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Make Ice Cream in a Bag!
by Merle O'Brien
Description: Idea for making ice cream in a bag.
Sponsors:
Yes, it sounds dangerous and the potential for messes seems
highly likely,but you'll be surprised at the good, "clean" fun
you'll enjoy when you make ice cream. This recipe is enough for one person to make a dish!
1/2 cup milk
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 tablespoon sugar
4 cups crushed ice
4 tablespoons salt
2 quart size Zip-loc bags
1 gallon size Zip-loc freezer bag
a hand towel or gloves to keep fingers from freezing as well!
Mix the milk, vanilla and sugar together in one of the quart
size bags. Seal tightly, allowing as little air to remain in
the bag as possible. Too much air left inside may force the bag
open during shaking. Place this bag inside the other quart size
bag, again leaving as little air inside as possible and
sealing well. By double-bagging, the risk of salt and ice
leaking into the ice cream is minimized. Put the two bags
inside the gallon size bag and fill the bag with ice, then
sprinkle salt on top. Again let all the air escape
and seal the bag. Wrap the bag in the towel or put your gloves
on, and shake and massage the bag, making sure the ice
surrounds the cream mixture. Five to eight minutes is adequate
time for the mixture to freeze into ice cream.
Tips:
Freezer bags work best because they are thicker and less likely
to develop small holes, allowing the bags to leak. You can get
away with using regular Zip-loc bags for the smaller quart sizes, because you are
double-bagging. Especially if you plan to do this indoors, we
strongly recommend using gallon size freezer bags.
Here are some interesting tidbits:
What does the salt do? Just like we use salt on icy roads in the winter, salt mixed
with ice in this case also causes the ice to melt. When salt
comes into contact with ice, the freezing point of the ice is
lowered. Water will normally freeze at 32 degrees F. A 10% salt solution freezes at 20 degrees F, and
a 20% solution freezes at 2 degrees F. By lowering the
temperature at which ice is frozen, we are able to create an
environment in which the milk mixture can freeze at a
temperature below 32 degrees F into ice cream.
Who invented ice cream? Legend has it that the Roman emperor, Nero, discovered ice
cream. Runners brought snow from the mountains to make the
first ice cream. In 1846, Nancy Johnson invented the hand-cranked ice cream churn and ice cream
surged in popularity. Then, in 1904, ice cream cones were
invented at the St. Louis World Exposition. An ice cream vendor ran out of dishes and
improvised by rolling up some waffles to make cones.
If you would like more fun things to do please sign up for
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join-recipes4learning@gt.sodamail.com.
Reader comment: Thanks for posting! Kept the kids busy for 1/2 an hour and was a lot of fun! For the future, if you use Lactade milk, it takes a good 3 to 5 minutes longer...Zazu
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