Sour cherry ice cream is just about the summeriest ice cream you can make. This version from the book Scoop Adventures is excellent!
A no-egg ice cream base ensures the sweet-tart fruit flavor really shines through in this homemade cherry ice cream!
Another one to check out is my chocolate cherry almond gelato
For ease of browsing here are all of my ice cream recipes (and a few ice cream cakes). Thanks for stopping by!
Disclosure: I was given a copy of Scoop Adventures by the fine folks at Page Street Publishing. Thanks guys!
Why This Recipe?
One of the things I really like about this recipe is that it is not a custard base, meaning that it doesn’t contain eggs.
The base is a mixture of sugar, milk, and heavy cream that allows the sweet-tart cherry flavor to really shine through.
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I also love the cookbook this recipe comes from.
Scoop Adventures is a delightful book with recipes inspired by or adapted from recipes from great ice cream parlors across all 50 states.
The book is divided into geographical regions, so if you’re hankering for southern treats or maybe something from the Pacific Northwest, it’s easy to find a recipe to fit the bill.
Of course, the sour cherry ice cream recipe comes from Colorado, but it would be right at home in Michigan as well. And it certainly was right at home in my freezer and in my mouth!
How to Make It
Ingredients
Here’s what you need:
- sour cherries: fresh or frozen. If you can’t find tart cherries, macerate pitted sweet cherries with sugar, lemon juice, and 1/2 teaspoon citric acid
- granulated sugar: for sweetness. Sugar also affects the set of the ice cream. If it’s too sweet, it will never completely freeze.
- lemon juice: provides balance and a pop of acid
- heavy cream:
- whole milk: You can also substitute half and half instead of using heavy cream plus whole milk
Procedure
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This is a very easy ice cream to put together. The components, made from the ingredients above, are simple:
- a homemade sour cherry syrup
- a Philadelphia-style (no egg, no starch) ice cream base
- Make the cherry syrup: simply macerate pitted cherries in a portion of the sugar and all the lemon juice for several hours.
Puree the mixture in a blender, and strain it out.
Reserve some of the cherry skins for texture in the final ice cream. - Make the base: cook the milk, cream, and the rest of the sugar until the sugar dissolves and the mixture comes to a boil.
Chill. - Combine the cold cherry syrup with the cream base
- Churn in your ice cream maker.
- Mix in some of the reserved cherry skins for texture and added flavor.
The resulting ice cream is a lovely deep pink and the flavor is pure cherries and cream.
Q & A
Yes, fresh or frozen cherries will work here. If using frozen, there’s no reason to thaw them first before making the recipe. Just dump the sugar and lemon juice in with the frozen cherries, let them sit on the counter until thawed, and then let them finish macerating in the fridge.
You can absolutely substitute sweet cherries, fresh or frozen. The recipe suggests adding some citric acid to the mixture to approximate the flavor of tart cherries, but you don’t have to do that. You’ll still end up with a lovely sweet cherry ice cream.
Churning in an ice cream maker is certainly convenient, but if you don’t have one, you can still make this ice cream. Once you combine the cherry juice with the base, place in a metal bowl (to freeze faster) and place in the freezer. Whisk it very well every 30-45 minutes until it’s the consistency of soft-serve ice cream. Then press plastic wrap directly on the surface of the ice cream and freeze at least four hours if not overnight.
For best texture, finish your ice cream within about a week. Any longer, and it may start to get a little icy, especially if you’ve taken it out of the freezer a lot and it has partially thawed and then refrozen.
PRO TIP: If using sweet cherries and you don’t want to special order citric acid, substitute Fruit Fresh, which is readily available in grocery stores, for the citric acid.
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Recipe from Scoop Adventures by Lindsay Clendaniel (Page Street Publishing; March 2014) Printed with permission
Colorado Sour Cherry Ice Cream
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Ingredients
- 3 cups 465g sour cherries, pitted
- 1 ¼ cups 250g sugar, divided
- 1 tbsp 15ml lemon juice
- 2 cups 473ml heavy cream
- 1 cup 237ml whole milk
Instructions
- Combine cherries with ¾ cup (150g) of the sugar and lemon juice. Allow the cherries to macerate in the refrigerator for approximately 6 hours, stirring every hour. Purée the macerated cherries in a blender. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve to remove the cherry skins; reserve the juice. Reserve 2 tablespoons (30g) of the cherry skins and discard the remaining skins.
- Fill a large bowl with ice water and set aside. Combine the remaining 1/2 cup (100g) sugar with the heavy cream and whole milk and place over medium heat. Bring the milk mixture to a low boil. Cook until the sugar dissolves, 3 minutes. Remove from the heat, transfer to a medium bowl and set in the ice water bath to cool, 20 minutes, whisking occasionally. Cover and refrigerate until well chilled, at least 4 hours or overnight.
- When you are ready to churn, combine the reserved sour cherry juice and the milk mixture in an ice cream maker and churn according to the manufacturer’s instructions. When churning is near completion, add the reserved cherry skins (adjust based on personal preference). Complete churning, transfer to a freezer-safe container and freeze until firm, at least 4 hours.
Did You Make Any Changes?
Notes
Nutrition
Hi, y’all! I hope you’ve enjoyed this post and hopefully also learned a thing or two.
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Thanks for spending some time with me today. Enjoy that homemade cherry ice cream, okay?
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Join in Today!
I am now following @Scoopmuse on twitter.
I left a comment on her FB page.
We just made ice cream on Sunday with a recipe from Jeni’s book. It came out so good. It had cream cheese, and buttermilk in it and we switched the roasted strawberries for roasted blackberries because we had some in the freezer from last summer. Would love to try some in the book, because I am excited to try new flavor combos.
That does it, I have *got* to get Jeni’s book! And roasted blackberry sounds fabulous, Karen! Good luck in the giveaway!
You must. I also saw recently she has another one coming out this year, though I think it might have more to do with ice cream desserts. Lord give me strength to resist all the temptations or up my metabolism.
Right?! Having an ice cream maker is seriously bad news. Or good news, depending on your perspective! lol
I follow Lindsay on Twitter
I follow Lindsay on Facebook
I have not made ice cream in YEARS! My fav was always Strawberry!
It’s time for you to get back in the habit, Denise–strawberry sounds like a great place to start! Good luck in the giveaway. =)
Sour cherries for the win! Your ice cream looks fabulous!
Lots of good recipes in that book; I’m glad it’s a part of my collection now, Christine! 🙂
I have made homemade ice cream. I have a little single serve maker that I use to make “ice cream” using almond milk for my vegan FIL.
I love that! There’s at least one vegan ice cream in the book, and I’m sure many of the “regular” ones can be made by subbing in almond milk or coconut milk and thickening the base with some starch rather than eggs. 🙂
I am now following @scoopmuse
I liked Scoop Adventures!
Love Cherry Ice Cream and always, always order it (one scoop cherry, one scoop milk chocolate) when we go out for pizza. Yours looks perfect!!! Yum!
We have a small, hand crank ice cream machine and love it. My favorite has to be the simple (no cooking an ice cream base) coffee ice cream. Fabulous! I also tried making a cheese ice cream once and it was pretty cool, interesting and wonderful (once one got used to the weird flavor).
I remember reading about your cheese ice cream in PS. See, I pay attention! 🙂 I have an idea for a “cherry covered chocolate” ice cream… =) If you win, I’ll bring you your copy to Orlando!
i follow lindsay on twitter as well.
i like scoop adventures on facebook
i’ve never made ice cream but i’d like to. my favorite flavor is mint cookie.
I love mint ice cream! Doubly refreshing! Best of luck in the giveaway, Itzia!
I am following Lindsay on Twitter.