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The Kitchn: How to make rolled ice cream at home (no fancy equipment required)

By Meghan Splawn on

TheKitchn.com

Whether you know this frozen dessert as Thai rolled ice cream, stir-fried ice cream, or even marble-top ice cream, its signature look and flavor are the same: Rolled tubes of sweet, milky, almost-chewy ice cream presented in a small cup with plenty of whipped cream and garnishes.

Places that sell rolled ice cream make it on super-chilled flat tops or marble slabs specifically designed for rapidly chilling an ice cream base. The person making the ice cream will roll and chop the liquid base on the chilled slab until it forms a cream. Then they'll flatten it, add flavorings and roll up each serving to order.

While it sounds complex, it's actually really easy to make rolled ice cream at home -- and incredibly fun, too. Here's how to make any flavor of rolled ice cream you like -- no fancy marble slabs or special equipment required.

2-Ingredient Rolled Ice Cream at Home

Most rolled ice cream vendors -- whether they're street carts or fancy storefronts -- are pretty tight-lipped about their ice cream base. Luckily, rolled ice cream's texture gives a lot away about its contents.

 

The key to successful rolled ice cream is making a frozen base that is freezable but still pliable enough to roll up when cold (and that tastes delicious, of course). There are two ingredients that can guarantee just that: sweetened condensed milk and heavy cream. Sweetened condensed milk is a brilliant shortcut ingredient because it's already sweetened, so you don't have to bother dissolving sugar in warm milk. Adding cream ensures that the rolled ice cream won't crack when you roll it (whole milk doesn't have enough milk fat), plus it makes the finished frozen dessert extra rich and delicious.

3 Tips for the Best Rolled Ice Cream

1. Make sure you've got space in the freezer. The trickiest part of making rolled ice cream is finding space in the freezer for a rimmed baking sheet (or a few 9- by 13-inch pans) to sit flat. Be sure to make this space before you carry a pan filled with liquid ice cream base around the kitchen, or you'll risk almost certain spillage.

2. Keep the ice cream base thin -- but not too thin. Depending on your freezer and your equipment -- or your flavors -- you may choose to divide the ice cream base into different pans. A rimmed sheet pan works, as do two quarter sheet pans, or two (9- by 13-inch) pans. Just make sure your base is about 1/8 of an inch thick. Too thin and it won't curl; too thick and it will collapse on itself as it rolls.

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