Why don't most ice cream recipes include salt in the base?

Why don't most ice cream recipes include salt in the base? - Bottles of cosmetic products placed on white surface

I've been getting into ice cream this summer and of all the recipes I've reviewed and tested, none of them call for salt in the ice cream mixture itself. (With the exception of caramel sea salt, and Ben's Chocolate recipe).

My question is why?

More info: I made plum sorbet last week. After tasting, but before churning, I decided to add salt to the base. It dramatically improved the "plumminess" just as you would expect salt to do. Furthermore, the ice cream turned out great. The addition of salt didn't have any effect on the churn.

So, why don't ice cream bases call for salt in the first place?



Best Answer

I can't read the minds of all the recipe authors, but I do have a couple ideas.

I've found it's definitely easy to overdo salt in ice cream. A very small quantity goes a long way. In most cases you don't actually want it to taste salty, you just want a tiny hint that people will only notice as improved flavor. The quantities are small enough that it'll be hard to provide accurate measurements, so you're stuck saying "a pinch" and hoping people don't use too big a pinch.

It's also just not the most obvious addition to most people. Ice cream can be pretty darn good without it. While everyone's used to salt in baked goods, as you said, ice cream recipes often don't include it, so there's not too much learning by example going on. We certainly don't usually put it on fruit! So if you're looking at recipes online that people have come up with on their own, there are decent odds that the author just didn't think of it, even if it would've actually been a nice addition.

Finally, just to clear up an oft-repeated misconception: in these quantities, salt is not going to mess with the freezing point, just like it won't affect the boiling point of pasta water. It takes a ton of dissolved salt to significantly lower the freezing point, and we're making ice cream, not seawater slushies. (Even if you did lower the freezing point, it'd probably be a good thing, since homemade ice cream is generally too hard, not too soft.)




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Quick Answer about "Why don't most ice cream recipes include salt in the base?"

pure water freezes at 0°C (32°F), water that has salt dissolved in it has to be colder before it freezes. The amount of salt you add for flavor has such a small effect on freezing temperature that it doesn't matter for ice cream.

Do you put salt in homemade ice cream?

To make ice cream, the ingredients\u2014typically milk (or half and half), sugar and vanilla extract\u2014need to be cooled down. One way to do this is by using salt.

What happens if you add salt to ice cream?

By adding salt to ice, it lowers its melting point and allows the ice cream to freeze cohesively.

Can ice cream be made without rock salt?

How does an ice cream maker with no rocksalt work? An ice cream. maker works by simply freezing the ingredients. By mixing them regularly, you prevent them from freezing solid, which will leave you with ice cream rather than a frozen solid block of milk and cream.

Is there any salt in ice cream?

It is rock salt (or salt) which is used in making ice cream. It is added to the ice which surrounds the canister while churning. There is a purpose to adding it to the ice. The rock salt lowers the temperature, which counterintuitively allows the ice cream to freeze better.






More answers regarding why don't most ice cream recipes include salt in the base?

Answer 2

Most people don't think of it. People making high-end ice cream generally include lots of added milk solids (often over 20% nonfat milk solids by weight) and this naturally includes a decent amount of salt.

Nevertheless, I find ice cream is usally better with even more salt than this. In addition to having 20 or 25% nonfat milk solids, I usually add about 0.7g salt per 1000g of mix. You don't taste the salt, but it pops other flavors into focus.

With some flavors, like chocolate, I'll go as high as adding 2g salt.

If you're making a flavor where you want to really taste the salt (salted caramel etc.) you'll of course have to use quite a bit more.

Answer 3

pure water freezes at 0°C (32°F), water that has salt dissolved in it has to be colder before it freezes.

also there is a possibility of crystalization of the salt

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