Double Chocolate Cookie Ice Cream

48 Comments on Double Chocolate Cookie Ice Cream

Double Chocolate Cookie Ice Cream

Food bloggers – in fact most people in the food world in general – tend towards exaggeration.

Every day we’re presented with the smoothest, creamiest ice cream, the crumbliest bars, unbeatable cookies and incredible bread, each recipe a must-make, a life-changer and better than anything that’s ever been eaten before.

Double Chocolate Cookie Ice Cream

There’s a reason that we do this. That old adage ‘sell the sizzle not the sausage’ exists for a reason – as humans we respond to the sensory and it’s these rich, emotive descriptions that will keep us reading a post, encourage us to try a recipe or recommend it to a friend.

There can also be a second, more obvious reason for hyperbole: that it’s true. If you read a lot of recipes this might require the casting off of cynicism, but if you trust someone and they tell you that a recipe is the best, then you know you’re onto a winner.

This recipe is the best. I hope you trust me.

Double Chocolate Cookie Ice Cream

When it comes to chocolate in desserts, nine times out of ten I’ll go for dark. The slightly bitter, rich, strong flavour works wonders in mousses, cakes, tarts and puddings and even stands up to being frozen: I’ve got recipes for both dark chocolate ice cream and dark chocolate sorbet which I thought would be impossible to beat.

That’s not to say I don’t like milk chocolate, I just prefer it in the form of bars. It’s creaminess can mean it’s tricky to work with when melted and if combined with butter, sugar, flour and other ingredients, it can somehow lose it’s magic. No such problem here.

Double Chocolate Cookie Ice Cream

This ice cream is a bar of milk chocolate in frozen form. It’s silky, thick and creamy, almost velvet with a smooth, mousse-like texture that coats your tongue and glides down your throat. Chewy crumbs of chocolate cookie, caramel-like from muscovado sugar and crunchy with nuts (can’t be bothered to make ice cream? These cookies are heaven on their own) melt into folds of milk chocolate ice cream making every mouthful more delicious than the last.

On eating his first mouthful (standing in front of the freezer before dinner, tub in one hand, teaspoon in the other), Carnivorous Fiancé declared it the best ice cream I’d ever made. This is something you may have heard before, in fact it tends to crop up every time I try out a new ice cream flavour (every cook needs a biased supporter on side), so I’d normally take this kind of comment with a pinch of salt. But this time it’s true. All I can say is this chocolate ice cream is amazing. Make it.

Double Chocolate Cookie Ice Cream

Double Chocolate Cookie Ice Cream
(makes just over one litre)

The recipe below will make more cookies than you need for the ice cream. I’m sure you can find a way to use them up.

Ingredients:

For the cookies (adapted from a Nigel Slater recipe)
125g dark chocolate, chopped
75g milk chocolate, chopped
75g unsalted butter, room temperature
225g light muscovado sugar
2 large free-range eggs, beaten
1 tsp vanilla extract
Pinch salt
50g hazelnuts, toasted and ground
150g self-raising flour

For the ice cream (adapted from The Perfect Scoop)
225g milk chocolate, minimum 30% cocoa, chopped
400ml double cream
4 large egg yolks
400ml full fat milk
125g golden caster sugar
Pinch salt
5 chocolate cookies (recipe above, or any good-quality, slightly squidgy cookie)

Method:
For the cookies
Preheat the oven to 180 degrees C. Line two baking trays with baking parchment.

Melt the chocolate in a medium bowl suspended over a saucepan of simmering water then set aside to cool slightly.

Cream together the butter and sugar. Add the vanilla extract and salt to the beaten eggs then add to the butter and sugar mixture a little at a time, beating constantly. Add the melted chocolate and continue to mix until combined.

Add the hazelnuts and flour to the chocolate mixture and fold to combine. Place large, heaped tablespoons of the mixture on to the prepared baking parchment – you should get 12 – 14 large cookies. Try to keep the mixture as heaped as possible – they will spread considerably in the oven.

Bake for 10-12 minutes, removing from the oven half way through baking time to swap the trays and push any over-spreading edges back in. Remove the still-soft cookies from the oven and set aside to cool. As they cool they will harden a little – once cool enough to lift without breaking, transfer to a wire rack.

For the ice cream
Melt the chocolate and cream together in a large heatproof bowl suspended over a saucepan of simmering water. Stir until smooth then remove from the heat and place a mesh sieve over the top.

In a separate medium bowl, whisk the egg yolks. In a medium saucepan, warm the milk, sugar and salt until the sugar is dissolved. Slowly pour the warm mixture into the egg yolks, whisk to combine then return the whole mixture to the saucepan.

Stir the mixture constantly over a medium heat until thickened and smooth (it should coat the back of a spatula). Be careful not to overheat the custard or it will split. Remove from the heat and pour through the sieve onto the chocolate and cream mixture.

Place the bowl of chocolate custard in a sink or bowl filled with ice and whisk until cool then chill in the fridge overnight.

Churn the ice cream according to the manufacturer’s instructions. While the ice cream is churning, crumble your cookies into tiny pieces and scatter a few in the bottom of the container in which you plan to freeze your ice cream. Layer the just-churned ice cream with crumbled cookie then smooth the top flat and freeze until ready to serve.

48 RESPONSES TO Double Chocolate Cookie Ice Cream

  1. My ice cream maker is churning away as I type … I have significant ice-cream envy!!

  2. what a great post! and i tend to go for ice cream with some texture to it, so yours here looks fabulous!

  3. Erin -

    Oh wow, this does look like the best!

  4. Wow. I definitely believe your statement that this is the best. Possibly, no definitely, ever. I don’t have an ice cream churner, but I’m tempted to make this ice cream in my freezer, with a few hours and a hand whisk. And plenty of patience. Or, I could just invest in an ice cream maker, as I am sure that I’ll want to make this again and again. And again. Thanks for sharing xx

  5. Okay – I absolutely have to try this.
    I haven’t made ice cream in ages – this is definitely next on my list!

  6. I guess it wouldn’t hurt to try it, you know, just to test the ‘best’ theory ;D

  7. Generally I am not the biggest fan of chocolate ice-cream but your descriptions are making me salivate. Definitely pinning this one to try.

  8. Coincidentally, I’m churning Turron ice cream as I write! I’m sold on your ice cream – a bit like gianduja with added decadence. I will certainly be trying it. Thanks, Tracey

  9. What would you suggest if you don’t own a churn? I would love to make this,bbut I don’t currently own a churn. It looks like perfection. 🙂

  10. This looks absolutely amazing! As I would expect from a recipe involving our Ice Cream Bible 🙂

    It’s difficult when you come across something that’s superlative – it’s so hard to get it to come across properly. I’m struggling with it in my post for tonight.

  11. Jeannie -

    What a delicious sounding ice cream, and extra cookies to serve it with. I found this method of making ice cream without a machine just before Christmas and it worked very well for me so I will try it again with your recipe.
    http://www.mydish.co.uk/user-recipe/58591/Ice%20Cream%20Without%20An%20Ice%20Cream%20Maker
    Hopefully others will find it useful. Mydish is a wonderful resource that a friend told me about. I am new to your Little Loaf site, also recommended to me, and very much enjoying it. I am making a list of things to try!

  12. Amy -

    I too usually go for dark chocolate but discovered last year that milk chocolate is great for ice cream. I didn’t add cookies though so may need to try this!

  13. This looks yummy. I’ve made ice cream a few times now but I haven’t gotten past the vanilla stage yet. I think your recipe has definitely inspired me.

  14. Great recipe! Seems Nige likes it too! Can’t wait to get my maker back.

  15. This does sound amazing. Perhaps it’s one for when we are not trying to be healthy…and when we have an ice cream maker! Good that Nigel likes it too 😉

  16. Jen -

    A tweet from Nigel Slater in praise of your ice cream – brilliant!

  17. cupcake girl -

    That looks delish….i’m cold and still want it, it looks that good!
    My Cupcake Habit

  18. When we live in a masssssive house, an ice cream maker will be first on my list of ‘new purchases’ (infact I wonder if it could be added to our wedding list? Light bulb moment!!). And a tweet from Nige? Ace stuff!

  19. You are this vegan’s dirty little foodie secret! I can look but won’t touch 😉

  20. Amy -

    Haha, thing is, when you say this is the best ice cream you’ve made all year/ever mad, I KNOW it’s some of the best out there because you make consistently make some of the best ice cream on the internet. What makes this one so good? Is it the creamy milk chocolate with the chewyness of the cookies? I have been looking for a good milk chocolate ice cream base (to infuse baileys with), and this one looks great. But now I’m wondering if I could skip the cookie part… that sounds too good!

  21. Linda -

    OMG I was starving before I read you post….now I’m delirious!!

  22. I do believe you and I am now dying to try this out. It must feel great to have discovered something as good as this and even better when Nigel Slater comments on it too!

  23. What a lovely post. Bloggers do tend to exaggerate but I think it’s done with the best intentions really 🙂 Fab tweet from Mr Slater himself too! Out of interest which ice cream maker do you use?

    • It’s a Cuisinart Duo. It’s quite good but if I bought another one I’d probably get a larger, single unit container.

      • Oh nice! Don’t have the space for a machine unfortunatly as my freezer is the height of an orange but one day I will splash out on one!

  24. Rebecca -

    Another great post. Food bloggers may appear to exaggerate at times in their use of superlatuves but I think it is for good reason and I seem to trust then more than books: they are just ordinary people, at home, like me and you know that when they post a recipe it is tried and tested, maybe with their own personal notes / tips that wouldn’t be in a book. Also, I think we all get to know our favourites and their style of writing and cooking, and can therefore trust their judgements. For example, you have never disappointed me! This ice cream sounds fabulous. I have been pondering the purchase of an ice cream maker but think I may try the tip from Jean to save me money and worktop space. I have never seen that site before but it looks good. Keep up the wonderful work LL! X

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  26. Sacha -

    I trust you, I trust you! You are so right about the superlatives. I try to edit myself on that as much as possible. But sometimes there’s no way around it. Sometimes, it’s simply the best. I can take of leave milk chocolate, but it certainly has its place, and I often stop at the milk chocolate ice cream page in The Perfect Scoop. I always say “next time.” But I think the time is now, especially with those deliciously dark cookie mix-ins!

  27. Love it, definitely will try it, since it does not need for ice cream maker cause i don’t have one. Thanks for sharing.

  28. OH WOW! This is amazing… can you come to my house and make this for me now! x

  29. Kitty Kat -

    Wow! Another gorgeous ice cream and I love the Nigel and David combo! Quick question! Do the cookie bits in the ice cream soften over time? Ha ha! Maybe you don’t know if it all got eaten in 24 hours!

    • They’re quite squidgy cookies to begin with but yes, they do soften after a few days 🙂

  30. I am a fan of cookies, chocolate, and ice cream. As a result, this post makes me realllllllllly hungry. It sounds decadent and wonderful! I always like my ice creams nice and rich like this, I figure if I’m having ice cream I might as well go all the way and have a fantastically rich flavored one 🙂

  31. Amy -

    So I made this milk chocolate ice cream base over the weekend. We had amassed some chocolate-oatmeal chewy bars and we crumbled those into the ice cream instead of Nigel’s chocolate cookies. It was great! Although I was kind of rushed in making it– so although it was amazing, the base alone with our cookie add-didn’t make for the best ice cream ever.. 🙂 I want to make this again, properly, with both components here someday soon. Thanks for the recipe!

    • Yay, so glad you enjoyed it! You’ll definitely have to make it again with the chocolate cookie mix in though, so good 🙂

  32. I don´t think I ever made milk chocolate ice cream, because I always go for dark too. But I´ll take your word for it and make this Kate. It looks fantastic and some cookies inside make it better! I like the `sell the sizzle not the sausage´, never heard it before.

  33. I love the idea of the smooth and creamy milk chocolate ice cream with the chunks of cookie running through it. I’m a sucker for proper milk chocolate too so this sounds right up my street.

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  36. Pat -

    I made this for my grandchildren at the weekend. Everyone loved it and had three large scoops each, and we had the other biscuits the next day. My four year old grandson said it was “awesome” and “the best ever”. I used the tip from Jeannie and it worked a treat. I am now planning to test it with more of your delicious sounding ice creams. Many thanks.

    • What a lovely comment to receive! So pleased you liked the ice cream and your grandson clearly has impeccable taste 🙂 If you’re looking at other recipes, I highly recommend the honeyed pistachio one and the salted caramel rolos!

  37. Hi there. The current Food on Friday on Carole’s Chatter is collecting links to posts about ice cream and sorbets – or anything similar like gelato. I do hope you link this in. This is the link . Please do check out some of the other links – there are a lot of good ones already. Have a great week.

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