rydra_wong (
rydra_wong) wrote in
cookability2010-06-29 06:22 pm
Banana not-icecream
Con: requires use of a food-processor or blender, which can be hard for those of us with noise sensitivity.
Pro: minimal prep, lasts indefinitely in the freezer, takes only a few minutes to make, no cooking required, compatible with a very wide range of special dietary requirements, is mysterious food alchemy.
Taken from Instructables: 1-Ingredient Ice Cream:
Take a banana or bananas, peel, chop into chunks, then put in a bag in the freezer.
When desired, take out your frozen banana chunks, put them in a food processor, and blend them.
The result is amazingly creamy in texture, and way sweeter than regular banana, for reasons I cannot fathom.
I don't eat a lot of sugar, and I actually find the result too sweet; I'm going to be experimenting with blending in extra ingredients, including other fruits or cocoa powder.
ETA: If you need/want to take a supplement that's in powder form, blending it in seems to work very well (I tried this with a scoop of whey protein).
ETA2: If you are okay with dairy, blending in some Greek yoghurt is amazingly delicious.
Pro: minimal prep, lasts indefinitely in the freezer, takes only a few minutes to make, no cooking required, compatible with a very wide range of special dietary requirements, is mysterious food alchemy.
Taken from Instructables: 1-Ingredient Ice Cream:
Take a banana or bananas, peel, chop into chunks, then put in a bag in the freezer.
When desired, take out your frozen banana chunks, put them in a food processor, and blend them.
The result is amazingly creamy in texture, and way sweeter than regular banana, for reasons I cannot fathom.
I don't eat a lot of sugar, and I actually find the result too sweet; I'm going to be experimenting with blending in extra ingredients, including other fruits or cocoa powder.
ETA: If you need/want to take a supplement that's in powder form, blending it in seems to work very well (I tried this with a scoop of whey protein).
ETA2: If you are okay with dairy, blending in some Greek yoghurt is amazingly delicious.

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I was thinking that a tablespoon or two of tart Greek yoghurt might work well (since I can tolerate dairy).
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Added: Also, I bet blueberries would work well blended into the bananas because blueberries freeze so well.
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In my case, it wouldn't fit into my tiny blender *g*.
It works fine with the banana in fairly large chunks, so it could well be fine with the banana whole -- if you try it, maybe you could report back?
ETA: Peeling the banana before freezing it is not optional, though. I know this because I forgot. Trying to peel a frozen banana is ... not easy.
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If I can convince the wife to try it, sure. I do not like bananas and were it not for the whole "bodies need potassium to not turn into one big cramp" I would never touch them. Yucky.
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I am yelling because I want the whole world to know how delicious it is.
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We cubed our watermelon, froze it, then blended bits and pieces together. We stopped when the fruit was still a little bit chunky so it was less like a traditional ice cream and more like Dippin' Dots done with fruit. It was so freaking good. I cannot wait to blend up more. (And if you pick a sweet watermelon, there will be no need to add sugar or anything else.)
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b) The reason it's sweeter is because fruits and vegetables convert starches to sugar with cold, as a form of antifreeze. It's why root vegetables are sweeter after the first freeze. Alton Brown said it, so it must be true.
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I make banana ice-blocks (banana onna stick!) in summer by peeling a ripe banana, cutting it in two, sticking am ice-block stick in each half (I use wooden ones), and wrapping each one in cling film and freezing it. You still get the lovely ice-creamy texture and banany-y sweetness and it's so easy to eat. If a bit suggestive. :-P
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And now I'm wondering about blending bananas with other fruit and pouring them into a lolly mould ...
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Those frozen bananas are also brilliant in milk or yogurt smoothies; just cut into thick (1-2 inch) slices while still frozen (it's not difficult), and blend. Flavour and iciness in one!
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