My husband and I have been married for almost fifty-four
years, and ice cream has always been a part of our lives. This connection began
in the summer of 1961, soon after we became engaged. I was the social chairman
for the Baptist Student Union at Mississippi College, where both of us were in
school. We decided at the end of the summer to have an ice cream social. It was
a good party with only one disaster.
I must give a little background information before I tell my
sad social chairman story. I led you astray a bit. I was making ice cream
before Frank and I met. Actually, my family made ice cream. I can remember my
dad on our little back porch
turning the crank. What a sweet memory!
The recipe for ice cream was in my cookbook at home, so I
needed to find the recipe for our party. Fifty-four years ago, there was no
Google, of course, so we went to a bookstore, and I copied the recipe on the
sly.
Now back to my story. I believe we made two freezers of ice
cream, and everyone had had a dish or two. Frank and I hadn’t had any, so we
were working on a third freezer. Frank turned and turned the crank; our BSU
director took a turn and turned and turned. That cream just would not freeze!
Finally, Frank opened the machine to see very soupy cream. He stuck his finger
in and tasted. Yuk! Salt had seeped into the cream, and it never would have
frozen! What a disappointment! So much work and no homemade ice cream. Our BSU
director opened the Wigwam, our snack bar, and got ice cream for us. It just
wasn’t the same.
Through all of the years of our married life, we have made
ice cream in the summer. Usually, we begin around Father’s Day. In fact, in
Pensacola, we always had a big Father’s Day party for Frank and had the singles
in our Sunday School department out for a party. So much fun!
The three flavors that we always have are vanilla,
chocolate, and orange-pineapple sherbet. Here are the recipes:
Vanilla Ice Cream
4 eggs 2
cups whipping cream
2 1/2 cups sugar 2
tablespoons vanilla
6 cups milk 1/2
teaspoon salt
2 cups half and half cream
Beat eggs and gradually add sugar. Mix in milk, then both creams. Add vanilla and salt.
Pour into freezer and freeze!
Always delicious!!
Chocolate Ice Cream
2 cans Eagle Brand 1/2
gallon chocolate milk
3 well-beaten eggs 2
teaspoons vanilla
Mix and freeze!
Orange Sherbet
2 cans Eagle Brand 1
large can crushed pineapple, well drained
2 quarts Sunkist 2
teaspoons vanilla
Mix and freeze!
We were famous for homemade ice cream in Pensacola, and our fame has followed us to New
Mexico, so much so that I noticed one of our friends looking through our
freezer at our Christmas Open House one year. When I asked Ralph what he was
looking for, he said that he just knew I had homemade ice cream there. I always
had ice cream, or so he thought.
I’ve already made ice cream this spring, so we’ve gotten a
good start! Oh, I almost forgot to tell you something. For most of our ice
cream years, we’ve used an electric freezer. I don’t know how many we’ve worn
out. Frank just ordered a new freezer (nowadays, clerks call them ice cream
makers) for us. Guess what! It’s both electric and manual! Hooray! If the
electricity goes off, the Youngs can still have ice cream!
2 comments:
wow! this looks easy to make. but i am sure there will always be that kid in us who always loves ice cream!
All the recipes are super easy, SweetBraveHeart! Try them. Our favorite is vanilla because you can dress it up with strawberries or chocolate in the bowl. But if I want to impress company, I make the sherbet. Thanks for reading and writing!
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