Please try to say that five times fast. 🙂
The end of June is fast approaching, and, quite frankly, it still doesn’t really feel like summer in Georgia. I honestly can’t remember a year that we weren’t in drought, but, according to the National Drought Monitor, we’re not. I know, I know, it doesn’t really need to be sweltering outside to make ice cream–let’s face it, I was making ice cream back in February–but I’d be feeling a whole lot more Summer-y if my ice cream was melting faster than I could scoop it out of the container.

Is there any less weird way to take a picture of an ice cream cone? If only they could float in the air.
I’ve actually wanted to make Bailey’s ice cream for quite a while. My problem with most of the recipes I’ve found is that they require cooking, and I am decidedly anti-cooking when it comes to ice cream. Yes, I’ll do it, but I hate having to heat everything up because then you have to stick it in the fridge for a few hours to get it to cool back down again before putting it in the maker…and then after the maker you have to wait for it to firm up a bit in the freezer, and that extra little bit of waiting just kills me.

Ice cream in the great outdoors of my porch…and seriously, this is the only pic that I don’t look like I’m holding a microphone. I should have found a cool hat and a book and pretended to be the Statue of Liberty.
So I came up with my own recipe. Well, adapted my own recipe from that wonderful Ben and Jerry’s Book that I used back in April to make strawberry ice cream. I had tried their Kahlua Amaretto before, and it was wonderful, so I compared my alcohol percentages (Kahlua is 26.5% alcohol by volume and Amaretto is 21%). As Irish Cream is only 17%, I figured it was a safe swap, and fortunately I was right. It actually freezes a whole heck of a lot better than the other recipe AND it doesn’t melt as fast which is definitely a plus. Ben and Jerry warn, “Whenever you flavor an ice cream with liqueur, you’ll either end up with a subtly flavored ice cream or an unfreezable sweet cream liquid mix that reeks of alcohol”(23). This recipe freezes really well. I would suggest leaving your ice cream in the freezer to harden for a little normal than longer(for me it came out perfectly after 24 hrs. 4 never works for me. It’s always still too soft and then it starts melting before I’ve even dished out everybody’s bowls.), because alcohol does depress the freezing point so colder =better.
In case this doesn’t work like I’m hoping it will, please excuse my possible lack of pictures in the instructions below. I’m trying out a new plugin and I’m fairly certain I wont know if the pictures will show up for sure or not until I hit “publish”, so I’m just going to go for it.
Two plugins later, I think I’ve found a winner.
No-Cook Chocolate Chip Irish Cream Ice Cream
Ingredients
- 2 Large eggs
- 3/4 cups sugar
- 2 cups heavy or whipping cream
- 1 cup milk (preferably whole milk)
- 1/2 cup Irish Cream (Baileys, St. Brendan's etc.)
- 1/2 cup semisweet chocolate chips (Or more. I tend to lean towards more, but I like chocolate.)
Directions
For those of you that missed last weeks post due to BlueHost’s wonderful network errors, travel back in time to the Marietta Hamfest my dad and I attended a few weeks ago and meet the pony. It’s a not a real pony…but imagine. And, according to the manufacturer’s info (which the great detective Julie found on Amazon), it can actually hold an 80 lb kid. Makes me wish I was that small.
If any body had any ideas to make this recipe any better, I’m totally up for suggestions. Eventually I’ll get a second freezer bowl for my maker to make testing a bit easier, but as you have to wait a day for the bowl to refreeze it’s a little difficult to whip up multiple batches in a row. I did find a recipe on allrecipes that uses part brown sugar part white, so I think that may be my next tweak.
Thanks for reading guys, have a great week, and as always, if you like what you read please share a comment or subscribe via Bloglovin or email. 🙂
This ice cream was delicious! I bet it would be good if you added caramel too.
Ooooohhh…not a bad idea!