Bourbon Peach and Pretzel Ice Cream with Caramel

No-churn homemade vanilla bean ice cream that can be made with or without an ice cream maker. Rich and creamy ice cream base is swirled with bourbon peach compote, homemade salted caramel, salty pretzels.

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Um hello summer! There is no better way to celebrate long sunny days than with fistfuls of ice cream so here we are again with another new NO CHURN ice cream recipe for you! I love making ice cream, it’s a fondness I developed working in pastry kitchens where almost any plated dessert can be elevated with a cool, creamy component. I love that ice cream is so versatile. A simple anglaise base can be steeped with literally any flavor your heart desires (I’m serious, there is an ice cream shop on our block with mushroom ice cream on the menu) and you can mix in whatever you like. Always in the words of our culinary queen Ina Garten, how easy is that?

Today’s ice cream screams summer—it’s filled with a bourbon peach compote, swirled with homemade salted caramel, and studded with salty, crunchy, pretzels for the most July vibe around. So let’s jump in!

how to make homemade salted caramel

Once you get over the slight anxiety that cooking sugar can produce, caramel is actually pretty simple and it’s something that can always find a home in your refrigerator. For this recipe, we’re making a wet caramel, which means a bit of water is added along with the sugar. This makes it a little more difficult to burn and crystallize. We are also adding lemon juice, which in the pastry world is called a ‘doctor’ and it too gets in the way of sugar crystallization. Sugar, water, and lemon juice are simmered WITHOUT STIRRING until the sugar is dissolved and the mixture starts to turn a bit golden. At this point, you are allowed to gently slosh the pan around to ensure even cooking. We’re going to continue to cook the caramel until it’s a deep amber color, remove it from the heat and whisk in some heavy cream. Cook it for one more minute and then add the butter and a pinch of salt. Let it cool completely and then drizzle it over everything or just eat it by the spoonful.

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how to make bourbon peach compote

Compotes are a fun, easy way to use up fruit that has started to lose its glamour. Slightly softened peaches, strawberries a little past their prime, plums with a couple of bruises—they can all benefit from the compote treatment. A compote is simply fruit cooked in a syrup, and it is different from a jam in that the fruit usually stays in whole or larger pieces. For this recipe, I wanted a very peach-forward ice cream situation so I sliced my peaches in wedges. Martin told me that this was too peachy for him and he would have preferred his peaches cut into smaller cubes, so please feel free to cut your peaches any way you would like. Whatever your peach sizing preference, pop them in a pot with a little brown sugar, lemon juice, and salt and cook them down low and slow for about 40 minutes until they are all slouchy and syrupy and soft. Toss in some bourbon and call it a day. Cool them and store them in a sealed jar in the fridge for up to a week.

P.S. This will make more compote than you need for the ice cream so you can spoon the rest over waffles or pancakes or top your ice cream with even more compote…no one is judging you around here.

making ice cream without an ice cream maker (or with because you can do both)

I’ve already written quite a bit on making ice cream without an ice cream maker and this blog post is getting a little long and clunky, so I’ll keep it short and sweet today. (If you’d like to real a whole long spiel, check out all of my other ice cream recipes here.)

To make homemade ice cream, we start with a creme anglaise base. This is simply a cooked custard thickened with egg yolks that we flavor and chill. Once the anglaise is very cold, we are able to whip it until its thick and fluffy and has medium peaks. All of our goodies are either folded in or layered on top and it takes an overnight freeze in a loaf pan or baking dish. That’s it!

*If you’d like to make this with an ice cream maker, simply make the anglaise base and then follow the instructions for churning on your ice cream maker.

Yield: one quart of ice cream
Author: Anna Ramiz
Bourbon Peach and Pretzel Ice Cream with Caramel

Bourbon Peach and Pretzel Ice Cream with Caramel

Prep time: 45 MinCook time: 30 MinInactive time: 14 HourTotal time: 15 H & 15 M
No-church homemade vanilla bean ice cream that can be made with or without an ice cream maker. Rich and creamy ice cream base is swirled with bourbon peach compote, homemade salted caramel, salty pretzels.

Ingredients

for the caramel
  • 1/2 cup (100 g) granulated sugar
  • 1/2 tsp lemon juice
  • 2 tbsp water
  • 1/4 cup heavy cream
  • 2 tbsp unsalted butter
  • Pinch of salt
for the bourbon peach compote
  • 2 lbs fresh peaches
  • 2/3 cup (142 g) brown sugar
  • Juice of one lemon
  • Pinch of salt
  • 2 tbsp bourbon
for the ice cream
  • 2 cup (460 g) heavy cream
  • 3/4 cup (150 g) granulated sugar
  • 4 egg yolks
  • Pinch of salt
  • 2 tsp vanilla bean powder or 1 tbsp vanilla extract
  • 1 cup pretzels, crumbled
  • 3/4 cup-1 cup bourbon peach compote, recipe included
  • 1/4 cup caramel, recipe included

Instructions

to make the caramel
  1. Combine the sugar, water, and lemon juice in a small sauce pan. Gently jostle the saucepan so that all of the sugar is moistened, but do not stir.
  2. Place saucepan over medium-high heat and cook, without stirring, until the sugar is dissolved and the caramel begins to turn golden in color. Swirl the saucepan gently, and then continue to cook until caramel is a deep amber color.
  3. Remove from heat and gradually stream in heavy cream, whisking continually. When all of the cream has been added, return caramel to heat and cook for 30 seconds to 1 minute more.
  4. Remove caramel from heat again and stir in butter and salt. Let cool completely.
to make the bourbon peach compote
  1. Thinly slice peaches* and place in a large, heavy-bottomed pot. Add brown sugar, lemon juice, and salt. Stir to combine.
  2. Bring to a boil over medium heat, and then reduce heat to a simmer. Simmer for 30-40 minutes, until peaches are broken down and syrup has thickened. Stir in bourbon and let cool completely.
  3. *If you’d prefer to dice peaches instead of slicing, that works too! It’s personal preference when it comes to size.*
to make the ice cream base
  1. Place heavy cream in a medium saucepan and heat over medium-low heat until cream is beginning to bubble around the edges of the pan and is hot to the touch.
  2. While the cream is heating, whisk together salt, vanilla powder, egg yolks, and sugar in a large bowl. When the cream is hot, slowly stream it into the egg mixture, whisking continually the whole time. Transfer the entire mixture back into the saucepan and return to heat.
  3. Cook, stirring continually with a wooden spoon, over low-medium heat until anglaise sauce is thickened, but do not bring to a boil. You can test if the sauce is ready by wiping your finger through the sauce along the back of the wooden spoon. If the line your finger creates holds, the sauce is ready. If it drips, continue cooking.
  4. When the sauce is sufficiently thickened, strain into a large mixing bowl, cover, and refrigerate.
  5. Whipping and chilling: When the anglaise sauce is cold, transfer to a mixer and begin whipping. Whip until soft peaks form and then return to the refrigerator.
to assemble the ice cream
  1. Place the whipped cream anglaise in a large bowl. Gently fold in 1/2 cup of the bourbon peach compote and 1/2 cup of crushed pretzels.
  2. Pour half of the mixture into a 9x5” loaf pan. Smooth the top into an even layer. Drizzle half of the caramel on top and swirl with a knife or a skewer. Dollop a few tablespoons more of the peach compote on top and another handful of crushed pretzels.
  3. Pour the rest of the ice cream into the pan and repeat with the remaining caramel, peach compote and pretzels.
  4. Place a piece of plastic wrap directly on the surface of the ice cream and then wrap the pan tightly in plastic wrap. Freeze overnight (or for 8-12 hours).
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Spiced Caramel Chocolate Lava Cakes

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It’s Valentine’s Day Weekend and that means really only one thing in the food world—chocolate. I took a poll on my Instagram stories at the beginning of the week asking if people preferred chocolate desserts or pink desserts and I truly don’t even know why I asked. Chocolate is always the winner. My perfect Valentine’s dessert (or honestly anytime dessert) is very simple, very rich, very gooey, and often salted. So basically, little lava cakes.

Back about 7 years ago or so, I pinned a recipe on Pinterest for molten cakes baked in muffin tins. It was from a very random blog, with a poor, artificially lit photo (one that would never stand on my carefully curated Pinterest boards of today!), and my sister-in-law decided to try out the recipe. They were a hit. We made them for party desserts. We made them for my other sister-in-law’s freezer when she had her first baby. I took them on road trips. We just became best friends. And then, like Jessie and her little girl owner in Toy Story 2, we grew apart. Other flashy recipes caught my attention. I started laminating doughs and layering cakes and going to pastry school. Fast forward to about a year ago, I had a craving for lava cakes and set out to sort through thousands of pins to find the recipe, and it was gone! Of course, I had never written the recipe down, so I set out to make my own perfect little molten lava cake recipe and here we are. These lava cakes are the product of lots of testing, lots of suffering through too dry or not-cooked-enough cakes, but we made it friends.

about the spiced caramel

You guys know I can’t just give you a normal, caramel lava cake recipe. It’s against my nature! So here, we spice our caramel with fennel seeds, cardamom pods, and black peppercorns. The spices give a little added flavor contrast to the chocolate and help to cut through some of the sweetness. It’s made using a traditional wet caramel, meaning sugar is cooked with water (which helps prevent that pesky sugar crystallization) until it turns a deep amber color. Heavy cream that has been steeped with your spices gets added, followed by butter and salt. Make sure to chill the caramel well, so that it’s scoop-able when filling the cakes or it will ooze out the sides during baking!

about the lava cakes

The actual cakes themselves are fairly straightforward here. All of your favorite ingredients make an appearance- flour, sugar, brown sugar, butter, eggs, and chocolate. The cakes get baked in muffin tins and the batter can be actually be chilled and baked off later if you want to make them ahead. You can also freeze and wrap baked cakes individually and heat them in the microwave, although you do lose a little of that molten middle. Still chocolate-y and still delicious. They are really the most perfect Valentine’s day treat.

Yield: makes six
Author: Anna Ramiz
Spiced Caramel Chocolate Lava Cakes

Spiced Caramel Chocolate Lava Cakes

Prep time: 20 MinCook time: 20 MinTotal time: 40 Min
Rich, decadent molten chocolate lava cakes filled with homemade caramel, spiced with cardamom, fennel, and black peppercorns.

Ingredients

for the spiced caramel
  • ½ cup (100 g) granulated sugar
  • 2 tbsp water
  • ½ tsp lemon juice
  • ¼ cup heavy cream
  • ¼ tsp fennel seeds, roughly chopped
  • 8 whole cardamom pods
  • ½ tsp black peppercorns
  • 1 tbsp unsalted butter
  • pinch of salt
for the lava cakes
  • 3 oz + 2 tbsp unsalted butter, divided
  • 6 oz dark chocolate, roughly chopped
  • 1 egg
  • 3 egg yolks
  • ¼ cup (50 g) granulated sugar
  • ¼ cup (60 g) brown sugar
  • 3 tbsp all purpose flour
  • 2 ½ tsp cocoa powder, divided
  • ¼ tsp kosher salt
  • ¼ tsp vanilla extract
  • spiced caramel, recipe included, chilled

Instructions

to make the spiced caramel
  1. Place heavy cream, fennel seeds, cardamom pods, and black peppercorns in a small saucepan set over medium heat. Bring to a simmer and then immediately remove from heat. Cover and let steep for 30 minutes. Strain out the spices and set cream aside.
  2. In a medium pot, stir together sugar, water, and lemon juice. Set over medium heat and cook without stirring until the sugar is dissolved and the mixture begins to take on a light brown color. At this point, you can gently stir the caramel. Continue to cook until the caramel reaches a deep amber color.
  3. Remove the caramel from the heat and whisk in the reserved heavy cream. (The mixture will bubble up, this is okay, just keep stirring). When all the cream has been added, return it to the heat and cook for one more minute.
  4. Remove from the heat again, stir in butter and a pinch of salt and then transfer to a clean bowl to cool.
  5. Store caramel in an air-tight container in the fridge for up to a week.
to make the lava cakes
  1. Preheat the oven to 425° F. Melt 2 tbsp of butter and divide between six muffin tins. Sprinkle 1 ½ tsp of the cocoa among the six muffin tins and use your fingers to mix the butter and cocoa powder and rub the mixture thoroughly up the sides of the tins to prevent sticking.
  2. In a heat-proof bowl set over a pot of simmering water, melt the chocolate. Set aside.
  3. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, add 3 oz of butter, sugar, and granulated sugar. Cream for 2-3 minutes, until light and fluffy, scraping down the sides as needed.
  4. With the mixer on low speed, add eggs and egg yolks one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Add the vanilla extract.
  5. Add the flour, remaining 1 tsp of cocoa powder, and salt and mix on low speed until just combined. Stream in the melted chocolate and continue to mix for 1-2 minutes until homogenous. Remove the bowl from the mixer, scrape down the sides, and fold with a rubber spatula to ensure that the batter is evenly mixed.
  6. Use a 2 ½ tbsp cookie scoop and place one scoop of batter in each of the prepared muffin tins. Place one teaspoon of cold caramel in the center of the batter, and then top each with another 2 ½ tbsp scoop of batter. Tap the pan gently once or twice to settle the batter.
  7. Bake for 8-9 minutes and then let cool for 10 minutes in the pan. Invert and serve immediately with ice cream and more caramel sauce.
  8. Leftover lava cakes can be wrapped tightly in plastic wrap and frozen. To reheat, remove from the plastic and microwave from frozen for 30-45 seconds, until warmed through.
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Espresso Chiffon Layer Cake with Chocolate Ganache Buttercream and Salted Caramel

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Every year, I ask Martin what kind of cake he wants for his birthday and every year he replies with one word— “fluffy”. It drives me crazy! He never cares about flavor or frosting or fillings, but fluffiness is his peak concern. Maybe, sometime soon, I will learn to stop asking. In the meantime, he will get the fluffiest cake I know—chiffon cake.

What is exactly is a chiffon cake, you ask? Excellent question, one I wish I could give a definitive answer to. In my cakes class in pastry school, our chef taught us that chiffon cakes are similar to angel food cakes in that they rely on egg whites for their leavening. The key difference, she said, was that chiffon cakes also include some sort of carbonated ingredient like club soda, seltzer, or even champagne. When I began testing this recipe, I embarked on my own chiffon cake research and could find absolutely nothing on the internet about carbonation being a mark of a chiffon cake. So who knows? What I can tell you, is that a chiffon cake does rely on the use of egg whites for it’s lift, includes some fat (angel food cake does not), and is endlessly fluffy. Also, I don’t think it would be a bad idea to start incorporating more champagne in cakes.

This espresso chiffon cake is layered with the silkiest ganache buttercream and enough salted caramel for it to ooze out the sides. It feels sultry (is that a word I can use to describe cake??) and romantic and like a messy bun updo, it’s just the right amount approachable and elegant. I highly recommend doubling the ganache buttercream and keeping the leftovers in your fridge for all the leftover cake scraps.

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Espresso Chiffon Layer Cake with Chocolate Ganache Buttercream

Yield: 1 8” 4-layer cake or two 5” 3-layer cakes

Ingredients: 

for the cake: 

7 eggs, separated 

1 tbsp vanilla extract 

1/2 tsp kosher salt

1 cup + 2 tbsp (8 oz; 230 g) granulated sugar

2 tsp baking powder

1/2 cup (4 oz) neutral oil

2/3 cup (5 oz) strong brewed espresso

1 1/2 cup (9 oz; 260 g) all purpose flour 

for the chocolate ganache buttercream: 

recipe from Tartine

8 oz (225 g) dark chocolate, chopped 

1 cup (240 g) heavy cream

1/2 cup (100 g) granulated sugar

10 T (140 g) unsalted butter, at room temperature 

for the salted caramel: 

recipe from Bobby Flay via NYTimes Cooking 

1 cup granulated sugar 

1/2 cup heavy cream 

2 T unsalted butter

1 tsp kosher salt 

Procedure: 

to make the cake:

  1. Preheat oven to 325° F. 

  2. In a small bowl, stir together granulated sugar and baking powder.

  3. In the bowl of a mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine egg whites, vanilla, and salt. Whip on medium-low speed until whites are frothy then, with the mixer running, stream in granulated sugar and baking powder. When all of the sugar is added, increase the mixer speed to medium-high and whip until a loose, silky meringue forms. When you pull the whisk out of the meringue, it should leave a ribbon mark that somewhat holds it’s shape. 

  4. Meanwhile, in a large mixing bowl, whisk together egg yolks, oil, and espresso. Add flour, and continue to whisk. This should be a thick paste-like batter. 

  5. Using a rubber spatula, add a small amount (one scoop, about 1/2 cup) of the meringue to the batter. Mix this vigorously until fully combined. (Doing this lightens up the batter and makes it easier for the meringue to be folded in.)

  6. Gently fold the remaining meringue into the batter in 3 batches, adding more only when the previous amount is combined. 

  7. When everything is mixed together, the batter should be light and fluffy, a light-tan in color, and there should be no meringue streaks left. 

  8. Divide batter evenly into 2, ungreased and unlined 8” cake pans and bake for 25-30 minutes, until cake is set and a toothpick comes out clean when inserted. 

  9. Immediately flip the cakes over onto a wire cooling rack, but do not remove the pans. Allow cakes to cool upside-down in the pans for at least 30 minutes, until cooled throughly. When cool, you can remove the cakes from the pans and set aside until you are ready to assemble.

to make the ganache buttercream:

  1. Place chopped chocolate in a heat-proof glass bowl set over a double boiler. Heat, stirring occasionally until chocolate is completely melted and set aside. 

  2. In a small saucepan set over medium heat, combine heavy cream and sugar. Heat until sugar is dissolved and small bubbles begin to appear around the edges of the pot. Pour half of the cream mixture into the melted chocolate and whisk to combine. Add the remaining cream to the chocolate and whisk until the mixture is completely emulsified. 

  3. Add the butter, a couple of cubes at a time, and whisk until completely melted and homogenized and then whisk a minute longer. 

  4. Cover the frosting with plastic wrap and let sit to cool at room temperature for at least 6 hours until thickened slightly. 

to make the salted caramel:

  1. In a medium saucepan set over medium-high heat, combine sugar and 1/4 cup water. Without stirring, cook sugar until a deep amber color.

  2. While the sugar is cooking, heat cream in the microwave or a small saucepan until slightly warm to the touch, just to remove the chill. Remove caramel from the heat and slowly whisk in heavy cream. (Caramel will bubble up, this is normal.)

  3. Return to the heat, and cook another minute or two. Add butter, whisking until combined, followed by salt. Remove from heat and let cool completely.