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Using a simple five-minute base recipe, you can make the โbrilliantโ (Andrew Zimmern), โastonishingly goodโ (Ruth Reichl) flavors of the innovative โice cream godsโ ( Bon Appรฉtit ) Salt & Straw at home. NAMED ONE OF THE BEST COOKBOOKS OF THE SEASON BY Eater โข Delish โข Epicurious Based out of Portland, Oregon, Salt & Straw is the brainchild of two cousins, Tyler and Kim Malek, who had a vision but no recipes. They turned to their friends for adviceโchefs, chocolatiers, brewers, and food experts of all kindsโand what came out is a super-simple base that takes five minutes to make, and an ice cream company that sees new flavors and inspiration everywhere they look. Using that base recipe, you can make dozens of Salt & Strawโs most beloved, unique (and a little controversial) flavors, including Sea Salt with Caramel Ribbons, Roasted Strawberry and Toasted White Chocolate, and Buttered Mashed Potatoes and Gravy. But more importantly, this book reveals what theyโve learned, how to tap your own creativity, and how to invent flavors of your own, based on whatever you see around you. Because ice cream isnโt just a thing you eat, itโs a way to live. Praise for Salt & Straw Ice Cream Cookbook โMaking ice cream at home is already enough of a mental hurdle. . . . Salt & Straw is out to prove us wrong with a new cookbook . . . making crazy ice cream flavors is more than doableโitโs addictive.โ โ Portland Monthly โThe approachable, you-can-do-this nature of the book should be all that home cooks need to try it out.โ โEater โI originally sought out this book solely because of the Meyer Lemon Blueberry Buttermilk Custard. . . . It is the greatest ice cream flavor thatโs ever existed and, because itโs only a seasonal flavor in their stores, I needed the recipe so I could make it whenever I wanted.โ โ Bon Appรฉtit โA cookbook dedicated to ice cream? Yes, please. This is essential reading for Salt & Straw fans.โ โFood & Wine โFew of Americaโs many ice cream makers are as seasonally minded and downright creative as Salt & Straw co-founder Tyler Malek.โ โGrubStreet Review: Here is a list of the included recipes - Great Book - I always thought ice cream was good, but then I had Salt & Straw. It made me realize that ice cream can be incredible. Ice cream can embody complex flavors that evolve across your palette has you eat them, and they don't have to revolve around what combinations of sugary treats you want to add to them. Sadly, I don't live in a state that has salt and straw, and after trying every highly rated local ice cream shop, I was disappointed to find them all to be uninspired sugary nonsense.So I set out to make my own ice cream, and though I am only a week into my journey, I am already making better ice cream than anything I have found locally. This book is full of tons of recipes (listed below), and while some of them sound strange, much of the strangeness is certainly not a novelty. The flavors are complex and mind blowing, thing's you'd never expect to be delicious are so. Anyways, this is an eye opening book, and Tyler talks a lot about what he learned from making these different flavors within the book as well, which is great for educating yourself for future experimentation. The flavor recipes in this book are as follows: The Bases: Ice Cream Base Sorbet (or Gelato) Base Coconut Ice Cream Base (Dairy Free) The Classics: Arbequina Olive Oil Stumptown Coffee and Burnside Bourbon Freckled Woodblock Chocolate Chocolate Gooey Brownie Xocolatl de Davidโs Bacon Raleigh Bar Dandelion Chocolateโs Roasted Cacao Bean Gelato Cinnamon Snickerdoodle Sea Salt with Caramel Ribbons Almond Brittle with Salted Ganache Strawberry Honey Balsamic with Black Pepper Pear and Bleu Cheese Double Fold Vanilla Roasted Strawberry & Toasted White Chocolate Salted Caramel Bars & Coconut Cream The Brewers Series: India Pale Ale Smoked Hefeweizen Hopped Farmhouse Ale Hopricot Gelato Imperial Stout Milk Sorbet w/ Blackberry-Fig Jam The Flower Series: Wildflower Honey w/ Ricotta Walnut Lace Cookies Honey Lavender Rose City Riot Grand Poppy-Seed Sherbert Dandellion Bitters Sorbet with Edible Flowers The Berry Series: Meyer Lemon Blueberry Buttermilk Custard Black Raspberry Cobbler Fro-yo Goat Cheese Marionberry Habanero Foraged-Berry Sherbert Strawberry-Cilantro Sorbet The Farmerโs Market Series: Caramel Corn on the Cob Cauliflower Garam Masala Green Apple & Mayo Sherbert Roasted Parsnip & Banana Sorbet Aquabeet Sorbet The Student Inventor Series: Olde People The Kail Creeasheon Chocolate Sardines Skittles Rainbow Sherbert Stop, Guac, & Roll The Spooktacular Series: Amortentia Sorbet Essence of Ghost Creepy Crawly Critters Grandma Draculaโs Blood Pudding The Great Candycopia The Thanksgiving Table-to-Cone Series: Sweet Potato Casserole with Maple Pecans Buttered Mashed Potatoes and Gravy Cranberry-Apple Stuffing Salted Caramel Thanksgiving Turkey Pumpkin Custard & Spiced Goat Cheese The Holiday Series: Peppermint Cocoa with Homemade Peppermint Patties Gingerbread Cookie Dough Apple Brandy & Pecan Pie Butter-Roasted Chestnut Fennel Five-Spice Eggnog Review: A fantastic book for ice cream lovers - There are a lot of books in the marketplace trying to teach the enthusiastic amateur how to make ice cream. Some are scientifically complex and require lots of ingredients. Some are wickedly innovative (Iโm thinking here of the Jenniโs ice cream book) and then there is this amazing book from Salt & Straw in Portland. Innovative flavors abound (smoked bacon caramel with cocoa nougat and chocolate covered pecans, anyone?). Meyer lemon with blueberries is stunning, but so are many others like cinnamon snickerdoodle and another that uses the almond brittle from a recipe of the grandmother of the owner. There are two things in particular I love about this book. One is a base recipe that is dead simple - you can put it together in five minutes - coupled with easy to follow coaching on how to churn the ice cream (or sorbet, gelato or the Vegan option). The other is the sheer variety of flavor combinations along with the coaching for how to make mix-ins that work in a frozen dessert. For example, a regular caramel will freeze rock solid, so this book shows you how to make a caramel that stays soft even when frozen. Iโve already made half the recipes in the book and everyone is a success. There are some I wonโt bother with - the beer based donโt speak to me and I can do without the blood sausage version (seriously), but itโs safe to say there is something here for everyone and the success rate is extremely high.




| Best Sellers Rank | #26,931 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #17 in Frozen Dessert Recipes #20 in Party Cooking #128 in Celebrity & TV Show Cookbooks |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,514 Reviews |
P**T
Here is a list of the included recipes - Great Book
I always thought ice cream was good, but then I had Salt & Straw. It made me realize that ice cream can be incredible. Ice cream can embody complex flavors that evolve across your palette has you eat them, and they don't have to revolve around what combinations of sugary treats you want to add to them. Sadly, I don't live in a state that has salt and straw, and after trying every highly rated local ice cream shop, I was disappointed to find them all to be uninspired sugary nonsense.So I set out to make my own ice cream, and though I am only a week into my journey, I am already making better ice cream than anything I have found locally. This book is full of tons of recipes (listed below), and while some of them sound strange, much of the strangeness is certainly not a novelty. The flavors are complex and mind blowing, thing's you'd never expect to be delicious are so. Anyways, this is an eye opening book, and Tyler talks a lot about what he learned from making these different flavors within the book as well, which is great for educating yourself for future experimentation. The flavor recipes in this book are as follows: The Bases: Ice Cream Base Sorbet (or Gelato) Base Coconut Ice Cream Base (Dairy Free) The Classics: Arbequina Olive Oil Stumptown Coffee and Burnside Bourbon Freckled Woodblock Chocolate Chocolate Gooey Brownie Xocolatl de Davidโs Bacon Raleigh Bar Dandelion Chocolateโs Roasted Cacao Bean Gelato Cinnamon Snickerdoodle Sea Salt with Caramel Ribbons Almond Brittle with Salted Ganache Strawberry Honey Balsamic with Black Pepper Pear and Bleu Cheese Double Fold Vanilla Roasted Strawberry & Toasted White Chocolate Salted Caramel Bars & Coconut Cream The Brewers Series: India Pale Ale Smoked Hefeweizen Hopped Farmhouse Ale Hopricot Gelato Imperial Stout Milk Sorbet w/ Blackberry-Fig Jam The Flower Series: Wildflower Honey w/ Ricotta Walnut Lace Cookies Honey Lavender Rose City Riot Grand Poppy-Seed Sherbert Dandellion Bitters Sorbet with Edible Flowers The Berry Series: Meyer Lemon Blueberry Buttermilk Custard Black Raspberry Cobbler Fro-yo Goat Cheese Marionberry Habanero Foraged-Berry Sherbert Strawberry-Cilantro Sorbet The Farmerโs Market Series: Caramel Corn on the Cob Cauliflower Garam Masala Green Apple & Mayo Sherbert Roasted Parsnip & Banana Sorbet Aquabeet Sorbet The Student Inventor Series: Olde People The Kail Creeasheon Chocolate Sardines Skittles Rainbow Sherbert Stop, Guac, & Roll The Spooktacular Series: Amortentia Sorbet Essence of Ghost Creepy Crawly Critters Grandma Draculaโs Blood Pudding The Great Candycopia The Thanksgiving Table-to-Cone Series: Sweet Potato Casserole with Maple Pecans Buttered Mashed Potatoes and Gravy Cranberry-Apple Stuffing Salted Caramel Thanksgiving Turkey Pumpkin Custard & Spiced Goat Cheese The Holiday Series: Peppermint Cocoa with Homemade Peppermint Patties Gingerbread Cookie Dough Apple Brandy & Pecan Pie Butter-Roasted Chestnut Fennel Five-Spice Eggnog
V**E
A fantastic book for ice cream lovers
There are a lot of books in the marketplace trying to teach the enthusiastic amateur how to make ice cream. Some are scientifically complex and require lots of ingredients. Some are wickedly innovative (Iโm thinking here of the Jenniโs ice cream book) and then there is this amazing book from Salt & Straw in Portland. Innovative flavors abound (smoked bacon caramel with cocoa nougat and chocolate covered pecans, anyone?). Meyer lemon with blueberries is stunning, but so are many others like cinnamon snickerdoodle and another that uses the almond brittle from a recipe of the grandmother of the owner. There are two things in particular I love about this book. One is a base recipe that is dead simple - you can put it together in five minutes - coupled with easy to follow coaching on how to churn the ice cream (or sorbet, gelato or the Vegan option). The other is the sheer variety of flavor combinations along with the coaching for how to make mix-ins that work in a frozen dessert. For example, a regular caramel will freeze rock solid, so this book shows you how to make a caramel that stays soft even when frozen. Iโve already made half the recipes in the book and everyone is a success. There are some I wonโt bother with - the beer based donโt speak to me and I can do without the blood sausage version (seriously), but itโs safe to say there is something here for everyone and the success rate is extremely high.
N**I
Best ice cream recipe book ever
This is the best ice cream recipe book I've ever used. It's taught me so much about the basics and chemistry of making ice cream. I've made about 10 recipes so far and each one is fantastic. There's a bit of a learning curve but I'd say the level is still easy. Once you know how to make a good ice cream base, the sky is the limit. I've now even taken some of the ideas and made my own variations. Highly recommended.
C**W
Interesting flavors, but unusually meaty
This has got to be the strangest ice cream book I own. I own a lot of ice cream books, and I've made a lot of ice cream, and I like daring and unusual flavors, but this one takes the cake (pun absolutely intended). I've read through it pretty carefully and tried a caramel sauce from the book, though not any of the ice creams yet, and well ... it's weird. It's not bad by any means, just unexpected. Not because of its unusual flavors (of which it has many), but in its combination of flavors. Most ice cream cookbooks include recipes for three things: 1) classic flavors, 2) house specialties, and 3) mix-ins and toppings. Every ice cream shop is going to have the classics: vanilla, chocolate, mint, caramel, strawberry, coffee, etc., and most ice cream cookbooks are going to include the author's take on those. S&S on the other hand has only one, a recipe for double-fold vanilla. All the other house specialties utilize classic flavors (examples: strawberry-honey balsamic with black pepper ice cream, or salted sweet cream ice cream with caramel ribbons). In other words, this book leans extremely heavily on the house specialties (which I kind of like), and I love trying new combinations and unusual flavors. But ... ice cream happens to be something that is reliably vegetarian (if not vegan), and this book is no exception. As a long-time mostly-vegetarian, that is also something I appreciate, but as a pragmatist, I'm fine with the fact that most ice cream books are going to have at least one recipe that includes candied bacon, and there is one such offering here (bacon caramel). But it doesn't stop with bacon; the irony makes me giggle a little. It has recipes for/including turkey (turkey skin/stock/boullion/fat), chicken (stock/boullion/fat/skin), gelatin, and โฆ. pork blood. Take a gander: Xocolatl De Davidโs Bacon Raleigh Bar Ice Cream (gelatin and bacon) Chocolate "Sardines" Ice Cream (gelatin) Creepy Crawly Critters Ice Cream (candied bugs) Grandma Draculaโs Blood Pudding Ice Cream (pig blood) Buttered Mashed Potatoes & Gravy Ice Cream (chicken stock and bouillon) Salted Caramel Thanksgiving Turkey Ice Cream (turkey stock, bouillon, and skin) Some of the omnivorous recipes actually sound pretty good, and if I still ate meat, I'd happily give them a try (the Xocolatl one is salted sweet cream ice cream with chocolate-covered pecans, caramel infused with bacon, and chocolate marshmallow nougat, and the "Sardines" recipe is chocolate with chunks of Swedish Fish-infused jello). There is one I might learn to like if I could get past the crunchy chitin from bugs (the creepy crawly flavor is tequila, orange, and matcha ice cream with chocolate-covered crickets and coconut-toffee candied insects). But the last three kinda turn my stomach (brandied chocolate pig's blood, mashed potato ice cream with white chocolate/chicken bouillon ripple, and turkey ice cream with turkey skin brittle). I don't think I'd like those even if I were still omnivorous. But those recipes aside, 51 of the 57 recipes are vegetarian, and there are many that sound great, in particular Stumptown Coffee & Burnside Bourbon Ice Cream, Almond Brittle With Salted Ganache Ice Cream, and the Honey-Lavender. There are many others that sound delicious as well. As for the mix-ins, they are pretty standard, including the usual chocolate sauces and brittles, cookies, and brownies. The caramel sauce is really quite excellent - it remains pliable when frozen (kitchen chemistry to the rescue!), instead of turning hard like stiff taffy the way most caramels do when cold. It uses a philosophy that I really like, providing three different bases to which you add flavorings: an ice cream base, a sorbet base, and even a vegan ice cream base. The vegan base is another area where they get weird. First of all, the presence of a base suggests that it's neutral-flavored and easily adaptable, but they only use it in a single recipe, and they give zero instructions for using it with other flavors. In fact, their vegan base probably cannot be widely used as it is STRONGLY coconutty, and the coconut would overshadow most other flavors. So, this feels (particularly in the context of a meatier-than-usual offering) almost phoned-in, only included so they can claim it's vegan-friendly when it really isn't. So: if you are looking for vegan desserts, look elsewhere (it doesn't even include sorbets which are typically vegan). But if you are interested in interesting flavors, this might be a fine choice. So, 4 stars because it's got lots of exciting flavors for me to try, losing one star for lack of dairy-free options.
M**I
Fun, delicious cookbook. I'm hooked.
What a fun cookbook. Easy to see why it won awards. Very instructive! Insightful and simple instructions. A few items seem regional and a little harder to find. The way the book was photographed is very top shelf and whimsical -- and fun. There are desserts included in the book, I like that, but did confuse me sometimes when I was looking for my next ice cream project. Would have been nice to see some substitutes for harder to find ingredients, and personally I would like to see some low fat (?), lower sugar, higher protein options -- with all the rich flavor, please
K**.
Salt & Straw Ice Cream Cookbook - A Beautiful, Delicious Mistake
Buying this cookbook was the best and worst decision of my life. Best because now I can make Salt & Strawโs legendary ice creams at home. Worst because I am making them at home. Constantly. And I think my freezer is now legally classified as a dessert bar. The recipes are wild in the best way. Who knew Pear and Blue Cheese ice cream would slap? But letโs not kid ourselves. The real reason this book should win a Nobel Prize is the chocolate ice cream. Itโs not just good. Itโs not just top tier. It is the frozen embodiment of joy. Other ice creams taste like they tried. This chocolate tastes like it knows itโs better than your childhood memories and isn't sorry about it. Reading this cookbook is like flipping through a food magazine edited by a mad genius who thought, โWhat if dessert were emotional?โ And the best part? You actually can make these at home. No degree in pastry arts required, just a decent whisk and a willingness to risk becoming your neighborhoodโs weird ice cream person.
L**A
Perfect Recreation of Salt and Straw Ice Cream at Home
First, I have to admit that Salt and Straw is my ice cream soulmate so I may be biased. Their incredible, unique, and always delicious no matter how unusual ice creams are unparalleled. I live on the wrong coast to be able to enjoy them more than once a year but itโs always a pleasure to go to their stores. If you are unfamiliar with Salt and Straw you may find the flavors odd but honestly theyโre pretty accessible. I received the cookbook yesterday and already made the strawberry honey balsamic ice cream and the caramel from sea salt ice cream with caramel swirls which taste exactly as if I had bought them from Salt and Straw. The recipes are clear and easy to follow. The concept of a single base recipe which is then added to to create flavors is a great way to make the more complex flavors unintimidating. Some are unhappy about the xanthum gum but itโs true to their instore recipe and increases the longevity of your ice cream. This allows you to have a few flavors in the freezer at one time without worrying about not eating them quick enough. The Brewers Series is fascinating and Iโm inspired to go try and find a local home brew store! The writing is warm, unfussy, and the authorโs passion for sharing ice cream comes through. Highly recommend!
A**A
Highly recommend for creative ice cream lovers!
Buy this cookbook and you wonโt be disappointed! I bought this and the cuisinart in June and have been loving making ice cream while at home. The first recipe I made I found elsewhere and it turned out grainy and icey. Iโve now made all of my ice cream from this cookbook and have been extremely impressed! Iโve made 5 from the cookbook so far (see attached pictures) and they all have been superb and so so creamy!! I will note, the flavors in the book are fun and creative so if you are looking to just make vanilla and strawberry, it might not be for you. For serious ice cream lovers looking for quality, fun recipes and willing to put some time into making ice cream, this book is for you! About 95% of the recipes use xanthan gum (my new bff!) which is a must in the structure and science of the ice cream so if youโre going to be weird about a word you donโt know - look elsewhere. The author explains it well, and itโs easy to find. Best purchase of 2020 by far - highly recommend!
R**S
Bom livro
Algumas receitas nรฃo se aplicam em nada ao paladar do brasileiro mas todo o resto vale muito a pena.
A**R
Great recipes
Really nice book from what seems like a good company. Simple to follow recipes so far that produce great results having made 6-7 in a Kitchenaid ice cream stand mixer.
S**M
Great recipes.
Excellent book. My family particularly likes the Salted Caramel.
D**K
Great American style icecream
Lovely cookbook, lots of recipes and very inventive. Unfortunately the whole book is based on 3 types of ice cream and the all of the range - ice cream,sorbet and coconut (dairy free) uses corn syrup and xanthan gum. I dislike the use of corn syrup, maybe as I live in Australia and can't source easily, and its use in all things American. I would have appreciated more variety in the types of ice cream base.
B**R
Ice cream recipe with a different twist
The book is a very interesting read but many of the recipes are just way too out there for me e.g. pigs blood, bacon, turkey and the like. Anyone who likes to make a party conversation will love it. Whilst I love to experiment it wasn't for me. I also wanted recipes without eggs, the book delivers here but the recipes are more like sorbet, e.g. icy and I was hoping for a eggless smooth ice cream, I have played around to improve this but no success yet. I used the base recipe to make lime and choc chip, the family loved it, and it was certainly refreshing. I am still happy to have it as part of my library.
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