Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

help me please


peterfc

Recommended Posts

peterfc Newbie

i love icecream but i don't know how to make icecream myself at home from eggs,
Can anyone help please?


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Ennis-TX Grand Master

....Joke? You do not make icecream with eggs, I guess you could to add protein, heck I might try that next time. I make icecream and eat it daily. I make vegan and sugar free versions. Different every time with different flavors using extracts, nut butters, nut milks, and protein powders. I use them as a meal myself so my methods are quite odd as I strive to load them with healthy fats, protein, vitamins, and minerals.

But I started off with a very simple base recipe years ago I still recall, I was using 1 can coconut milk, 1/4-1/3 cup maple/agave/honey, and flavorings of choice. The goal of making a icecream is to make it rich with fats and sweet.  Depending on what your doing depends on how it goes. I used to make ones with lower sugar using fruit instead of sweetener like

pina colada using 1 can coconut milk, 1 20oz can crushed pineapple (non syrup one), 2tbsp maple syrup/agave/honey, pinch of stevia, and 1-2 tsp vanilla extract (sometimes a bit of rum) blend it fridge for 8 hours then blend again before loading into my icecream maker. Alternatively this one can be put in a spring form pan, ice pop mold, or a pie crust and frozen for 12hours then served might need to be defrosted a bit in this form.

Other forms like sherbet I would blend frozen ripe grapes, melon, etc into a pulp add 2-4tbsp of nut milk to 1 cup blended fruit, 1-2 tsp sweetener and sometimes added 1-2 tsp protein powder to help it set up.

Now days I do HUGE 6L batches with nut milk, coconut flour, coconut yogurt, nut butters, sugar free sweetener, pectin and agar agar gum for emulsifiers with extracts and when ready mix this up with protein powders and more extracts -_- I normally eat about 3-4 cups of this concoction for dinners

I am planning on doing catering soon using the coconut milk and maple blend and a commercial machine.

NOW if your looking for a sugar free, high protein, vegan icecream I might suggest Open Original Shared Link

PM what exactly flavor you looking for, and what your restrictions/goals are I will see about getting you a recipe for icecream if you need it.

 

Victoria1234 Experienced

There are recipes online for ice cream made with eggs. Here's the first one I found : Open Original Shared Link . Just google ice cream with eggs recipe.

kareng Grand Master

Yes.  some people make it with eggs.  They are usually not cooked, so most people don't make it that way.  

YOu can find lots of recipes on the internet.  Not sure what this has to do with Celiac?  I am moving this to the recipe/cooking section

Feeneyja Collaborator

And the key to making a custard base (which is what ice cream with eggs is), is to temper your eggs with the warm milk solution and wisk continually (with no heat) when you add the tempered eggs back to the milk base. Slowly heat, wisking continually, until your custard forms. Do any of this too quickly or hot and you have scrambled eggs in milk.  Gross.  The custard base must be cooled completely (best over night) before churning otherwise it will not freeze properly and you will have large ice crystals. 

But I now do what Ennis does. We can't have milk so I use a combination of coconut milk, cashew butter, honey, sometimes avocado, to make a great dairy free ice cream. Ice cream cakes are our new favorite dessert. 

Ennis-TX Grand Master
10 minutes ago, Feeneyja said:

And the key to making a custard base (which is what ice cream with eggs is), is to temper your eggs with the warm milk solution and wisk continually (with no heat) when you add the tempered eggs back to the milk base. Slowly heat, wisking continually, until your custard forms. Do any of this too quickly or hot and you have scrambled eggs in milk.  Gross.  The custard base must be cooled completely (best over night) before churning otherwise it will not freeze properly and you will have large ice crystals. 

But I now do what Ennis does. We can't have milk so I use a combination of coconut milk, cashew butter, honey, sometimes avocado, to make a great dairy free ice cream. Ice cream cakes are our new favorite dessert. 

OMG I feel Like a idiot, custard icecream, been years since I made a good custard. Hmm >.< now I am thinking of homemade eggnog icecream, I even have egg nog extract to cheat on it lol. Feeneyja you should swing by and we can go icecream crazy one night making several batches lol. QUESTION, do you think this can be done with just egg whites? Perhaps add nutritional yeast for that nutty yolk flavor? My inability to process yolks limits me a tad but at the same time I like the idea and challenge.

TexasJen Collaborator

I LOVE ice cream!  When I went gluten free last year, I was disappointed that I was so limited in my options - especially since mint chocolate chip ice cream is my favorite and it has been hard to find gluten free. 

You have several options- you can make ice cream and sorbet with a blender and a freezer or you can buy an ice cream maker.  

Check out this mason jar recipe: Open Original Shared Link

No special equipment needed.

Also, this....

Open Original Shared Link

So, you don't need special equipment to do this. I have also made strawberry banana ice cream in a blender and honey dew melon sorbet that way (surprisingly yummy!)

My husband bought me an ice cream maker for Christmas which helped.  If you have an ice cream maker, you can increase your options. 

My favorite so far is this Mint chocolate chip:

1 cup heavy cream

1 cup whole milk

1/2 cup sugar

1 tsp vanilla

1 tsp peppermint extract

pinch of salt

1/2 cup chocolate shavings or mini chocolate chips

Stir the milk, cream and sugar together until sugar starts to dissolve. Add the remaining ingredients and put in the ice cream maker.

We have made grapefruit sorbet, salted caramel custard, coconut chocolate chip, strawberry. chocolate chip, pecan praline, egg nog, vanilla, sugar free versions too. 

Good luck!  Sometimes I'm annoyed by making it myself and sometimes I like the option of making my own yummy options!


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Victoria1234 Experienced
3 hours ago, TexasJen said:

I LOVE ice cream!  When I went gluten free last year, I was disappointed that I was so limited in my options - especially since mint chocolate chip ice cream is my favorite and it has been hard to find gluten free. 

You have several options- you can make ice cream and sorbet with a blender and a freezer or you can buy an ice cream maker.  

Check out this mason jar recipe: Open Original Shared Link

No special equipment needed.

Also, this....

Open Original Shared Link

So, you don't need special equipment to do this. I have also made strawberry banana ice cream in a blender and honey dew melon sorbet that way (surprisingly yummy!)

My husband bought me an ice cream maker for Christmas which helped.  If you have an ice cream maker, you can increase your options. 

My favorite so far is this Mint chocolate chip:

1 cup heavy cream

1 cup whole milk

1/2 cup sugar

1 tsp vanilla

1 tsp peppermint extract

pinch of salt

1/2 cup chocolate shavings or mini chocolate chips

Stir the milk, cream and sugar together until sugar starts to dissolve. Add the remaining ingredients and put in the ice cream maker.

We have made grapefruit sorbet, salted caramel custard, coconut chocolate chip, strawberry. chocolate chip, pecan praline, egg nog, vanilla, sugar free versions too. 

Good luck!  Sometimes I'm annoyed by making it myself and sometimes I like the option of making my own yummy options!

Omg how delicious sounding! I love mint chocolate chip ice cream! Thanks!

 

Feeneyja Collaborator

Ennis, Egg yolks are what make custard based ice creams. But you have me thinking. I make a frozen peanut butter pie where I make a Swiss butter cream frosting with added peanut butter. It tastes amazing. For my kids with lactose issues, butter isn't a problem (just fresh milks and cheeses), so I add butter to the whipped cooked egg whites then room temperature natural peanut butter. So I think that heating the honey and whites in a double boiler, then whipping and adding any solid fat would work. Then freeze (no need to churn because the whites and fat provide you with structure).  

For Father's Day I made a chocolate brownie (cashew butter base) in a spring form pan, scooped out the center of the brownie leaving just a shell, added the peanut butter filling described above and topped with reserved brownie bits, froze that, then added a chocolate avocado ice cream and topped with chopped homemade dark paleo chocolate chunks...It was terrific!

What industrial ice cream maker do you use?  I'm tired of making small batches of ice cream. 

Ennis-TX Grand Master

MK4800 I had it on a trial/rental for a bit trying to purchase one now. Things pretty good, and the cheapest on the market. If you order from the factory it cost $995 ($650+$345 s&H) I started a fund raiser from my bakery for it.   As for retail if you order on Amazon or Ebay your looking to pay $1100-1400 for it.    If your really interested I can give the sales rep your email and she can contact you about getting one. Open Original Shared Link

My plans when I get my own is to use it for catering, markets, and events. I found it on rental from a company out of Houston and tried it. Then looked into purchasing one.

 

Feeneyja Collaborator

Darn. That's a bit much for me (even though I do have a big family).  I guess I just need to keep going with the small batches. 

Ennis-TX Grand Master
6 minutes ago, Feeneyja said:

Darn. That's a bit much for me (even though I do have a big family).  I guess I just need to keep going with the small batches. 

They make special containers for you to freeze iceceam in. The stuff from a soft serve will stay scoop able in them for 24-48 hours, Becomes a tad harder after that. If you set the consistency to max and prep in a cold house with prefrozen containers and pull fill immediately it makes more of a hard ice cream that keeps good for about 72+ hours scoop able.  So you could go from making it daily to once every 2-3 days and still have some everyday.

cristiana Veteran
On 6/21/2017 at 0:08 PM, peterfc said:

i love icecream but i don't know how to make icecream myself at home from eggs,
Can anyone help please?

You've opened up a great discussion here, peterfc.  Most illuminating.  

I remember when I lived in Oz back in the 1980s there were three frozen custard outlets around Sydney.  I think, from memory, they only sold about three flavours - vanilla (plain), strawberry and chocolate.  But the ice cream was absolutely delicious.  

I think ice cream made with a custard is a great way to enhance the nutritional value of the stuff - and possibly reduce the fat content to boot?  Brilliant.

Victoria1234 Experienced
3 hours ago, cristiana said:

You've opened up a great discussion here, peterfc.  Most illuminating.  

I remember when I lived in Oz back in the 1980s there were three frozen custard outlets around Sydney.  I think, from memory, they only sold about three flavours - vanilla (plain), strawberry and chocolate.  But the ice cream was absolutely delicious.  

I think ice cream made with a custard is a great way to enhance the nutritional value of the stuff - and possibly reduce the fat content to boot?  Brilliant.

This all makes me want to break out my ic maker and see if I can recall how to use it. Very inspirational!

Jmg Mentor
50 minutes ago, Victoria1234 said:

This all makes me want to break out my ic maker and see if I can recall how to use it. Very inspirational!

I saw one in the store today and was sorely tempted. I love ice cream :D

 

Victoria1234 Experienced
2 minutes ago, Jmg said:

I saw one in the store today and was sorely tempted. I love ice cream :D

 

Go for it!

cristiana Veteran
4 hours ago, Jmg said:

I saw one in the store today and was sorely tempted. I love ice cream :D

 

Hi Jmg - which store? 

Ennis-TX Grand Master

I just opted out of that Mk-4800 found a cheaper more marketable version for the markets. Keeping it under wraps til we get it done. PS you and find fully automated 1.5-2liter hard serve ice cream machines on ebay in the $200 range that do not require freezing a bowel or ice. There are smaller 1 liter options that require you to freeze a bowel to make it for under $100 even soft serve versions, hell saw with with syrups included for $45

Jmg Mentor
8 hours ago, cristiana said:

Hi Jmg - which store? 

Lidl this time - next to Aldi it's my addiction!  Open Original Shared Link

 

 

Victoria1234 Experienced
14 hours ago, Jmg said:

Lidl this time - next to Aldi it's my addiction!  Open Original Shared Link

 

 

What language are they speaking in the video? Is there a version with subtitles? :P

Jmg Mentor
46 minutes ago, Victoria1234 said:

What language are they speaking in the video? Is there a version with subtitles? :P

That reminds me of the time I was in rural California and someone asked me if I was German :D 

They're speaking the beautiful South Western Ireland version of English. If you ever get the chance you should go there. It's one of the most beautiful parts of the world and the people are lovely. Albeit they maintain a sadistic pleasure in spinning tall tales to confuse hapless English visitors to their pubs... :lol:

Victoria1234 Experienced
2 hours ago, Jmg said:

That reminds me of the time I was in rural California and someone asked me if I was German :D 

They're speaking the beautiful South Western Ireland version of English. If you ever get the chance you should go there. It's one of the most beautiful parts of the world and the people are lovely. Albeit they maintain a sadistic pleasure in spinning tall tales to confuse hapless English visitors to their pubs... :lol:

I'd love to visit! I'm half Irish and half English and would so adore to see Ireland. I loved England when I visited a million years ago. People were so kind.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - AlwaysLearning replied to Colleen H's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      3

      Gluten related ??

    2. - Colleen H replied to Colleen H's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      3

      Gluten related ??

    3. - Jmartes71 replied to Jmartes71's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      My only proof

    4. - AlwaysLearning replied to Jmartes71's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      4

      My only proof

    5. - AlwaysLearning replied to Colleen H's topic in Coping with Celiac Disease
      3

      Gluten related ??


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,084
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    bigwave
    Newest Member
    bigwave
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Who's Online (See full list)

  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • AlwaysLearning
      Get tested for vitamin deficiencies.  Though neuropathy can be a symptom of celiac, it can also be caused by deficiencies due to poor digestion caused by celiac and could be easier to treat.
    • Colleen H
      Thank you so much for your response  Yes it seems as though things get very painful as time goes on.  I'm not eating gluten as far as I know.  However, I'm not sure of cross contamination.  My system seems to weaken to hidden spices and other possibilities. ???  if cross contamination is possible...I am in a super sensitive mode of celiac disease.. Neuropathy from head to toes
    • Jmartes71
      EXACTLY! I was asked yesterday on my LAST video call with Standford and I stated exactly yes absolutely this is why I need the name! One, get proper care, two, not get worse.Im falling apart, stressed out, in pain and just opened email from Stanford stating I was rude ect.I want that video reviewed by higher ups and see if that women still has a job or not.Im saying this because I've been medically screwed and asking for help because bills don't pay itself. This could be malpratice siit but im not good at finding lawyers
    • AlwaysLearning
      We feel your pain. It took me 20+ years of regularly going to doctors desperate for answers only to be told there was nothing wrong with me … when I was 20 pounds underweight, suffering from severe nutritional deficiencies, and in a great deal of pain. I had to figure it out for myself. If you're in the U.S., not having an official diagnosis does mean you can't claim a tax deduction for the extra expense of gluten-free foods. But it can also be a good thing. Pre-existing conditions might be a reason why a health insurance company might reject your application or charge you more money. No official diagnosis means you don't have a pre-existing condition. I really hope you don't live in the U.S. and don't have these challenges. Do you need an official diagnosis for a specific reason? Else, I wouldn't worry about it. As long as you're diligent in remaining gluten free, your body should be healing as much as possible so there isn't much else you could do anyway. And there are plenty of us out here who never got that official diagnosis because we couldn't eat enough gluten to get tested. Now that the IL-2 test is available, I suppose I could take it, but I don't feel the need. Someone else not believing me really isn't my problem as long as I can stay in control of my own food.
    • AlwaysLearning
      If you're just starting out in being gluten free, I would expect it to take months before you learned enough about hidden sources of gluten before you stopped making major mistakes. Ice cream? Not safe unless they say it is gluten free. Spaghetti sauce? Not safe unless is says gluten-free. Natural ingredients? Who knows what's in there. You pretty much need to cook with whole ingredients yourself to avoid it completely. Most gluten-free products should be safe, but while you're in the hypersensitive phase right after going gluten free, you may notice that when something like a microwave meal seems to not be gluten-free … then you find out that it is produced in a shared facility where it can become contaminated. My reactions were much-more severe after going gluten free. The analogy that I use is that you had a whole army of soldiers waiting for some gluten to attack, and now that you took away their target, when the stragglers from the gluten army accidentally wander onto the battlefield, you still have your entire army going out and attacking them. Expect it to take two years before all of the training facilities that were producing your soldiers have fallen into disrepair and are no longer producing soldiers. But that is two years after you stop accidentally glutening yourself. Every time you do eat gluten, another training facility can be built and more soldiers will be waiting to attack. Good luck figuring things out.   
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.