Food & Nutrition

Information about ice cream

Ice Cream

Ice cream is a sweet treat that people have been eating since the Romans created flavored ices in the fourth century B.C! But in addition to being a delicious dessert with a long history of delighting the taste buds, ice cream also provides a healthy amount of nutrients to your diet.

VARIETIES

Prepared by stirring, while freezing, a pasteurized mix of one or more dairy ingredients, sweetening agents, flavorings, stabilizer, emulsifier and optional egg or egg yolk solids or other ingredients. Federal standards require ice cream to contain a minimum of 10% milkfat and 20% total milk solids by weight.

Frozen Custard, French Ice Cream, French Custard Ice Cream

Like ice cream, but contains a higher content of egg yolk solids.

Reduced Fat Ice Cream, Lowfat Ice Cream, Fat Free Ice Cream

Reduced fat ice cream contains 25% less fat than the original product. Lowfat ice cream contains less than 3 grams of fat per serving. Fat free ice cream contains less than 0.5 grams of fat per serving.

Sherbet

Low in milkfat and solids with 1 – 2% milkfat and 2 – 5% total mild solids. Water, flavoring, sweetener, and stabilizers are added. It has more sugar than ice cream.

A WORD ABOUT FLAVORING & AIR

Flavoring

Added Flavoring must be identified on the label as natural, naturally flavored, or artificially flavored (e.g. raspberry ice cream, raspberry flavored ice cream, artificially flavored raspberry ice cream).

Air

While ice cream is made, air is whipped into it increasing its volume. This increase in volume is known as overrun. Overrun does not have to be declared on the label. Generally, the higher the overrun, the lower the cost of the ice cream.

NUTRITIONAL INFORMATION

Ice cream has a great deal more nutritional value than its dessert counterparts, such as cake, pie or candy. Calcium, riboflavin (vitamin B2), and protein are the primary nutrients in ice cream.

STORAGE & HANDLING

Store ice cream tightly covered at 0 degrees Fahrenheit. To avoid crystallization and volume loss, scoop out ice cream, keeping surface as level as possible. Cover surface with plastic wrap before re-closing and return to freezer immediately.

To make it easier to serve, soften ice cream:

Transfer ice cream to refrigerator 10 – 20 minutes before serving

OR

Microwave on High (100%) in carton

  • 1 pint = 10 – 15 seconds
  • 1 quart = 15 – 25 seconds
  • 1/2 gallon = 30 – 40 seconds

SERVING SUGGESTIONS

Appetizer Fruit Shrub:

Top fruit juice with a scoop of ice cream or sherbet.

Frosty Fruit Salad:

Arrange assorted fresh fruits around a scoop of fruited ice cream.

Main Dish Garnish:

Complement a main dish with ice cream or sherbet (e.g. cranberry with poultry, orange with pork, mint with lamb and cherry with game).

Easy Dessert:

Top a stirred custard with a scoop of vanilla ice cream instead of meringue for an easy Floating Island.