Grilled Cheeseburger

Yes, really!

The whole idea of our weekly flavor was born from a challenge to ourselves, to concept and create on a regular basis, over a long term.  This is how we keep our minds fresh, fuel our curiosity, make our breakthroughs and hone our skills.  It also meant we would ultimately begin to challenge our own paletes, as well as our followers’ in the process.  And because we’re willing to walk out on a limb here and there, we get a lot of funny suggestions for flavors.  Sometimes we actually entertain them.  Sometimes we don’t.  In this case…

This flavor wasn’t created as a gimmick or as a joke, in fact, it was created out of pure desire to see if we could make something this far out, actually taste good.  We realize that the public’s taste for Cheeseburger ice cream might be nil, but much of the point of these weekly releases are to give you an idea of our thought process when we concept, and ultimately create a flavor.  Once in awhile our ideas fall flat, and those get left on the kitchen floor, never to be posted here or created at all for that matter.  This one, in our opinion, did not.

It all started with a discussion on the consumption of shakes and malts while enjoying a burger and fries.  Many of you willingly slurp down ice cream as a means to wash down a cheeseburger, even dipping fries in it.  In some ways, the meal and the dessert are synonymous.  So why wouldn’t this flavor work?  We had to try.

The concept was narrowed down to a few important factors.

1. No physical meat in the final product

2. Somehow make the ice cream taste reminiscent of a grilled cheeseburger, while still allowing ice cream to be, well, ice cream

 

We agreed that steeping a burger would be the approach to get the flavorful fat and flavor to soak into the cream- the beef, the smoke, the char, and the cheese.

So, we had some cheeseburgers.

IMG_0046BEEFCheeseburgers

 

 

 

 

 

Obviously we start with quality ground beef, and Grass Run Farms is a good one.  The burgers went on a hot charcoal grill and were topped with Wisconsin Cheddar.  We ate some of the cheeseburgers.  Then we took the two left over and kept them to steep in the ice cream base.

Wisconsin Cheddar

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Being Wisconsin boys, we knew there had to be more cheese, so we tailored our ice cream base to accept more of this fine cheddar along with the grilled grass fed patties.

BriocheBrioche CroutonBrioche Crouton

 

 

 

 

 

 

Don’t worry, we didn’t forget the bun.  For this, we took our favorite New French Brioche Buns and baked them off into croutons with some help from our friends butter and salt.  They went in at the end of the churn.

Grilled Cheeseburger Ice Cream

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And here it is.  A creamy, dense cheddar cheese ice cream steeped with charcoal grilled, grass fed beef patties and specked with brioche bun croutons.  A  sweet ice cream that ever so subtly reminds you of a cheeseburger.

Of course, you want to know – what did we think?  It IS good.  Honestly it wouldn’t be my first choice, and isn’t for eating in mass quantities – but its a blast to try and experience the brain tease.
Want to try it? You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest. 2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 7/25/13 at 4pm. Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

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Dark Chocolate Strawberry Pistachio

Since local berries are one of our absolute favorite things of summer, its not uncommon for us to do multiple flavors with the same berry.  Especially strawberries. When I began thinking about a new flavor concept for using strawberries, I chose to go the selfish route this time and do exactly what I wanted to eat.  I knew pistachio was going to be one of the components.  I toiled on different sugars or a combination thereof, as well as different forms of cream combinations (sour cream, cream cheese, goat cheese, goat milk, etc – and then it hit me.  We’ve only done two (!) flavors previous to this with a chocolate base, (3X Chocolate, Georgia Walnut) and we’ve seriously neglected the chocolate lovers, myself being one of them.  So that was that.  Dark Chocolate, Strawberries and Pistachios.

CocoaStrawberriesPistachios

 

 

 

 

 

 

The chocolate base has a good concentration of cocoa – not quite as much as our 3x chocolate since there needed to be balance with the other flavors, however its still a nice dark chocolate ice cream.

Dark Chocolate Base

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The gorgeous local strawberries were made into a nice thick syrup to be woven throughout the base.

Strawberry SyrupStrawberry Syrup

 

 

 

 

 

 

The shelled, roasted and salted pistachios were thrown in during the churn to give a big salty crunch.  The final product is a dark chocolate ice cream, rippled with fresh strawberry syrup and studded with salted crunchy pistachios.

Chocolate Pistachio Strawberry

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Want to try it? You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest. 2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 7/12/13 at 4pm. Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

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Amarula

This is usually the time of year that we start rolling out all things local, since berries are finally coming around here in Minnesota. But this week, we are featuring a flavor that utilizes a fruit from across the Atlantic and then used to make a cream liqueur called Amarula. We were just recently introduced to Amarula by a couple who was interested in having us make it into an ice cream for their wedding. After making the flavor for their tasting, we decided it was definitely one we needed to release to the masses. This one is for you Shira and Bill! Let’s get started with this weeks flavor: Amarula…

 

 

Amarula Cream Liqueur

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amarula Cream Liqueur. Made with Marula fruit, only grown in Africa, and said to be tart, sweet, refreshing, with a “guava-like” taste. The Marula fruits are squeezed of their juices, de-seeded, and then fermented into a wine. The wine is then distilled twice and cream is added. The result is a unique cream liqueur that is caramely like an Irish Cream, but has a hit of sweet/tart fruit to it.

 

 

Amarula ready for reduction

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To get the Amarula into the ice cream we unfortunatly need to remove the alcohol from the liqueur. To do this, we boil the liqueur on the stovetop and reduce slightly. The reduction is added straight into our organic cane sugar ice cream base and given a genrous salting before the churn.

 

 

Amarula

 

 

 

Amarula ice cream y’all! It has an ultra creamy texture, similar to our Oat with Maple Brown Sugar, accompanied by notes of  tropical fruit and salty caramel.

 

Want to try it? You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest. 2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 7/5/13 at 4pm. Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

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Sour Cream Vanilla w/Pluot Jam and Crunchy Quinoa

We’ve talked a lot over the past few years about where our inspirations come from, and sometimes a flavor is developed from a number of different directions.  This one began from a plan to create a flavor with the Pluot fruit – a hybrid fruit made from apricot and plum.  Stone fruits are in season right now in a big way, and we try to take advantage of them before their season ends and the local berry season begins.  The original plan was to make a Pluot jam with our Sour Cream Vanilla base.

Pluots

 

 

 

Beautiful Flavorosa Pluot’s from our favorite local market, the Seward Co-op.

 

 

 

By total chance, the recent issue of Food and Wine magazine showed up the week before I planned on making this flavor, and I happened across a recipe for making crunchy quinoa to be used in a salad.  Salad, schmalad – this was going in Pluot ice cream.

Quinoa

 

 

 

Good old fashioned uncooked Quinoa.

 

 

 

First the pluot jam. Making the jam was rather straightforward process, involving removal of the pits from the fruit, and then combining the pulp and skin with sugar and water, mashing and cooking down into a nice, thick jam.

Pluot Jam cookingPluot Jam

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then came crisping up the quinoa.  First the quinoa was lightly cooked until just tender and dried on a sheet pan.  Once completely dry, the quinoa is fried in vegetable oil until it is brown and crunchy, and cooled on paper towels.  The original recipe called for salt immediately upon removing from the oil, but I used both salt and sugar to give them a little sweetness as well.

Crunchy QuinoaCrunchy Quinoa

 

 

The quinoa fry up with a surprising crunch and a dense nut-like flavor.  Very tasty.

 

 

Finally the sour cream vanilla base is made with our favorite sour cream and vanilla beans.  We use light sour cream because it keeps the fat content of the ice cream at the perfect level.

Sour CreamVanilla bean

 

 

 

 

 

Our landing, is an incredibly silky vanilla ice cream, rippled with layers of Flavorosa Pluot jam and speckled with crunchy bits of quinoa throughout.

Pluot with Cruncy Quinoa

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Want to try it? You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest. 2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 6/28/13 at 4pm. Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

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Asparagus with Truffle Honey

Ok, so this week we are going to test your inner most ice cream love. And not just your inner love, but your preception of ice cream love. And not just your percieved love, but your adventurous ice cream love.

On a recent trip to Pizzeria Lola my wife and I ordered one of the weekly specials: pizza topped with asparagus and truffle honey. Not only does Lola live up to all hype given, but this weekly pizza special was off the charts good. The idea resinated immediatley, and I couldn’t stop thinking about my process and how I would break it down into ice cream. Once asparagus hit the local farmers market, we were on it. Let’s get started with this week’s flavor, Asparagus with Truffle Honey.

 

 

Asparagus

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Asparagus from the Midtown Farmers Market.

 

 

Asparagus BlanchBlanched AsaparagusAsparagus PureeAsparagus Strain

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We cut off the tips and blanch them in boiling water to soften up and bring out their vibrant green color. We reserved the staulks and grilled them for delicious eats guys. After blanching, into the food processor for a spin. The puree is added into our organic cane sugar ice cream base right after cooking. We give it a generous salting and the solids are strained out through a fine mesh strainer. The asparagus ice cream is ready for churning.

 

 

Nordeast Nectars HoneyTruffle Oil

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Now that the asparagus ice cream is done, we’re ready to make our truffle honey. We were lucky enough to get our hands on some of the last remains of Nordeast Nectars honey. Last year many of their bees died off, but thankfully their queen is still alive. This year Britt Lundberg and her neighborhood crew are making efforts to regroup, and hopefully, with a name change, new packaging, and much hard work, we will see more of this local liquid gold from them. To make the truffle honey, we stir a small amount of truffle oil into the honey. The oil becomes suspended in the honey. The truffle honey gets layered into the pints during packaging.

 

 

Asparagus with Truffle Honey

 

 

Asparagus with Truffle Honey! It’s creamy asparagus ice cream with an itital burst of truffle flavor leading into a sweet honey finish. Testing your inner love, perceptions and adventures in ice cream. Love, FrozBroz

 

Want to try it? You can win one of the only two pints in the world, filled with this fabulous, scratch made craft ice cream in our weekly pint giveaway. Enter your name in the comments section here, or on our facebook page under the posted contest. 2 lucky winners will be drawn randomly on Friday 6/21/13 at 4pm. Winners must be able to pick up locally and give us feedback. Pints must be claimed by email within one week or we will redistribute. 🙂 Good luck!

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