Wintergreen Ice Cream Recipe - How to Make Ice Cream with Wintergreen (2024)

Home | Sweet Things | Wintergreen Ice Cream with Chocolate Chips

5 from 3 votes

By Hank Shaw

November 01, 2012 | Updated November 09, 2017

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Wintergreen Ice Cream Recipe - How to Make Ice Cream with Wintergreen (2)

Wintergreen is a polarizing flavor, much like cilantro, or grouse. Where typical mints possess varying degrees of spiciness or warmth, wintergreen is pure. It is, to me, mint at its highest level: Icy, numbing and austere. It is the favorite fruit of the Snow Queen.

It is this purity of flavor that lends itself to medicine. Chances are you’ve only ever encountered wintergreen in toothpaste, mouthwash or somesuch. Apparently this association with the medicinal is why the English loathe its flavor in foods. We Americans tend to be more open about it’s flavor, possibly because we have several native plants that bring it to us, notably the black birch, and Gaultheria procumbens itself, the wintergreen plant.

Wintergreen Ice Cream Recipe - How to Make Ice Cream with Wintergreen (3)
Wintergreen Ice Cream Recipe - How to Make Ice Cream with Wintergreen (4)

Also known as teaberry, the wintergreen is a pretty little groundcover in Eastern forests. It has simple leaves that are hard, waxy and stiff. They do not have a light green stripe down their middle, as does the similar partridgeberry, which is Mitchella repens. Incidentally, while you can eat partridgeberries, they don’t taste like much.

Wintergreen grows in massive mats all over the forest floor, and it is often the only thing still green when autumn slides into winter. This is also the time the berries begin to ripen. Wintergreen leaves also have lots of the same flavor, so you can certainly use this for teas and whatnot as well; I steep the leaves in 100-proof vodka to make my own wintergreen extract. If you want to do this your self, fill a half-pint jar with wintergreen leaves and totally submerge them in the vodka. In a month or so, you will have an amber extract. It lasts forever.

The berries, while not really sweet per se, are sweeter than the leaves. That’s why I prefer them for foods like this ice cream. The catch is that you will need lots of berries, and, sadly, the wintergreen plant is picky about setting fruit. A few weeks ago my friend Nate and I came across a nice patch near Gloucester, Massachusetts. It was a huge mat of wintergreen, but only a few of them had the crimson berries we were looking for. I am not sure what causes a wintergreen plant to fruit, but they seem to do so in patches.

Wintergreen Ice Cream Recipe - How to Make Ice Cream with Wintergreen (5)

It took some effort, but we gathered a couple cups’ worth. I took most of them home, keeping them cool as best as I could. Wintergreen berries will keep for weeks or even months in cold weather; they will hang on the plant all winter long if nothing eats them. You can dry them, too.

What to do with them? Ice cream was my first impulse. I love mint ice cream, and especially a mint ice cream with chocolate chips in it. My recipe makes a very pure wintergreen flavor because I skip the eggs and use a combination of a little corn starch (buy GMO-free if you are so inclined) and a bit of an invert sugar, in this case maple syrup. Making the traditional egg yolk custard can mask certain flavors, especially herbal ones. It also makes the ice cream even heavier than it already is. The corn starch and syrup help keep the ice cream scoopable for weeks. Try it and you will see.

5 from 3 votes

Wintergreen Ice Cream with Chocolate Chips

]I made this recipe with wild wintergreen berries from Massachusetts, but the berries live across much of the northern tier of states and in Canada. It is a pretty subtle wintergreen, so it shouldn't remind you too much of mouthwash or toothpaste. If you don’t feel like foraging, you can use a teaspoon of wintergreen extract, but the flavor will be slightly different. I do not use eggs in this recipe. I am using corn starch and maple syrup. This lets me do several things: First, it keeps the color of the ice cream a pure white, which I like because it makes me feel cooler, as wintergreen should. Second, it keeps the flavors pure. Third, the corn starch and maple syrup, which is an invert sugar, keep the ice cream scoopable far longer than with a regular, egg-based ice cream.

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Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Servings: 6 servings

Author: Hank Shaw

Prep Time: 40 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 20 minutes minutes

Total Time: 1 hour hour

Ingredients

  • 2 cups heavy cream
  • 2 cups whole milk
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 2 ounces of chopped wintergreen berries
  • 1/2 teaspoon wintergreen extract (optional)
  • 3 tablespoons maple syrup
  • 3 tablespoons corn starch
  • 4 ounces of semi-sweet chocolate, chopped fine and kept cold

Instructions

  • Save about 1/4 cup of the milk back to dissolve the corn starch in later. Heat the rest of the milk, the cream, sugar and wintergreen to the steaming point, about 160°F to 170°F. Turn off the heat, cover the pot and let steep for at least 2 hours, and up to overnight. To steep, let the mixture cool to room temperature on the stove, then pour it into a lidded container and refrigerate.

  • You can strain the mixture or not: The cooked wintergreen berries soften, have an innocuous texture and add a little color to the ice cream, but you can strain it if you want.

  • Pour the mixture back into a pot. Turn the heat on medium to heat it up again slowly. While it is heating, whisk the corn starch in with the remaining milk until it is dissolved. Stir the cornstarch mixture into the ice cream base. Stir in the maple syrup. Stir the ice cream base frequently until it gets back to the steaming point, then stir it constantly for 8 to 10 minutes. You need to do this to get the mixture to set up correctly.

  • Turn off the heat and cool the mixture. I do this by filling a large bowl with ice and then nestling a smaller bowl inside the larger bowl. Pour the ice cream base into the smaller bowl, then stir frequently to cool it rapidly. Now is the time to add the wintergreen extract, if you're using it. When the ice cream base is cool, put it in your ice cream maker and follow its directions.

  • As soon as the ice cream is made, gently fold in the chocolate chips. Either serve at once (it will be soft) or allow to harden in the freezer. The longer you store this ice cream, the harder it will get.

Notes

This recipe makes about 1 quart.

Nutrition

Calories: 599kcal | Carbohydrates: 53g | Protein: 5g | Fat: 39g | Saturated Fat: 24g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 118mg | Sodium: 69mg | Potassium: 311mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 43g | Vitamin A: 1307IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 167mg | Iron: 1mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe? Tag me today!Mention @huntgathercook or tag #hankshaw!

Categorized as:
Berries and Fruits, Featured, Foraging, Recipe, Sweet Things

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

Read More About Me

Wintergreen Ice Cream Recipe - How to Make Ice Cream with Wintergreen (2024)

FAQs

How to make wintergreen flavor? ›

Instructions
  1. Rinse and dry the wintergreen leaves thoroughly.
  2. Chop the leaves.
  3. Please in a mason jar and cover with vodka. Put lid on top.
  4. Place jar in a dark location for 6 weeks or more. ...
  5. Strain the vodka, add another cup of wintergreen leaves and allow to sit for another 6 weeks. ...
  6. Use as you would any mint extract.
Jan 15, 2021

What is the secret to making ice cream very creamy? ›

When it comes to great ice cream, cold temperatures and speed are your friends: the faster you bring your base from liquid to solid, the creamier it'll be. In a 2-quart unit, a typical batch of ice cream will take between 18 and 25 minutes to churn.

How do they make wintergreen? ›

Wintergreen essential oil is usually obtained by steam distillation of the leaves of the plant following maceration in warm water. Methyl salicylate is not present in the plant until formed by enzymatic action from a glycoside within the leaves as they are macerated in warm water.

What mixes well with wintergreen? ›

If you choose to make a solution with wintergreen oil and other essential oils, wintergreen oil may blend well with peppermint, lavender, and eucalyptus oils.

What is wintergreen flavor made of? ›

Oil of wintergreen, derived from the leaves of Gaultheria procumbens, is a volatile oil used as a flavouring for candies and chewing gum and in the treatment of muscular aches and pains. The active ingredient, methyl salicylate, is also synthesized and sold as oil of wintergreen.

What ingredient makes ice cream thick? ›

Egg Yolks: The most traditional thickening agent, egg yolks contain natural proteins and fats that contribute to a rich and luxurious texture in custard-based ice creams. Cornstarch: Often used in non-custard ice creams, cornstarch mixed with milk helps thicken the base and create a smooth mouthfeel.

What sugar is best for ice cream? ›

Most home ice cream recipes call for simple table sugar, which is chemically known as sucrose. But in pro kitchens you have more options. Liquid sugars like invert sugar, corn syrup, honey, and glucose syrup all add body, creaminess, and stability to ice cream, and a little goes a long way.

What makes ice cream creamy and not icy? ›

By binding with liquids, sugar molecules prevent an ice cream base from fully freezing into crunchy ice. That is, the more sugar you add, the softer and less icy your batch will be. The kind of sugar you add also matters.

What does wintergreen do to your body? ›

Wintergreen leaf contains an aspirin-like chemical called methyl salicylate. It has effects that might reduce pain, swelling, and fever. People use wintergreen for back pain, joint pain, muscle soreness, and many other conditions, but there is no good scientific evidence to support these uses.

Can I eat wintergreen leaves? ›

Wildflowers of the Adirondacks: Wintergreen berries were used as food by several native American groups. The leaves were used to make oil of wintergreen and a tea used as a tonic. Wintergreen on the Bloomingdale Bog Trail (12 May 2017). Wintergreen has a variety of uses as a food.

Why is my wintergreen dying? ›

Light and Temperature: The Balancing Act

Your American Wintergreen's leaves are like a mood ring for its health. If they're turning brown or curling, it's time to reassess its sunbathing habits. Too much light and your plant's leaves might crisp up, while too little can lead to a pale and limp appearance.

What essential oil mix for wintergreen? ›

Oils that Blend Well with Wintergreen Essential Oil

Wintergreen oil blends well with Marjoram, Peppermint, Spearmint, Thyme, Oregano, and Ylang Ylang essential oils.

What is the difference between wintergreen and spearmint flavor? ›

A: It's the strength of the mint. Peppermint is strong. Wintergreen a little milder and spearmint has a mild mint flavor.

What are the ingredients in wintergreen candy? ›

Ingredients: Sugar, Dextrose, Natural Flavor, Artificial Color (FD&C Yellow #5 and FD&C Blue #1). Our candy is cooked in a copper kettle with top quality ingredients before being formed by vintage equipment. We're proud to say our candies are family made in the USA!

What's the difference between mint and wintergreen? ›

Meet the American Wintergreen

When crushed, this plant has a minty smell, but it isn't related at all to mint. While the major chemical giving mint its particular characteristics is menthol (and eucalyptol), in wintergreen the active ingredient is methyl salicylate, a volatile form of salicylic acid.

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