Showing posts with label ice cream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ice cream. Show all posts
Monday, October 15, 2012
Pumpkin Pie Ice Cream
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Oh My COWS (Creamery)
One of my favorite things we did in Prince Edward Island was tour the COWS Creamery factory. If you're Canadian, chances are you've at least heard of COWS. If you're American, you've probably not heard of them. Bummer. You're totally missing out.
They have numerous ice cream shops across the province and have expanded across Canada in recent years.
COWS is manufactured exclusively on PEI, with cream and eggs from local farms and dairies. According to our tour guide, COWS premium ice cream is made with 16% butterfat cream, sugar and eggs, and is churned really slowly to make sure that the ice cream you're eating is actually ingredients, not air.
Interesting thought - the tour guide brought this up, but it's true! Have you ever noticed that some ice cream you can just plow through a whole pint in one sitting, but other brands you can't? The difference is how much air is incorporated into the ice cream when it's freezing. If you were to let a pint of store brand ice cream totally melt you'd probably end up with around 1/2 to 1/3 of the pint full of liquid. If you let a pint of COWS melt, you end up with at least 3/4 pint of liquid. That's some high density ice cream...
They have numerous ice cream shops across the province and have expanded across Canada in recent years.
COWS is manufactured exclusively on PEI, with cream and eggs from local farms and dairies. According to our tour guide, COWS premium ice cream is made with 16% butterfat cream, sugar and eggs, and is churned really slowly to make sure that the ice cream you're eating is actually ingredients, not air.
Interesting thought - the tour guide brought this up, but it's true! Have you ever noticed that some ice cream you can just plow through a whole pint in one sitting, but other brands you can't? The difference is how much air is incorporated into the ice cream when it's freezing. If you were to let a pint of store brand ice cream totally melt you'd probably end up with around 1/2 to 1/3 of the pint full of liquid. If you let a pint of COWS melt, you end up with at least 3/4 pint of liquid. That's some high density ice cream...
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