Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Rose Petal Ice Cream

Recipe is from At Home with Herbs by Jane Newdick.  Story Publishing, 1994.

* I suggest doubling the recipe for a larger batch*

1 1/2 cups whipping cream
1/2 cup half-and-half
4 scented roses
2 egg yolks
3/4 cup sugar
2 tsps. honey
2 drops natural pink food coloring ( I omitted this)

1)  Put the cream, milk, and rose petals in a saucepan and bring to just below the boil.  Remove from the heat, cover, and leave to infuse until cooled.

2)  Whisk egg yolks, sugar, and honey together in a large metal or china bowl until pale and creamy.

3)  Strain the rose-flavored milk into the egg mixture and return to pan, or put the bowl over a pan of boiling water.  Cook very gently until slightly thickened, but do not let it boil.  Add a drop or two of coloring, if desired but this is NOT necessary.

4)  Chill the custard mixture, then freeze it, or process it in an ice-cream maker.  Store in the freezer.  Leave it to soften from frozen for about 20 minutes before serving. 


When I'm in the garden, I often have ideas about what I'd like to cook with the kids.  I remembered this rose petal ice cream recipe and so I decided to give it a try.    
Here is the rose bush from which we harvested our roses.  It smells great and it sits right under our bedroom window. I've been feeding Rosie our leftover banana peels and she just loves it!
The kids got all confused when I told them to pick the roses.  Maybe it's because I try and discourage them from picking roses most of the time?
The roses...
Sarah enjoyed plucking the petals off the roses.
Here are the ingredients.  It's very simple.  If you want to make this non-dairy, substitute with MimicCream instead of whipping cream and use coconut milk instead of half-and half. 
Sarah thought that it was so cool to put rose petals in a pot.
The rose petals are cooking...
This is what the mixture looks like after cooking.
Now the mixture is run through a sieve.  I used my chinois for this.
As you can see, it thickens up nicely.
Just simply let the rose petal ice cream sit in your freezer to solidify.  If you have one then pour it into your ice cream maker.
After about half an hour it was ready!
The finished product.
I did not add the suggest food coloring to our ice cream (for a variety of reasons).  I think it still had a pretty pastel pink color.  I also added a vanilla bean (and seeds) at the first step just in case the rose flavoring was too light. 
Rose petal Ice Cream
Sarah Elizabeth loves the ice cream!
If Gabriel likes it then you know its gotta be good!


~Summer Days~



2 comments:

  1. Absolutely lovely! Makes one wish to have a field of rose bushes!!! Fabulous step-by-step photos, Morgan, I think this is something you could give a 'twist' and come up with lovely creams of your own...lemon peel ice cream...cucumber! (think how refreshing THAT would be on a hot summer day!) There's no limit...and, if you run out of ideas, stand in front of the sorbet counter at WFM and glean their wisdom. One of my favorites, in the sorbet counter, (before I swore off dairy) was the salt-water taffy...I wonder if just taking a taffy recipe and tweaking it like the rose-petal concoction wouldn't work.
    I particularly love the memories you are making for the kids, someday they may be walking through a rose garden and look at one another and say, "Remember when Mom made us the ice cream out of roses?" That's the kind of memories children can carry as a testament to your love!

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  2. Jenny, when I read your comment I started to tear up. Thank you for your post! I would like to think that by teaching my children simple, easy and affordable ways to enjoy life that they will continue to dwell in the land of affordable possibility and contentment well into adulthood.

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