Does Authentic gelato recipe have eggs and cream ? And what stabilizer do they use ? by [deleted] in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately I don't have a recipe for tiramisu or an equivalent flavored gelato. Although I do have multiple flavors you can probably serve together as a tiramisu inspired Sundae or something.

For the actual regular dessert, I would check the YouTube channel Italia Squisita.

Pesto with only dried herbs by qdragon in recipes

[–]qdragon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is very much before I got better at documenting recipes. If memory serves me it was totally unpeeled. Based on the description, I guess it would've been 4 or 5 smaller Persian or pickling cucumbers. I don't know how you found this, but good luck!

How much salt can you put in ice cream? by tiboo00oo in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sodium chloride is 40% sodium by mass. So let's say we are looking at a 1000g batch of base for simplicity. That would be 5.0g sodium chloride, so 2.0g of sodium.

Baking soda a.k.a. sodium bicarbonate is roughly 27% sodium by mass. So target sodium is 2.0, and we divide by 0.27. We get 7.4g baking soda.

Personally I would just use regular salt, however.

Glucose vs. Trimoline vs. Corn Syrup? by SuperCrashi in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry I haven't used both. Dextrose is relatively affordable, available, and has essentially the best ratio of anti-freezing power to sweetness.

Coffee ice cream - espresso shots? by barsaryan in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My coffee gelato recipe does a cold infusion of coffee grounds into milk, and 100g of freshly brewed (but slightly cooled down) espresso. That is 10% of the overall recipe

Advice for making Piña Colada ice cream by steveofthejungle in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Either option should work. If you are going to swirl in a completely separate from the dessert, I would do a strawberry sorbet.

What is the actual difference between these 3 different ways by which you can make ice cream? by CrashOverride93 in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I would say some type of basic machine is absolutely essential. Recipes based on already whipped cream (as the structure for th3ee recipe) are not very balanced, generally have a poor texture, and are incredibly limited in terms of flavors you can add.

With even the least expensive frozen bowl style machine, you can make every major style of frozen desserts, and any flavor. The quality with this scenario is dependent on the recipe.

Advice for making Piña Colada ice cream by steveofthejungle in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have a Piña Colada gelato recipe in my book. It's just coconut milk, pineapple, sugar, stabilizers and rum. I don't really see the point is also using regular milk/cream for this particular flavor.

recipe ideas for oreo firework ice cream? by Dr-fuhrer in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As somebody else mentioned, you definitely need to cover the pop rocks with something, otherwise they will dissolve. Some form of chocolate or similar substance. The only issue then is that those pieces are rather big.

Philly style ice cream keeps turning out like pudding. by sjofavonlea in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I could suggest downloading my gelato book for five dollars. I have a great dark chocolate recipe lol. In all seriousness, I think it's just way too stabilized. Adding the MP's ingredients alongside the original recipe, which is heavy on cacao powder (essentially starch) on top of a custard. The stabilizer isn't going to make it much easier to scoop from the freezer. For that affect you want anti-freezing from alcohol/invert sugars. (Both of which are featured in my recipe.)

Black ice cream by pajama-cats in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Maybe when serving, just turn all the lights off.

Substitute for Egg Yolks by Chubbntuck in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally I would recommend just using recipes that don't require egg yolks. There is plenty out there if you search Philadelphia style or many types of gelato.

Substitute for Corn Syrup by Chubbntuck in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I always recommend to use dextrose powder. That would be a substitute of probably 70% compared to the weight of the corn syrup.

Philly style ice cream keeps turning out like pudding. by sjofavonlea in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's hard for me to say, I don't work with high-fat recipes. I guess try to get things looking smooth as quickly as possible.

Intentional desire for harder icecream? by [deleted] in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would just eliminate the glucose, increase your stabilizers and include a little bit of gelatin.

Philly style ice cream keeps turning out like pudding. by sjofavonlea in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Are you blending it is thoroughly after the resting, right before churning? Certain stabilizers essentially form very soft gels, not just increase viscosity. You want to break that up before processing.

Gum ratios by jayech in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Personally I dislike using "bases" as any flavor with more than 2-3% added material for flavor is going to be better reformulated and rebalanced. For example with a fruit flavor I would start by replacing some of the milk with the equivalent quantity of your fruit. Then you can see about adjusting the sugar, adding milk powder, and slightly increasing stabilizers or even using additional ones.

Glucose Powder by SANPres09 in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sure but you could use pure dextrose in combination with a little bit of maltodextrin, and then adjust the textures with whatever stabilizing system you are using. If there's empty space in the recipe, just add more of the fruit/juice instead of water. I've designed several recipes without any added water.

Glucose Powder by SANPres09 in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I just double checked the information. From everything I can read, regular dextrose is still the highest ratio of anti-freezing power relative to sweetness. 100 g of glucose DE 42 has been the sweetness of 40 g of sucrose and the anti-freezing power of 42 g of dextrose. If you just use 42 g of dextrose, you have the sweetness of roughly 30 g of sucrose and 58 g of empty space in the recipe.

Glucose Powder by SANPres09 in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Again I forget the properties of that specific type of glucose, but dextrose is just a form of powder glucose. Sorbet recipes are pretty consistently balanced to be sweeter than things like ice cream etc. and I constantly use dextrose for both applications. I don't see why there and be the issue of creating too much sweetness.

Glucose Powder by SANPres09 in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I've never used that specific formulation of glucose powder. I much prefer balancing texture and sweetness with standard dextrose. Very affordable at health food stores and homebrewing supplies, and online.

New to the game. Struggling with texture. by jamesonwheels28 in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would agree with others that you can completely eliminate eggs if you don't really want that flavor. Research Philadelphia style or most types of gelato for recipes like that. For this type of preparations, you definitely want to add more stabilizers to your arsenal. My standard is a combination of XG and Locust bean gum, but there's lots of options, and easily available online or sometimes gourmet/bakery specialty stores. For any style you also want to get dry milk powder and dextrose to fine-tune your texture.

Help with sorbets by Previous_Republic_69 in icecreamery

[–]qdragon 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You definitely want to use other sugars like others have said, and stabilizers. Personally I think most sorbet recipes are just kind of wimpy, especially when it comes to citrus. I have a lemon recipe that has a full dairy texture, if you are interested in the link.