Showing posts with label ice cream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ice cream. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 January 2015

Iced Vo-vo Ice Cream

With Australia Day coming up next week, Facebook and the internet is being swamped with pictures of lamingtons, pavlovas, prawn dishes, kangaroo burgers and the like.

It's nice to get in the spirit of the day, so I thought I'd work on a recipe for my variation on a classic Aussie treat. Iced vo-vos are particularly Australian and I know that my husband loves them. Why not come up with an ice cream version, which is probably much better suited to enjoying on a hot day than a biscuit with a cup of tea!





This recipe is really quite easy to make. I made the biscuits and the raspberry sauce myself and then stirred them, pink marshmallows and coconut into bought vanilla icecream. If you wanted to get super fancy, you could make your own ice-cream and marshmallows. I don't have an ice cream machine and didn't have the time to make my own marshmallow. Iced vo-vos should be fun, after all!

If you were really short on time, you could always use a packet of milk arrowroot biscuits and shop bought raspberry sauce or jam. The flavours would still be delicious!

You won't need all of the biscuit base or sauce in the ice cream, so you can experiment with other combinations to come up with your own dessert. Maybe iced vo-vo sandwiches?

Just make sure you leave the vanilla ice cream out of the freezer long enough to soften before you try to stir in the components. If you like more jam or more marshmallow, just add a bit extra. Tip it all back into the original tub and then freeze again for a few hours before serving.

This is the perfect dessert to have on Australia Day, or at any time over summer when you feel like a sweet treat.














Iced Vo-Vo Ice Cream


Biscuit base

60g butter, softened
1/2 cup caster sugar
1 egg
3/4 cup plain flour
3/4 cup SR flour

Preheat oven to 180 degrees. Line a large baking tray with baking paper.
Beat butter and sugar in a bowl with a mixer until creamy.
Add egg and continue to beat until smooth and fluffy.
Stir through sifted flour until it forms a soft dough.
Place in the fridge for 15 minutes to rest. This is really important on a hot day, otherwise the dough is too soft.
After 15 minutes, roll the dough out onto the baking paper directly into a rectangle about 5mm thick. You might need a sprinkling of flour to stop it sticking.




Bake in the oven for 12-15 minutes or until golden brown.
Remove from the oven and transfer the biscuit on the baking paper to a wire rack to cool completely.

Raspberry sauce

1 cup fresh or frozen raspberries
1 Tbs caster sugar

Place berries and sugar in a saucepan and heat gently, stirring to dissolve the sugar.
Bring to a simmer and cook until the berries release their juices and start to break down. You want a thin jammy consistency.
Allow to cool slightly, then push through a fine sieve to remove the seeds. Discard the seeds.
Allow the sauce to cool completely. If it seems too thick, add a tiny bit of water to thin.


1 litre vanilla ice cream
1/4 cup desiccated coconut
1 cup pink marshmallows, finely chopped

Allow the ice cream to soften and tip into a large bowl.
Stir through coconut, marshmallows and as much of the crumbled biscuit as you like.
Drizzle over the raspberry sauce and gently stir through so that you create a ripple.




Spoon it back into the original container and return to the freezer for a couple of hours to set.

Enjoy with a little more of the raspberry sauce over the top and a piece of biscuit poking out the side.

Perfect summer indulgence!


Monday, 23 December 2013

Christmas Cheer

Christmas is a time for eating way too much, but I wouldn't have it any other way! There are lots of traditions in my family and my husband's family, so we do tend to eat the same things every year. I love this and for me, Christmas wouldn't be Christmas without roast turkey, glazed ham, pudding and brandy custard.

Both of our families have European heritage, so we celebrate on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. My family are interstate, so one year we celebrate with my family, the other year with my husband's family. This year we are staying in Melbourne, which means I can be a bit more creative with what I make to eat.

This year, we have decided to do a roast duck and a roast turkey on Christmas Eve. The duck was our idea as we eat it quite a bit and love the richness of the meat.  Orange and duck are a match made in heaven, so an orange sauce just had to be made to go with the bird. Duck a l'orange is a bit retro and a bit old fashioned, but I love the flavour. A few years ago I came across a recipe for a simple version of the sauce using fresh orange and marmalade. It gives a beautifully citrus flavour, but also some sweetness and a little bitterness.  Perfect to foil the richness of the duck.  Normally I would make the sauce and simmer the already cooked duck breasts in the sauce for a few minutes to take on some of it's flavour. To serve with the roast, I'm just going to put the sauce in a jug on the side, so people can help themselves.

I have also made this sauce to have with pork fillet, and it is delicious. It would go nicely with some chicken too.




Easy Orange Sauce For Duck


2 oranges
4 Tbs honey
4 Tbs red wine vinegar
4 shallots, finely diced
4 Tbs orange marmalade
400ml chicken stock
Salt and pepper to taste

Zest the oranges into long strips and place in a small bowl. Cover with boiling water and set aside for 3 minutes. Drain.
Cut the ends off the oranges, stand on the end and then using a sharp knife, remove the skin and pith from the fruit.
Cut the orange segments between the membrane to separate them and reserve in a bowl. 
Squeeze any extra juices from the orange into the same bowl.
Heat the honey in a large frying pan over medium heat.
Add the vinegar, shallots, marmalade, chicken stock, reserved orange juice and zest and simmer for about 8 minutes, or until reduced slightly.
Add the orange segments to the sauce and season to taste.
Remove from the heat, cool slightly, then pour into a jug to serve.

If you are making the sauce just before you serve the duck, add any meat juices from carving to add some extra richness of flavour.


Caramel Ice Cream With Speculaas and Fruit


Dessert on Christmas Eve is not set and depends on who has been allocated to make it and what the weather is looking like. Tomorrow night isn't going to be that warm, but when I saw the recipe for this ice cream cake, I just knew that I had to make it.




My Kitchen Stories is a foodie blog that I've been following for a while now, with a collection of amazing recipes. Tania wrote about this caramel ice cream cake a few weeks ago and how easy it was to make without needing an ice cream machine. Not having an ice cream machine, I thought this would be perfect. My husband's family are Dutch, so the flavours were just right. Please check out My Kitchen Stories for some fantastic recipes and wonderful foodie photos.

I made my caramel by boiling a tin of condensed milk for 3 hours, but for an even easier version, you could buy a tin of caramel from the shop.

I am going to serve my version topped with fresh cherries, strawberries and blueberries, with a crumbling of speculaas biscuits on top. I can't wait to try it! From the taste of the mixture when I licked the bowl, this is definitely going to become a regular in our house.


1 tin of caramel condensed milk
400ml thickened cream
150g speculaas biscuits, crushed into chunks

Beat caramel and cream in an electric mixer on medium speed until thick and creamy.
Gently stir through biscuit pieces.
Pour the mixture into a lined springform tin and smooth the surface.
Freeze overnight.
Carefully remove from the tin and place on a serving plate.
Decorate with fresh berries or other fruit, extra speculaas biscuit pieces and whipped cream, if desired.


Cherry Ice Cream


On Christmas Day this year, we have been asked to bring trifle and ice cream. I am not playing around with the trifle, so it is just going to be layers of sponge roll, jelly and poached fresh cherries and strawberries with custard and a topping of toasted flaked almonds.

The ice cream however, is where I can get a bit creative.  Cherries are so beautiful around Christmas time and so nothing could be better than fresh cherry ice cream. I have made this recipe before and it is so easy, especially when you don't have an ice cream machine. It really is like a frozen meringue with cherry pieces throughout. Light and delicious!




300g fresh cherries
1/2 cup caster sugar
2 egg whites

Pit cherries and roughly chop.
Place in a container and freeze overnight.
Place cherries in the bowl of an electric mixer with a whisk and beat on medium for a few minutes to break up the chunks.
Add the sugar and egg whites and whisk on high speed for 5 minutes, or until doubled in volume and meringue looking.
Spoon into a a freezer proof container and freeze overnight.

This ice cream can be served straight from the freezer as it doesn't set particularly hard. Make sure you keep it in the freezer on a hot day, so it doesn't melt.

Freshly made, it would also be great as a mousse filling for brandy snap baskets or mini tarts. You could also serve it as an alternative to cream on fruit salad or even very decadent pancakes.