June 5, 2009
Ice Creams for the Savory-Toothed
In the mountains where I live, temperatures are still dipping below freezing at night. But the days are finally starting to reach the 70s, which has rekindled my seasonal ice cream infatuation with a vengeance. Forget plain vanilla and chocolate—yawn. (I do make an exception, however, for what may be the creamiest soft-serve in America, Donnelly’s, at a former dairy farm near Saranac Lake, New York.) In my opinion, the kookier the flavor, the better.
So I was happy to see that Restaurants and Institutions magazine just named savory ice cream flavors as one of the top current ice cream trends. The article cited two South Carolina restaurants serving up experimental flavors: Carolina’s, in Charleston, which makes a smoked-honey ice cream, and Devereaux’s, which serves ice cream infused with black peppercorns and served alongside a goat-cheese cheesecake with red-wine syrup.
My first experience with savory ice creams was in the late 1980s, in a suburb of San Francisco, when a Filipino friend introduced me to cheese ice cream. It contained actual chunks of what appeared to be cheddar cheese, and it was neither particularly salty nor sweet. I tried it alongside a scoop of ube, or purple yam, ice cream, which was extremely sweet and delicious. My friend told me that Filipinos like to order the cheese ice cream to temper the sweetness of another flavor. I wasn’t entirely sold on it at the time, but I’d be willing to try it again.
Since then, the best unusual ice cream flavor I’ve tried was avocado, at the Chinatown Ice Cream Factory, in New York City. It was slightly sweet, and had the silkiest, most luscious texture of any ice cream I’ve tasted. If I still lived in the city I would be working my way through their other intriguing flavors, like Zen Butter (I have no idea what that means). I’d be interested, if a little scared, to sample the Durian ice cream; I’ve never tasted this notoriously foul-smelling tropical fruit, though it is one of the few foods Andrew Zimmern, of the Travel Channel show “Bizarre Foods”, couldn’t stomach—and he’s eaten rancid meat and maggot-infested cheese.
If you’re in the New England area, check out one of the places suggested in Chow’s Boston Digest. Pad thai? Maybe. I’m not too sure about clam chowder, though. No, wait, I am sure—that sounds atrocious.
While looking for pictures of quirky ice cream flavors, I found this savory borscht and dill ice cream, which actually sounds kind of great. In my food fantasies (which I am not talented enough of a cook to realize, unfortunately), I could also imagine a tahini ice cream, maybe even with bits of that hard sesame-toffee candy, or halvah (the fiberglass-textured kind often sold in Jewish delis).
What’s the most unusual ice cream flavor you’ve tried?
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The strangest ice cream flavor I have had so far is from the new-ish Haagen Dazs FIVE (ingredient) line. The make some good ones, such as Brown Sugar. But Ginger was a bit weird. Kind of soapy. It made me want sushi.
Salty black licorice ice cream, in Sweden. Looks just like chocolate chip ice cream, which is what I was expecting! Still, strangely delicious.
There’s an ice cream store that sells online called Jeni’s. They’ll ship you whatever you like from their selection on dry ice and they’re all wonderful. Things like champagne sorbet and lemon basil ice cream are not to be missed.
Thanks for the love, MessyONE.
We’re in Columbus, but we do indeed ship. You can find us online at http://jenisicecreams.com; and you can also find us at select restaurants and shops — most recently at Foragers Market in Brookyln.
Cheers.
[...] than the addition of chopped nuts, ice cream seems to beg for constant reinvention, with ever-more-bizarre flavors and strange textures (think Dippin’ Dots). I don’t know why that is, but maybe it has [...]
Being not a sweets person, I’ve been thinking about savory ice cream for a long time. Delighted to see others have as well.
Today (4th of July) I think I may have invented Vichyssoise ice cream, freezing Vichyssoise in my ice cream maker. First pass, potato made the frozen mixture weird and dry, but as it melted, it was luxuriously creamy and delicious once again… Back to soup.
At best, it seems a great way to aerate and freeze Vichyssoise, and preserve it, and serve it at its optimal chilliness.
Humpty Slocums in SF (mission district) has some amazing flavors, including my favorites Secret Breakfast (bourbon and cornflake), Jesus Juice (red wine and coke) and basalmic vinegar carmael.
[...] from http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/food/2009/06/ice-creams-for-the-savory-toothed/. [...]
UBE, AVOCADO, CORN & QUESO DE BOLA ICE CREAMS IS NOTHING NEW IN THE PHILIPPINES. I WAS BORN IN THE 70′S AND WE ALREADY HAD IT.
The oddest flavor ice cream I’ve had was a garlic ice cream at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in California. The garlic had been roasted to bring out the sweeter taste in it, but it was still obviously garlic and it was…odd.