In 1963, my girlfriend at the time, made a really nice ice cream, using the recipe on a Sunshine powdered milk tin. Is that recipe still in existence?
By Arthur
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When you get the recipe, please post it!
I have never heard of this and Im 76 years old. I saw on Facebook in the short making pretty objects out of dry ice cream. Theirs was dry rounds That they formed into pretty objects!
I was searching for a powdered milk ice cream recipe and came across your question. Just a few minutes later I came across this recipe in an old newspaper ad from 1960. I think this is the one you are looking for!
news.google.com/
For those who had trouble reading the recipe from the Google link, I have transcribed it for myself and am sharing it below:
Powdered Milk Ice Cream [Sunshine Ice Cream]
Makes about 2 Pints
Ingredients
1 teaspoon gelatin
½ cup hot water
4 heaped tablespoons full cream powdered milk
3 tablespoons sugar
1 ½ cups hot water
1 ¼ teaspoons vanilla extract
Directions
Dissolve gelatin in 1 tablespoon cold water, then mix with the ½ cup hot water.
Beat together powdered milk, sugar and 1 ½ cups hot water; add gelatin mixture and vanilla. Beat well, turn into freezer trays. When frozen to the consistency of thick cream, remove, beat until doubled in bulk. Freeze firm.
For a richer ice cream, reduce hot water to 1 cup, add one 4-oz. tin [Nestles] cream. [Not sure what this is. - I would just try 4 oz. of regular cream.]
When you mix the powdered milk with water, also add the sugar. (You missed out sugar in the method). I made this a few years ago.
I am a diabetic so I use cocoanut sugar, a natural sugar substitute.
I added the sugar to the recipe posted above. Thanks for letting us know.
This recipe doesn't call for heavy cream (which is skimmed off after milking the cow) but is asking for full fat powdered milk. Miksi is one brand I found online but there are probably others.
Nestles cream is in a tin at least I think thats what it means
Peppermint Candy Powdered Milk Ice Cream [Sunshine Ice Cream]
Makes about 1 Quart
Ingredients
2 teaspoon gelatin
1 cup hot water
8 heaped tablespoons full cream powdered milk
Directions
In a food processor coarsely grind a few peppermint candy canes to give you about 1/4 cup of coarsely ground candy cane. Set aside the coarsely ground candy canes to add at the end. Next, finely grind 4 oz of peppermint candy until it is almost a powder.
Dissolve gelatin in 2 tablespoon cold water, then mix with the 1 cup hot water.
Beat together powdered milk, sugar and 1 ½ cups hot water, can of evaporated milk; add gelatin mixture, vanilla, finely ground peppermint, vanilla and optionally add the peppermint extract if you think it needs more peppermint flavor. The candy will dissolve and the mixture should be pink.
Beat well, cool in the freezer or fridge until it is cold.
Once the mixture is cold, place into the ice cream maker and churn for ~15-20 minutes. Once it is done, add the coarsely chopped peppermint candy.
My mother made this recipe from the 1940's on. We were the first in street to have a fridge with a tiny freezer and stainless steel icecream trays. In 1949 my father bought her a Sunbeam Mixmaster which made the job easier. I am giving this recipe a go today as I lost my Mum's recipe book in 1969. Thank you for the recipe.
Nice
Nonfat dry milk works equally as well. I added a little extra milk powder and it was very rich. I used cold water instead of hot and processed in my Ice cream maker. Fabulous flavor.
"Nestles cream" is a canned Nestle product called Table Cream. Commonly used in countries where fresh milk isn't readily available. In USA can be found at foreign groceries and online.
The sugar is in the method - right next to the words powdered milk!
---- any "sugar" is SUGAR natural or not. I know you posted this a while ago--please, don't play with your health and life. The ADA does not have YOUR best interests at heart. Watch KenDBerry, MD on youtube for the truth about diabetes and how to battle it. I watched my mom suffer 20 years with every complication of T2 diabetes, including amputations. She died at 64. Very low carb/ keto/non processed foods/high animal fat---is the way to eat. My grandmother ate this way after her diagnosis at the same age as my mom and lived to 84--with no complications. I was on the wrong path and dx with T2 at 40 also. A1c was 12 at one point, now is down so far to 6.5 and still dropping . I went very low carb and eat NO processed foods (even ADA approved desserts or "keto" labeled processed junk/desserts). For help to learn about it you can watch Dr. KenDBerry on YouTube--he has many videos, explains many things--no purchases/payments necessary for the info. Be Well my friend.
In Australia Nestles is the brand of cream sealed in a can. Just normal cream that is preserved in a can.
That is correct. Carnation and Nestle produced Evaporated Mils, Condensed Milk and Cream here In Tins. Actually, I still use Carnation tinned milk and Sunshine Powdered Milk.
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