Churn it, whip it, freeze it, scoop it

Homemade Ice Cream Recipes

Welcome to the Chilly Scoops recipe counter: a cheerful, practical guide for creamy machine ice cream, silky custard, quick no-churn desserts, dairy-free scoops, bright sorbets, crunchy mix-ins, and sauces worth guarding with a spoon.

Ice cream bowl illustration
Yield About 1 quart
Texture Creamy, scoopable, joyful

Start Here: The Scoop Strategy

Great homemade ice cream is less about fancy equipment and more about balance. You need enough fat for richness, enough sugar for scoopability, enough chill for small ice crystals, enough salt to wake up flavor, and enough patience to let the freezer do its quiet little magic trick.

Use this page as a recipe map. Beginners can start with no-churn or Philadelphia-style vanilla. Texture chasers can move to custard. Fruit lovers can make sorbet. Plant-based makers can start with coconut, oat, cashew, or banana bases and tune sweetness, fat, and water content from there.

Choose Your Ice Cream Method

Creamiest beginner route

Machine-Churned Philadelphia Style

Egg-free, clean-tasting, and flexible. Chill the base very cold, churn until it looks like soft serve, then harden in a shallow container.

  • Best for vanilla, mint chip, coffee, cookies and cream, and fruit ripples.
  • Flavor is direct because there is no egg custard note.
  • Great first machine recipe because the base is simple.
Rich and old-school

Custard-Style Ice Cream

Egg yolks add body, silkiness, and a deeper dessert-shop feel. It takes more care, but the reward is a lush, slow-melting scoop.

  • Best for chocolate, vanilla bean, brown sugar, pistachio, and caramel.
  • Cook gently and use a thermometer for accuracy.
  • Strain the base before chilling for the smoothest finish.
No machine needed

No-Churn Ice Cream

Whipped cream plus sweetened condensed milk makes a fluffy base that freezes into a soft, sliceable dessert.

  • Best for cookies and cream, birthday cake, caramel swirl, and peanut butter cup.
  • Use bold flavors because the base is sweet.
  • Freeze in a loaf pan for easy scooping.
Bright and dairy-free

Sorbet and Fruit Ices

Fruit, sugar, acid, and water become a refreshing dessert when the balance is right. Too little sugar can turn it icy and hard.

  • Best for strawberry, mango, lemon, raspberry, peach, and watermelon.
  • A little citrus makes fruit taste louder.
  • Let it soften briefly before serving.

Featured Homemade Ice Cream Recipes

Machine

Classic Vanilla Bean Ice Cream

A dependable egg-free base with a clean dairy flavor, fragrant vanilla, and enough richness to carry sauces, pies, cones, and late-night freezer visits.

Ingredients

  • 2 cups heavy cream
  • 1 cup whole milk
  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract or 1 vanilla bean
  • 1/4 teaspoon fine salt

Steps

  1. Whisk milk, sugar, vanilla, and salt until the sugar dissolves.
  2. Stir in cream, cover, and chill until very cold.
  3. Churn according to your machine directions until thick and soft-serve-like.
  4. Pack into a chilled container, press parchment on the surface, and freeze until firm.

Scoop tip: Add crushed cookies, mini chips, or brownie bits during the last minute of churning so they stay suspended instead of sinking like tiny dessert anchors.

Custard

Chocolate Custard Ice Cream

Dark, plush, and dramatic in a bowl. This is the recipe for anyone who believes chocolate should enter the room with a soundtrack.

Ingredients

  • 2 cups heavy cream
  • 1 cup whole milk
  • 2/3 cup sugar
  • 1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 4 large egg yolks
  • 4 ounces chopped semisweet chocolate
  • 1/4 teaspoon fine salt

Steps

  1. Warm cream, milk, sugar, cocoa, and salt until steaming.
  2. Whisk egg yolks in a bowl, then slowly whisk in some hot dairy to temper.
  3. Return everything to the pot and cook gently, stirring, until the custard thickens and reaches at least 160°F.
  4. Pour over chopped chocolate, whisk smooth, strain, chill, churn, and freeze.

Scoop tip: A tiny pinch of espresso powder can deepen chocolate flavor without making the batch taste like coffee.

No-Churn

No-Churn Cookies and Cream

Fast, friendly, and nearly impossible to dislike. This is the "company is coming and I forgot dessert" hero move.

Ingredients

  • 2 cups cold heavy cream
  • 1 can sweetened condensed milk
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1/4 teaspoon fine salt
  • 18 chocolate sandwich cookies, roughly crushed

Steps

  1. Whip cream to soft peaks.
  2. Fold condensed milk, vanilla, and salt into the whipped cream.
  3. Fold in crushed cookies, leaving some big pieces for texture.
  4. Freeze in a covered loaf pan until scoopable.

Scoop tip: Keep a handful of cookie crumbs for the top so the pan looks like it came from a tiny freezer bakery.

Dairy-Free

Coconut Mango Ice Cream

A golden, sunny dairy-free scoop with coconut richness, mango brightness, and just enough lime to make the fruit sparkle.

Ingredients

  • 2 cans full-fat coconut milk
  • 2 cups ripe mango puree
  • 1/2 cup sugar or maple syrup
  • 1 tablespoon lime juice
  • 1/4 teaspoon fine salt
  • Optional: 1 tablespoon cornstarch whisked with a splash of coconut milk

Steps

  1. Blend coconut milk, mango, sweetener, lime, and salt until smooth.
  2. For extra body, simmer with the cornstarch slurry until slightly thickened.
  3. Chill completely, churn, and freeze until firm.
  4. Serve with toasted coconut or a mango ripple.

Scoop tip: Dairy-free bases love bold seasoning. Add lime gradually and taste cold if you can.

Sorbet

Strawberry Lemon Sorbet

Bright, ruby-colored, and refreshing. It is the frozen dessert equivalent of opening a window on a sunny day.

Ingredients

  • 4 cups hulled strawberries
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice
  • Pinch of fine salt

Steps

  1. Simmer sugar and water just until dissolved, then cool.
  2. Blend strawberries, syrup, lemon juice, and salt.
  3. Strain if you prefer a smoother texture.
  4. Chill, churn, and freeze in a shallow container.

Scoop tip: If the sorbet freezes very hard, let it sit at room temperature for a few minutes before scooping.

Master Ratios for Future Recipe Experiments

Base Starting Ratio Best For Watch Out For
Philadelphia-style dairy 2 parts cream, 1 part milk, sugar, salt, flavoring Clean vanilla, mint, coffee, cookie flavors Can taste flat without enough salt or strong flavoring
Custard Dairy base plus 4 to 6 yolks per quart Chocolate, vanilla bean, caramel, nut flavors Overheating can scramble eggs; strain before chilling
No-churn 2 cups whipped cream plus 1 can condensed milk Cookies, candy, cake pieces, fudge swirls Sweetness climbs quickly, so balance with salt or bitter notes
Coconut dairy-free Full-fat coconut milk plus fruit or flavoring Tropical fruit, chocolate, coffee, toasted coconut Coconut flavor is present, so pair intentionally
Sorbet Fruit puree plus simple syrup and acid Berries, citrus, mango, peach, melon Too little sugar can freeze rock-hard

The Chilly Scoops Flavor Lab

Classic Comfort

Vanilla bean, chocolate fudge, strawberry, butter pecan, coffee, mint chip, cookies and cream.

Try with: waffle cones, brownies, pie, caramel sauce.

Bakery Counter

Cinnamon roll, blueberry crumble, banana pudding, brown butter blondie, lemon shortbread.

Try with: cookie chunks, cake cubes, graham crumble.

Bright and Fruity

Peach basil, raspberry lime, mango coconut, roasted cherry, pineapple ginger.

Try with: citrus zest, jam ripples, toasted coconut.

Grown-Up Sundae

Espresso fudge, salted caramel, dark chocolate orange, pistachio honey, black sesame vanilla.

Try with: flaky salt, brittle, cocoa nibs, roasted nuts.

Sauces, Swirls, and Mix-Ins

Fudge Ripple

Warm 1/2 cup cream with 1/3 cup sugar, whisk in 4 ounces chopped chocolate and a pinch of salt, then cool completely before layering into ice cream.

Berry Jam Swirl

Cook 2 cups berries with 1/3 cup sugar and lemon juice until thick and glossy. Chill before swirling so it ribbons instead of melting the base.

Salted Caramel Ribbon

Use a thick caramel sauce and chill it until spoonable. Layer it into the container instead of churning it in so it stays dramatic.

Crunch Rule

Cookies, pretzels, brittle, and nuts stay happier when pieces are bite-size and added late. Chocolate coating can help delicate crunches resist sogginess.

Fruit Rule

Fresh fruit contains water, so cook it into a jam, roast it, macerate it, or use small pieces to avoid icy chunks.

Salt Rule

Frozen desserts need a little salt. It does not make the batch salty; it makes vanilla taste more like vanilla and chocolate more like chocolate.

Homemade Ice Cream Troubleshooting

I

Icy texture

Chill the base longer, reduce excess water, churn in a fully frozen bowl, and store in a shallow airtight container.

H

Too hard to scoop

Check that the formula has enough sugar and fat, let it soften briefly, and avoid storing it near the freezer door.

S

Too soft after freezing

Reduce alcohol or watery add-ins, churn until properly thick, and give the batch several hours to harden.

F

Flavor tastes dull

Cold mutes flavor. Add enough vanilla, cocoa, fruit, salt, spice, or citrus before freezing, and taste the chilled base.

Food Safety Notes for Homemade Ice Cream

Homemade ice cream can be wonderfully simple, but egg-based recipes deserve careful handling. Use pasteurized egg products when you want a no-cook egg base, or cook custard bases carefully and check temperature with a clean food thermometer. Keep dairy cold, chill cooked bases quickly, and return leftovers to the freezer before they melt into soup with ambitions.

Safety baseline: For egg custard bases, cook to at least 160°F, chill promptly, and keep cold foods cold. This page follows general guidance from U.S. food-safety sources; always follow current official advice and your recipe's specific instructions.

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Homemade Ice Cream Basics

Read the beginner step-by-step guide for equipment, chilling, churning, mix-ins, and hardening.

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Ingredients Guide

Understand what milk, cream, sugar, eggs, stabilizers, sweeteners, and flavorings do in a frozen base.

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Dairy-Free and Vegan Ice Cream

Plan coconut, oat, cashew, banana, fruit, and other plant-based bases with better texture in mind.

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More to Explore

Ice Cream Science

Learn why fat, sugar, air, temperature, and ice crystals decide whether your scoop is dreamy or crunchy.

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Toppings Guide

Build sundaes with crunch, sauces, fruit, candy, whipped cream, and a little dramatic flair.

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Storage Tips

Keep homemade batches fresher by managing air, temperature swings, and freezer placement.

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Classic Desserts

Turn your batch into sundaes, floats, milkshakes, affogato, sandwiches, and cakes.

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Ice Cream Pairings

Match scoops with brownies, pies, cookies, coffee, waffles, fruit, and cake.

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Seasonal Ideas

Find spring, summer, fall, and winter inspiration for your next freezer experiment.

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