For me, Memorial Day weekend is best when spent with my friends, Kath and Trev up in Vermont on their farm. We garden and cook and eat and cook and eat and … you get the idea. When we are not making food we are usually discussing it. During one exuberant conversation about Paris, the topic of ice cream came up (we make a lot of ice cream and sorbets there –– they have an enormous machine that makes perfect ices like blackberry, mango, and my own recipe for madeira vanilla).
When
you talk about ice cream and Paris, you talk about Berthillon. Since 1954, the shop on the Ile Saint-Louis
has been the destination for ice cream lovers operated by the Chauvin family
(non-stop lines snake out along the street –– a pretty good indicator of the
glories that await within the shop). All
the ingredients are the finest to be had –– seasonal fruit comes from local suppliers at Rungis, exotics
are relentlessly sourced until the best is obtained (chocolate, vanilla, etc). I read on Yelp that a local once said the ice cream at
Berthillon tasted like children’s laughter –– does it get better than that?
Knowing
the wonders of Berthillon first hand, when I saw the recipe for the Ultimate
Chocolate Ice Cream that purported to be as good as Bertillon, I had to try
it.
I found it in a charming book called Frozen Desserts: The Definitive Guide to Making Ice Creams, Ices, Sorbets, Gelati, and Other Frozen Delights
by
Caroline Liddell and Robin Weir. I met
Robin at the Oxford Symposium last year when he decorated an ice cream tree in
July before an audience with enormous panache. Such courage is impressive (ice cream molds in July, terrifying!) but then Weir is
obsessed with all things ice cream. His
collection of ice cream molds was dizzying… all of the fruit shapes and colors
made for a very splendid tree (a tree frame was hung with multiples of 10 or 12
different fruit ice creams in the shape and color of many fruits –– terribly
charming.
I found it in a charming book called Frozen Desserts: The Definitive Guide to Making Ice Creams, Ices, Sorbets, Gelati, and Other Frozen Delights
Weir
began his ice cream odyssey in the 1980s when he was horrified at the ingredient
list in a tub of ice cream he inspected in his grocery cart ––you know,
emulsifiers, stabilizers, dextrose etc.
It was scary stuff that had nothing to do with pure, simple ice
cream. He began looking into the roots
of ice cream and the beauty of fresh ingredients and came up with a stellar
book. Not to rest on his laurels, 12
years and “millions of calories later", he
went on to write another great book and best seller that came out last year, ICE
CREAMS, SORBETS AND GELATI: The Definitive Guide, filled with 400 recipes
for all skill levels as well as more glorious history of ices from all over
England and Europe and even America (the older book I have is also full of wonderful
stories and great recipes). I recommend his books… they are indispensable when you are in the mood for the best ice
cream ever. This is killer chocolate and the trick with the cocoa is genius. For it to be as good as Berthillon, it would have to be eaten in Paris (location, location, location). Absent that –– this is great chocolate –– one of the best I've had.
The Ultimate Chocolate
Ice Cream inspired by Bertillon, Paris from Robin Weir
5 T Dutch Processed Cocoa Powder (alkalized)
½ C minus 1 T sugar
1 ½ c milk
5 ¼ oz semi-sweet chocolate
3 egg yolks
1 t vanilla extract
1 t instant espresso granules (recipe called for coffee granules, I like the darkness of espresso)
¼ c sugar syrup*
1 c whipping cream (36% fat)
1-2 t of Armagnac, cognac or rum (optional)
rose geranium leaves for garnish (they taste great with chocolate, mint would work too)
rose geranium leaves for garnish (they taste great with chocolate, mint would work too)
*½ c water + 5/8 c sugar, heated till sugar dissolves. This will make you more than you need.
Combine the cocoa and ½ the sugar. Pour in enough milk to make a paste and then
bring the rest of the milk to a boil.
Pour the hot milk into the cocoa mixture then return all to the pan
under very low heat (Weir recommends a heat diffuser for this). Simmer very, very
slowly for 6 minutes stirring constantly. Liddell/Weir say this is what rids
the cocoa of its powdery flavor. Remove
from the heat and add chopped chocolate.
Whisk eggs and the rest of the sugar till pale. Then pour the chocolate into the mix and
return to the pan. Stir till it slowly reaches 185º. Add sugar syrup and coffee and liquor and put mixture over an ice bowl until cooled. Strain and put in fridge. Add the cream to the mix and use the ice
cream machine. When ready, put into
container. Top with plastic and
cover. Serve after 2 hours or remove
from freezer 20-25 minutes before serving.
This ice cream is best and most flavorful when it is soft ––I think most
ice creams are.