Goat Cheese Ice Cream With Fennel, Lemon and Honey
Published June 1, 2021
- Total Time
- 1½ hours, plus at least 4 hours’ freezing
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
3 cups whole milk
⅔ cup granulated sugar
2 teaspoons lemon zest
1 teaspoon crushed fennel seeds or ½ teaspoon whole anise seeds
Pinch of salt
4 egg yolks
8 ounces plain fresh goat cheese (chèvre), crumbled
¼ cup honey
1 cup blueberries (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
Put the milk, sugar, lemon zest, fennel seeds and salt in a medium saucepan. Bring to just under a simmer over medium-high heat, stirring occasionally to prevent scorching, then turn heat to low.
- Step 2
Place egg yolks in a small bowl. Slowly whisk 1 cup of the hot milk mixture into the yolks to temper them. (This keeps the yolks from curdling.) Whisk yolk mixture back into the remaining milk in the saucepan. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture thickens slightly and coats the back of a spoon, 5 to 8 minutes. Turn off heat and whisk in the goat cheese.
- Step 3
Pour ice cream mixture into a bowl and set in an ice bath until completely cool, about 30 minutes. Alternatively, cool mixture in the refrigerator for several hours.
- Step 4
Churn mixture in an ice cream machine according to manufacturer’s instructions, usually about 30 minutes. At this point, the ice cream will still be somewhat soft. Transfer about ½ cup at a time to a storage container, drizzling a little honey over each addition.
- Step 5
Cover container and freeze for at least 4 hours, until firm, before serving. (Freezing the ice cream overnight is recommended.) Serve in bowls with blueberries, if using.
Private Notes
Comments
This recipe looks so tempting. Is it possible to prepare it without an ice cream machine?
Am I the first reviewer to make the recipe exactly as written? Two notes: the custard, even after 14 stirred minutes, did not thicken as it should, so I stopped trying. Because of the high fat content, my 20 year old ice cream churner immediately seized up. Watch for that. But the finished product was sublime. The fennel seeds melted away, the tiny pockets of layered honey were like little presents, and I am now the most popular gift-bringing guest on County Road FF in River Falls, WI.
General question: Can you make ice cream with straight goat's milk, like that available in some grocery stores?
I only had 1 1/4 c milk, so added 3/4 c half & half for 2 c liquid total. Then made the following modifications 1/3 c honey & 3 T sugar in lieu of 2/3 c sugar. 6 oz goat cheese. 2T honey for drizzling in. Left everything else the same. Was a bit skeptical as the custard felt a tad grainy, but it turned out well, not "wow", but well enough that I'll make again, possibly adding minced candied lemon peel.Served w a drizzle evoo, flaked salt, raspberries from the garden (blueberries are a week away)
That is sublime! I laced mine with stewed blueberries because they are in season then tossed in some fresh. The taste and textural contrast between the fresh fruit and that lovely goat cheese ice cream is lovely. On a hot and sticky August night, it was perfection.
Can anyone who's made this recipe give an estimate of the finished volume? I have a small (one-pint) ice cream maker, and I'm uncertain exactly how to reduce the recipe.

