Chocolate Ice Cream

Oh.My.God. In his prologue to this recipe in The Perfect Scoop, David Lebovitz says that when he first made this ice cream it was so good he licked the dasher clean when it was done churning. I may have done him one better. After licking the dasher clean, I took a spoon to clean up all the bits of ice cream that were still frozen to the sides of the bowl and hadn’t made it into the freezer container. This is, without question, the absolute best chocolate ice cream I have ever eaten. And I certainly have eaten enough to guarantee that the previous statement is statistically accurate. Smooth, creamy, and the most intense chocolate flavor you will ever find in a chocolate ice cream.
Let’s talk about the chocolate, shall we? This recipe calls for Dutch-process cocoa powder*, which adds a tremendous amount of depth and richness to this ice cream. I believe it’s a drastically improved flavor over what you would get using a regular unsweetened cocoa powder. The recipe then gives the option of semisweet or bittersweet chocolate and I used 60% bittersweet. I love dark chocolate and it definitely added an extra oomph of richness to the ice cream. I really just can’t say enough about the incredible flavor of this ice cream and I think the Dutch-process cocoa and the bittersweet chocolate is a stellar combination.
And now, on to the texture. This is the first time I have made ice cream using egg yolks to thicken the custard and I’ve been officially converted. While the other ice creams I’ve made have had a nice texture, this ice cream is completely unmatched. It is unbelievably smooth and creamy, and you can run a spoon through it straight from the freezer like you’re cutting butter. Absolutely superb.
And now I need your help. I am in need of a quality ice cream scoop. I want the pretty round scoops. Does anyone have any recommendations? I recently saw the Rösle ice cream scoop received high praise from Cook’s Illustrated, but am interested in hearing about any that you use and love. Thanks for the input!
*I typically can’t find Dutch-process cocoa powder in the regular grocery stores in my area; if you’re in the same boat, you can easily order it online. I have ordered it both from Penzeys and Amazon with no problem. I would highly recommend getting it, as you can use it in many other chocolate baked goods as well. Penzeys offers smaller quantities, so if you just want to try it out, you can get a small bag of it through them for a much lower cost.
Want more ice cream? Check out the Blueberry Cheesecake and Classic Vanilla recipes.
Don’t forget! If you’re dying to make homemade ice cream and cursing yourself for not having an ice cream maker, head straight to this tutorial on how to make homemade ice cream without an ice cream maker!
One year ago: Jalapeno Cheddar Cornbread
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Chocolate Ice Cream
Makes about 1 quart
2 cups heavy cream
3 tablespoons unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder
5 ounces bittersweet or semisweet chocolate
1 cup whole milk
¾ cup granulated sugar
Pinch of salt
5 large egg yolks
½ teaspoon vanilla extract1. Warm 1 cup of the cream with the cocoa powder in a medium saucepan, whisking to thoroughly blend the cocoa. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer at a very low boil for 30 seconds, whisking constantly. Remove from the heat and add the chopped chocolate, stirring until smooth. Then stir in the remaining 1 cup cream. Pour the mixture into a large bowl, scraping the saucepan as thoroughly as possible, and set a mesh strainer on top of the bowl.
2. Warm the milk, sugar, and salt in the same saucepan. In a separate medium bowl, whisk together the egg yolk. Slowly pour the warm milk into the egg yolks, whisking constantly, then scrape the warmed egg yolks back into the saucepan.
3. Stir the mixture constantly over the medium heat with a heatproof spatula, scraping the bottom as you stir, until the mixture thickens and coats the spatula (170°F on an instant-read thermometer). Pour the custard through the strainer and stir it into the chocolate mixture until smooth, then stir in the vanilla. Stir until cool over an ice bath.
4. Chill the mixture thoroughly in the refrigerator, then freeze it in your ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s instructions. (If the cold mixture is too thick to pour into your machine, whisk it vigorously to thin it out.)
(From The Perfect Scoop by David Lebovitz)



I forgot to say thank you!
You’ll be glad to know that my dear ice cream snobbish husband has declared that I need not look any further…this recipe is THE one. There ya have it.
I just got the wonderful Kitchenaid ice cream attachment for Christmas and really, really want to try this. (Can I just say YUM?) But I’m confused as to how this is done using the attachment. It only says to freeze in your ice cream maker, but all the Kitchenaid recipes only call for mixing in the attachment and then freezing in a separate container. Can you clarify? At what point in this recipe did you use your attachment?
Hi Lauren, I apologize if the language in confusing. Sometimes in ice cream recipes, the terms “freeze” and “churn” are used interchangeably. Where it says “freeze in your ice cream maker”, this is where you would use your attachment and churn the ice cream. Then, transfer to a container to store in the freezer.
Hi! I live in Melbourne Australia, and I just made your recipe with my Kitchenaid icecream attachment – can I just say it tasted absolutely AMA ZING! I can’t wait for it to finish freezing in my fridge tonight! Thanks so much for posting the recipe – loved making it and will so enjoy the eating! Thanks again for your very easy to follow instructions. Best wishes to you for Christmas and the New Year.
I am no chocolate lover but my husband prefers it over any other flavor. I just got a KA mixer with the ice cream attachment and first made two versions of vanilla. Neither turned out perfectly. I knew I had to make chocolate next for hubby and I found your recipe. I just put it in the freezer to set and what i ate off the dasher was divine. Hubby’s going to love it. I used heavy whipping cream in place of the cream. Would that explain why my ice cream was nearly overflowing my bowl while it was churning? I also used Nestle semi sweet mini chips as that’s the Thanks a million for the recipe and instructions.
I used Nestle semisweet mini chips as that’s all my local store carried.
I made this ice cream over the weekend as part of a homemade ice cream cake for my wife’s birthday. It is divine.
Oh and if you still need a good scoop search Google for “antifreeze ice cream scoop” as there are many brand and sizes to suit your needs. my mother bought one about 25 years ago, paddle shape. They are solid aluminium and have antifreeze inside. The ice cream slips right off. They have the classic scoop shape and paddle shape, for filling a bowl up quick. I inherited hers and still use it to this day :)
Gonna try this tomorrow, have a batch of chocolate chip going now. It sounds yummy! I had planned on using dutch cocoa but not the added melted chocolate, a welcome addition! Anyways thanks for the recipe, I cannot wait to try this out tomorrow.
oh em gee!!! I made this recipe today and it is absolutely devine! I also had some left-over salted caramel in the fridge so some tubs have this swirled through which is to die for! Thanks for a great recipe :) Cheers.
My six year old loves this ice cream. He loves it so much that I stop buying ice cream and now I do this one at least twice a month lol. Thank you for your awesome recipes
Ok, I just made this ice cream using semisweet chocolate and it’s good but not what I want in a chocolate ice cream. It reminds me of a frosty from the Wendy’s fast food chain. Next time I’m going to use the bittersweet chocolate and hopefully it will come out like the picture.
Thanks
Mmmmm! This was the best creamiest ice cream I have ever made! Thanks so much for sharing!
I made this last week and it was absolutely the best ice cream I’ve ever had. I did not have dutch processed cocoa (used a store brand) but it still turned out creamy and very chocolately. Thanks for such a great recipe.
Help! I guess I am a bit of a blonde…I just did the egg mixture part and it separated! It looks like cottage cheese in a pan of milky water. What did I do wrong? How do I fix it?
Hi Mary, I’m not really sure how this could have happened? I’ve never heard of this happening… did you make any substitutions or change the technique in any way?
Got a Kitchenaid maker for Christmas. I am making ice cream this weekend and this is just what I’m looking for to launch it’s inaugural use!
Thank-you for posting!
How long can you keep the custard in the fridge before churning?
Hi Kathryn, I would say up to 24 hours or so.
I made this a year ago and it was the best ice cream I have ever tasted in my long legged life. And I have been to Italy. I will attempt to make it again for Christmas Eve for my mom who cannot swallow. (I don’t have the baker’s chocolate so I am going to use my Costco bag of chocolate chips.)
I used your malted ice cream and added cocoa to make it chocolate malt.
I have this custard cooling in the refrigerator as I type. It was dark. I used the dutch cocoa and 5 oz Ghirardelli 60% cacao chocolate chips. Did your base come out darker than the end product?
BTW, I made your chocolate malt ice cream for my gluten-free nephew and after it was done, I realized malt powder is NOT gluten free. Oh Snap! I had to make another batch so chose this one. Poor me!!!
Hi Gloria, It does get a little lighter when it churns, but I wouldn’t be worried about the color!
It came out perfect. Thanks!
This ice cream looks great. I would just like to ask why dutch process cocoa powder is used, isn’t natural cocoa powder supposed to give a more intense and chocolaty flavor? I cant find dutch process cocoa but really would love to make this ice cream. Thanks!
I think Dutch-process cocoa powder a wonderfully clean and robust flavor, but you can make this with natural cocoa powder if you’d like.
After making the Coconut Vanilla Bean Cake with Swiss Meringue Buttercream frosting, I had 12 egg yolks left over. Even though I don’t have an ice cream maker, I decided to try this. It is truly a “sucker” ice cream recipe. I followed the directions, and it wasn’t that difficult, and it was SO good. I used David’s directions for making ice cream without an ice cream maker, but I used an immersion blender for breaking up the ice crystals, and I can’t imagine it coming out any better using an ice cream maker. I put the custard in a Ziplock oblong 8c plastic container, and this meant it was only ~2″ deep in the freezer, and it gave me some area to get the blender in there and really mix it up. It was also convenient because I just left it in the same container to scoop it out. I am now trying the apple pie ice cream with the same method. We’ll see how that goes, I’m not sure about the step of adding the snickerdoodles in the end, but I’ll figure it out.
You will go to heaven for publishing this recipe. I licked the dasher clean, scraped the inside of the ice chamber and licked the custard bowl. I am sitting on the floor next to the fridge, spoon in hand, waiting for the ice cream to firm up. I might not make it.
Made this over the weekend. Absolutely amazing! My daughters were fighting to see who got to finish it off. My oldest (and sneakiest) took the container and locked herself in my room so she had enough time to finish it off before her sister could break in and get the ice cream back! :) Making again today to appease the heathens. Thanks for the recipe!!!
Hello! This (and the Strawberry!) is epic, epic epic!! I am making this for the second time! I have a question…When you have a recipe, like this one, that calls for 5 egg yolks, do you have a “go to” recipe for the whites? Thank you and many blessings in your new home!
Hi June, It really all depends on what else I’m making in the coming days. Sometimes I have something specific I know I can use the whites for, or else I just save them for an egg white omelet!
Amazing. Better than shop bought. The texture was somewhere between a mousse and ice cream. Gobbled up by all the family. The richness of the dark chocolate (I used 85%) means small portions are enough.
Thanks for this amazing recipe. The ice cream is very creamy and silky and the taste is amazing.
OMG……just churned this off. AMAZING!!!! My husband and I are licking our spoons. THANKS! I am a very happy woman right now.
You asked about ice cream scoops and the one I recommend is the Wilton Ice Cream scoop. It can scoop the hardest ice cream, covers the corners and has a silicon oadded handle and is available in at least 6 cool colors. The Rosle looks like a great tool but I’ve never used one so I cannot attest to it’s usability. It is also around $26.00. While I recognize that Rosle makes very high quality kitchen tools, the Wilton is hands down a wnner for less than half the cost. http://www.amazon.com/WILTON-CREAM-ASSORTED-COLORS-2104-1133/dp/B00444GOI0/. Most were under $10.00 and free delivery.
I made this ice cream yesterday and I can’t believe how good it is! It was my first attempt ever at making ice cream- I don’t own an ice cream making machine. I only hope that I can make it once again and have it turn it just as good or better!
I live in The Netherlands and therefore used ingredients available in a Dutch grocery store. For anyone who may be interested, I used the following successfully:
‘slagroom’ (Dutch whipping cream)
180g Verkade ‘puurchocolade’ (dark chocolate bar)
3 T Blokker ‘cacao’ (unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa)
I also note that I used only 4 egg yolks.
Hats off to David Lebovitz for this incredible recipe and thank you to all the people who shared their experiences making this. I may just buy an ice cream maker soon!
I made the ice cream and tasted it, it was very creamy, no doubt, it seems the best proportion is 2 cream : 1 milk. But taste wise I don’t think this is a winner, it taste good but lack the wow factor.
I found this recipe, migh make it soon.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mckaig/2253397846/