Peach Buttermilk Ice Cream Float + 5 Frozen Treat Links!

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A Good Summer Memory

One sip made me think of you.  Senses exaggerate, eyes dilate, and there I am with you, barely able to see over the wooden ice cream counter.  I request a vanilla ice cream float, knowing you will drink half of it.  I’ll share, but I don’t want to.  You pay the pimple covered, sweaty boy behind the register; your hands tanned and wrinkled smell of gasoline and fresh grass clippings stick to your khaki pants.  Pools of sweat form patterns on your white t-shirt.  The fans overhead move slowly, barely able to cut through the thick, humid, summer air.  We step outside.  The mid-day sun makes herself known and beads of sweat form on our foreheads.  I take a big sip.  You wait patiently.  Bubbles of soda water, now sweet with vanilla ice cream and vanilla syrup, dance on my tongue.  I hand it over and you take a long drink.  Refreshed and energized from a sugar hit, you are ready to head home and finish the yard work.  I grab the spoon sticking out of your pocket and finish the remaining sticky sweet vanilla ice cream.  We drive home with windows down, my fingers and mouth still sticky from our perfect summer treat.

This peach buttermilk ice cream float is far from the artificially sweet vanilla ice cream float I shared with my grandfather.  The fresh simple syrup hints at peach and the homemade buttermilk ice cream tastes like cheesecake.  They are natural companions.  The cold sparkling water dilutes the syrup just a bit.  As the creamy, tangy ice cream slowly melts, the sweet bubbles begin to dissipate, but still dance on my tongue.  I take long sips and think of him on that hot summer day.

Peach Buttermilk Ice Cream Float

recipe adapted from Martha Stewart

Buttermilk ice cream barely adapted from Epicurious

Peach Simple Syrup from Minimalist Baker

serves 4-6

Ingredients for Peach Simple Syrup

1 cup sugar

1 cup water

2 ripe peaches thinly sliced, more for serving if desired

Directions:

In a small saucepan, bring sugar, peaches and water to a boil. Lower the heat and crush the peaches with a wooden spoon to infuse flavor. Stir. After the sugar is completely dissolved, cover and remove from heat. Allow to sit for about 30 minutes. Pour the simple syrup into a bottle, over a fine mesh strainer. You can reserve the peaches for the float or eat them. I ate them immediately.  Refrigerate the simple syrup until ready to use.  It will last, refrigerated, for several days.

Ingredients for Buttermilk Ice Cream

6 large egg yolks

2 cups heavy whipping cream

2/3 cup raw sugar

pinch of Kosher salt

1 cup cold buttermilk

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/4 teaspoon cinnamon

Directions:

Place a metal bowl in the freezer and chill until cold, at least an hour.

Whisk egg yolks in a bowl. Using a large saucepan, mix together cream, sugar, cinnamon and salt. Bring to a simmer, stirring constantly until sugar dissolves.  Slowly whisk half of the hot cream into the egg yolks. Next add the egg mixture to the saucepan. Stir constantly until the custard thickens and can coat the back of a spoon, about 3 minutes. Do not boil! Remove from heat once thickened.

Pour cold buttermilk into cold bowl. Using a fine mesh strainer, pour the custard into the buttermilk and whisk. Add vanilla and whisk. Chill mixture, uncovered, for several hours, stirring occasionally. (I think it is best to chill this overnight so it is super cold for your ice cream maker.)

Process custard according to your ice cream maker’s instructions. Store ice cream in air-tight container overnight before serving. If you can’t wait that long the ice cream will be more like soft serve. Enjoy!

Peach Buttermilk Ice Cream Float

Ingredients:

1/3 cup of peach simple syrup

2 scoops or about 1/2 cup of buttermilk ice cream

Sparkling water

Fresh peach slices, optional

Directions:

Add 2 scoops of ice cream to a glass. Pour in peach simple syrup, followed by sparkling water. Serve immediately with a spoon and straw. Enjoy!

5 Frozen Treat Links!

For a frozen sweet treat with an adult kick, check out Heather Christo’s bourbon vanilla root beer float and Foodie Crush’s boozy blueberry float.

Looking for a vegan option?  Head to Edidble Perspective for a vanilla bean cashew cream milkshake.  Then check out What’s Cooking Good Looking rhubarb milkshake. Decisions, decisions…

I made a roasted strawberry and rhubarb frappe that was a huge hit last year.  If you missed it, you can find the recipe here.

 

Blueberry Cheesecake Bars + 5 Summer Cheesecake Desserts You Should Check Out!

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She started this years ago.  Cheesecake, any form, any flavor, equaled special occasion.  My mother’s go to cheesecake recipe featured a vanilla wafer crust, creamy, silky smooth cheesecake topped with canned cherry or blueberry pie filling.  She rarely needed to refer to the recipe.  She knew it by heart.  She also knew how quickly the little individual cheesecakes nestled in their silver cupcake liners would disappear.  A stern warning like “don’t touch them until Christmas Eve or you’ll get coal in your stocking” usually followed the last dollop of pie filling she place on the perfectly browned cheesecakes.  We waited, and not so patiently waited, until she declared, after her final sip of wine, “let’s have dessert!”

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When she pulled the little bites from the fridge, our mouths watered.  We always ate two immediately and maybe a third if her mood allowed it.  When we got older, the cheesecakes would make a late night appearance usually due to an insatiable case of the munchies.  The baffled look on her beautiful morning face when she discovered just how many we consumed still haunts me to this day.  I’m sure she thought “wtf”?  And then quickly figured out the culprit.  She was, after all, an ER nurse, she grew up during Woodstock, she knew, though pretended otherwise.

When we moved out of her nest, these sweet treats became her go to dessert for any family dinner.  No longer were they just for the holidays. Merely having us in her nest again warranted an appearance of her cheesecake.  We still eat them with the same passion as when we were children.  It’s amazing how food has way to transport you back to a time and place that you still long for, a place we attempt to create in our new families; a place called home, but really home was her.

bcc816I thought about asking her for the recipe, but I knew damn well she wouldn’t share it.  It is still her made from scratch delight.  I get it.  So I drew inspiration from her, but adapted a recipe from Pioneer Woman.  Like my mother’s, the cheesecake is smooth and tangy.  The crust is perfectly sweet, but features graham crackers instead of vanilla wafers.  The blueberry topping is made from fresh blueberries.  Honestly, I could go either way.  I love the canned stuff, but with blueberries abundant this time of year how can you not go fresh?

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I made and shared these bars at a fourth of July party with good friends.  They were a hit.  I saved a few for Bubba and the kids at home.  They asked for them the next day and the day after that.  Maybe this will be the dessert for my kids.  The dessert that reminds them of home, the dessert that reminds them of me.

Blueberry Cheesecake Bars

recipe adapted from Pioneer Woman

Makes 16 bars

Ingredients for Crust:

2 sleeves of graham crackers

1/2 unsalted butter, melted

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Ingredients for Filling:

3 packages, 8 ounces each, cream cheese, softened

1 + 1/2 cup sugar

1 + 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

4 eggs

1/2 cup full fat Greek yogurt

1/2 teaspoon fresh lemon juice

pinch of kosher salt

Ingredients for Blueberry Topping:

4 cups blueberries, about 2 pints

3/4 cup of sugar

squeeze of lemon juice

1/4 cup water

2 Tablespoons cornstarch

4 tablespoons water

Directions:

Pre-heat your oven to 350F.  Line a 9×13 baking pan with aluminum foil and coat with cooking spray.  Set aside.

Using a food processor, pulse the graham crackers into crumbs.  Add the melted butter and vanilla extract and pulse until the crumbs look like wet sand.  Dump the mixture into your prepared baking pan and the press the crumbs evenly into the bottom of the pan.  Set aside.

Using a stand mixer with a paddle attachment or a handheld electric mixer, beat the cream cheese, sugar, vanilla until smooth.   Next, add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each egg.  Add the Greek yogurt, lemon juice and pinch of salt and mix until well combined.

Pour the filling into the crust and smooth out the top.  Bake for 45 minutes.  Then turn off the oven, leave the door closed and allow it to bake for another 10 minutes.  Lastly, open the oven door a bit and allow it sit in the oven for another 10 minutes.  (Yup, with the door open.)

Remove the cheesecake and let it cool completely on a wire rack.

While the cheesecake cools, make your blueberry topping.  Add blueberries, sugar and 1/4 cup of water to a small pan.  Over medium high-heat, bring to a boil and cook until the juices slightly thicken, about 5 minutes.  ( I mashed some of the berries during this time for a less chunky topping, but it is not necessary.)  In a small bowl, make a slurry: 2 tablespoons cornstarch + 4 tablespoons of water, mix well.  Stir in slurry and a squeeze of lemon juice.  Let it boil for another couple of minutes and then remove from heat.  Allow to cool before adding to cheesecake.

Pour the blueberries over the cheesecake and smooth over the top.  Cover and refrigerate overnight or for at least 4 hours.  I think overnight is best.  Once chilled, remove from 9×13 pan by lifting it out with the foil overhang.  Grab a serrated knife and cut into squares.  Enjoy!

(Can be made two days ahead. Keep refrigerated, covered and cut just before serving.)

5 Cheesecake Recipes You Need To Check Out!

Looking for a completely new and creative take on cheesecake?  Check out My Mother’s Apron Strings for The SoNo Cheesecake: pistachio graham cracker crust, cheesecake topped with fresh raspberries. Wow!

If you need a quick and easy cheesecake, head to Food &Wine for their icebox chocolate cheesecake.

Smitten Kitchen’s raspberry swirl cheesecake and strawberry cheesecake ice cream pie are on my must make list!

Check out my lemon ricotta cheesecake. It was a huge hit!