In the early
days of my transition to a plant-based diet, finding vegan ice cream in the
market was often difficult, if not impossible. I didn’t have an ice cream
habit, but on certain special occasions, it was definitely something I wanted
to include in the mix. While dairy free sorbets and fruit juice bars are nice, if
what you want is ice cream, they just don’t quite fit the bill. If I was lucky,
I might be able to find Tofutti, the closest thing to a dairy based ice cream
on the market for a very long time. But now, I can’t even keep track of all the
vegan ice creams available, and I don’t always have to search out a specialty
store to find them. There is a drawback to this, though. Most of the ice creams
on the market, even the vegan ones, are high in fats, saturated fats, and
sugars. The solution, of course, is to make your own, where you have control
over the ingredients.
This cookbook
has four recipes for Nice Creams with six additional variations, enough to
satisfy anybody’s particular ice cream cravings. Initially I was avoiding this
part of the cookbook because all these recipes call for an ice cream maker, something
I don’t have, and likely won’t have as long as I’m living and traveling full
time in a 5th wheel trailer. But along the way, I discovered a
workaround for making delicious and creamy vegan ice cream using pre-frozen
ingredients and my VitaMix blender. While my rendition of the Nice Cream
recipes in this book will stray far from the original preparation instructions,
the flavors will all be present and delightfully delicious. (Robin provides a
very thorough primer on making her Nice Creams in this section, very worth
taking the time to read.)
The first recipe
I tried was the “Cherry Vanilla Nice Cream”, page 492. The basic ingredients
listed are arrowroot powder, thick vegan milk or cream, sugar, vanilla extract,
and pitted cherries. Using this list as my ingredients guide, I used frozen cherries
(2 cups), 1 frozen banana, ¼ cup soaked cashews (soak for at least an hour,
then discard water), ¼ cup pure maple syrup, and soymilk as needed. Put
everything except the extra soymilk into a high speed blender, and process
until completely blended, smooth, and creamy. If necessary, stop the blender to
push down unblended ingredients, and to add soymilk, a little at a time if the
mixture is too thick. The cashews add richness, and the bananas contribute to a
smoother texture. Not quite as rich as a full fat version, but delicious and
satisfying all the same.
If this is too
much to eat at one sitting, place the leftovers into a freezer container, and
save for another day.
Keeping it
“McDougall Friendly” check list: