Peach and tarragon ice cream
- Published: 14 Jun 23
- Updated: 18 Mar 24
Sweet, juicy peaches and grassy, aniseedy tarragon make an elegant icecream pairing rarely found outside swanky restaurants. Both the flavours are mellowed out by the cream to create something moreish yet sophisticated.
Check out our quick raspberry ice cream, too.
- Makes about 1 litre (serves 8-10)
- Hands-on time 40 min, plus churning
Ingredients
- 4 large ripe peaches
- 100g caster sugar
- ½ bunch tarragon
- 270ml whole milk
- 350ml double cream
- Fine sea salt
- 4 medium free-range egg yolks
- Peaches to serve (optional)
Specialist kit
- Ice cream machine
Useful to have
- Probe or sugar thermometer
Method
- Quarter the peaches, discarding the stones, then put them in a saucepan with the sugar, 250ml water and all but 2 sprigs of the tarragon. Bring to a simmer, cook for about 10 minutes until the peaches are very soft, then strain, reserving the liquid and discarding the tarragon. Put the peaches in a blender or food processor, whizz until smooth, then return to the pan with the reserved liquid. Continue cooking over a low heat until you have around 100ml syrupy peach purée. Leave to cool.
- Put the milk, cream and a pinch of fine sea salt in a medium pan, heat gently until steaming hot, then remove the pan from the heat. In a separate bowl, use a balloon whisk to whisk the egg yolks for 1 minute until thoroughly combined.
- Half-fill the sink with cold water. Gradually whisk the hot cream into the yolk mixture, whisking continuously to form a custard. Return the custard to the pan and cook over a low heat, stirring all the time, until it reaches 82°C on a sugar thermometer (or becomes thick enough to coat the back of a spoon). Don’t let the custard boil or it will scramble. As soon as it reaches the right temperature or thickens enough, plunge the base of the pan into the sink of water to cool. Speed up the cooling process by stirring the mixture every so often.
- Once the custard is at room temperature, stir in the syrupy peach purée. Finely chop the leaves from the remaining tarragon sprigs and stir them in too. Pour the mixture into a lidded container, cover the surface with baking paper, add the lid and chill overnight.
- The next day, pour the custard into an ice cream machine and churn for 25-45 minutes (depending on your machine) until it reaches the texture of thick whipped cream. Transfer to a lidded container, seal and freeze for at least 4 hours until ready to serve. It will keep for up to 3 months in the freezer. Soften for 5-10 minutes out of the freezer before serving (see serving tip).
- Recipe from July 2023 Issue
Nutrition
- Calories
- 266kcals
- Fat
- 21g (12g saturated)
- Protein
- 3.1g
- Carbohydrates
- 16g (15g sugars)
- Fibre
- 1g
- Salt
- 0.1g
delicious. tips
Serving suggestion: For a seriously suave pud, halve peaches widthways, remove the stone, then fill them full of ice cream and decorate with little tarragon leaves.
Don’t waste it: Lightly whisk, then freeze the leftover egg whites to use in meringues.
Buy ingredients online
Rate & review
Rate
Reviews
Subscribe to our magazine
Food stories, skills and tested recipes, straight to your door... Enjoy 5 issues for just £5 with our special introductory offer.
SubscribeUnleash your inner chef
Looking for inspiration? Receive the latest recipes with our newsletter