4 apricot stones, extract the kernels and crush them to powder. Stir this into the purée, then press the purée through a fine stainless steel or nylon sieve. Chill it thoroughly in the refrigerator.
Before freezing, taste for sweetness, adding more lemon juice if necessary. Turn into a metal or plastic container of about 1-litre (1¾-pint) capacity and transfer to the freezer.
After 2½ hours or so, turn the half-frozen ice into the food processor or high-power blender or beater and beat until the ice crystals have disappeared. If you have no suitable electric machine, use a big bowl and a heavy whisk or fork. Add the cream and the apricot brandy, and taste again for sweetness. Re-pack the cream into the container and return to the freezer.
In approximately 3 hours the ice should be frozen to about the right consistency for serving. An extra refinement is to give the ice a second rapid breakdown in the blender or food processor a short while – about 10 minutes – before serving. This restores the thick creamy texture of a good ice cream, and it can now be turned into a dish ready for serving, and returned to the freezer for a quarter of an hour. Alternatively, the second breakdown can be performed while the ice cream is still only two-thirds frozen. It is then turned into a simple or fancy mould and returned to the freezer until set.
Notes
Unpublished, 1960s
ALMOND ICE CREAM
This is a very delicate ice. The mixture can also be used as a basis for several fruit ices such as strawberry, orange, raspberry.
60 g (2 oz) of almonds, 90 g (3 oz) of sugar, 450 ml (¾ pint) of milk, 3 egg yolks, 150 ml (5 fl oz) of double cream, 2 tablespoons of Kirsch.
First skin the almonds. The best way to do this is to drop them in a small saucepan of boiling water, remove from the heat at once, and with a perforated spoon extract about half the almonds. Peel off the skins, then repeat the process with the remainder. Put the skinned almonds on a fireproof plate or dish in a very slow oven. Leave them for about 7 minutes, just long enough to dry them, but not to toast or colour them. Pound them to powder in a mortar or grind them in a food chopper. (Unless the almonds are very dry, this process will be difficult.)
Bring the milk and sugar to the boil, stirring all the time. Stir in the pounded almonds. Have the egg yolks ready beaten in the liquidiser or a bowl, pour the hot almond and milk mixture over them, give the whole lot a rapid whirl, return to the saucepan and cook gently, again stirring all the time, until the custard begins to thicken. Immediately take it from the heat, give it another whirl in the liquidiser or beat it in a chilled bowl, strain it through a fine sieve, chill it in the refrigerator.
Before freezing, stir in the cream and the Kirsch.
Notes
STRAWBERRY AND ALMOND ICE CREAM
To the almond ice mixture on
page 277
, add a purée made from 250 g (½/ lb) of hulled strawberries plus an extra 30 g (1 oz) of sugar and the juice of half an orange. This makes a most delicious and subtle ice.