Lebanese Milk Ice Cream (Booza ala Haleeb)

Lebanese Milk Ice Cream (Booza ala Haleeb)

 

I eat ice cream in all seasons, and maybe I crave it more in the winter, no no I crave it too in summer!  That looks peculiar, right? I remember a friend of mine who told me once that the state of Alaska has the highest ice cream consumption. So thanks God, that makes me look normal!!wink

Lebanese ice cream comes in vibrant colors and flavors- mulberries, strawberries, lemon, chocolate, rose water, orange, etc… usually scooped out into wafer cones or filled in boxes.  The good thing in Beirut is that you can have a multiple of flavors in one cone, so you will have the chance to taste various flavors.

But this week I was craving the milk ice cream – an eggless milk ice cream flavored with salep/ sahlab , mastic gum and rose water – dressed up in raw ground pistachios.  Salep is a thickening powder made from the dried pulps of a mountain wild orchid - Turkey is the major salep producing country - it gives the ice cream that stretchy and chewy texture. 

Another ingredient that adds a unique flavor is the mastic gum/mistaka.  Mastic is the dried resin that seeps through the bark of the Pistacia lentiscous, a tree native to the Mediterranean.  It appears as pea-sized granules and is used as a flavoring in lots of oriental sweets.  These critical ingredients produce a rich creamy, elastic and fragrant tasty ice cream.

The pistachios perfectly contrast the milky flavor of the ice cream. I actually tested the recipe a few times before I was fully satisfied with the result.  The end product is a rich, creamy and a mouth-watering ice cream.  Trust me on that! A taste to remember!!yescheeky

 

Pin it now

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

With a mortar and pestle grind the mastic granules with a pinch of sugar.

 

 

 

 

 

Place the powdered milk, water, sugar, heavy cream, crushed mastic, cornstarch, salep powder in a heavy-bottomed saucepan and whisk continuously over medium heat.  Bring to a gentle boil, and that stage you will notice that the mixture has thickened a bit. Remove from heat, add the rosewater, stir well and set aside to cool down. 

 

 

 

 

  Transfer to an ice cream maker and follow the manufacturer’s freezing instructions.  This should take about 30 minutes.  Freeze it for another 2-3 hours, allowing the ice cream to harden.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ingredients:
  • 1 cup raw pistachios, crushed
  • 11/2 cups of powdered milk
  • 3 cups water
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • ¾ cup granulated sugar
  • 2 tablespoons cornstarch
  • 1 tablespoon salep (If you couldn’t find the Turkish original salep, the instant salep found online would do good as well, though the elasticity will be a bit less.
  • 1 tablespoon rosewater
  • 4 large mastic grains

 

Directions:

  1. With a mortar and pestle grind the mastic granules with a pinch of sugar.
  2. Place the powdered milk, water, sugar, heavy cream, crushed mastic, cornstarch, salep powder in a heavy-bottomed saucepan and whisk continuously over medium heat.  Bring to a gentle boil, and that stage you will notice that the mixture has thickened a bit. Remove from heat, add the rosewater, stir well and set aside to cool down. 
  3. Place a piece of wax paper on top to prevent a skin from forming.  Refrigerate for 4 hours or overnight.  Transfer to an ice cream maker and follow the manufacturer’s freezing instructions.  This should take about 30 minutes.  Freeze it for another 2-3 hours, allowing the ice cream to harden.
  4. Just upon serving sprinkle some pistachios on top of each bowl.  Enjoy!!

 

 

 

If you enjoyed this recipe, be sure to subscibe to our newsletter so you never miss a single recipe.

All photos and content are copyright protected. Please don't use photos without prior written permission.

 

 

 

Comments

admin's picture

Welcome to our blog!
I am Hadia, the blogger behind Hadia's Lebanese Cuisine.  I grew up in Beirut Lebanon and I currently reside in Kinshasa, Congo with my husband and my three adorable sons.  I grew up in family that adores food, I love cooking old favorites as well as creating new dishes.
After a long journey of writing recipes, food styling and photographing (all in preparation for my cookbook, 'Hadia - Lebanese Style Recipes' , it is time to devote my attention to food blogging.  With time, I have turned my passion for cooking into a career, I now enjoy taking pictures of the food as much as I enjoy cooking.  Here on our blog , we feature scrumptious Lebanese, Middle Eastern and international recipes.

Diane Williams's picture

This is the most interesting ice cream recipe i have ever seen! I'm amazed how you make this luscious dessert! It' lovely and creamy and I want some!!

Lynn Elliott Vining's picture

I always like to have ice cream on hand! I bought a churn this year, on like Mama used to have. (She actually had 6!) I was just making it in a bowl in the freezer. I love it! I'm making some tonight!

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Welcome Message

About US

Marhaba, and welcome to my blog! Discover the secrets behind the symphonies of flavor that make up Lebanese cuisine. Join my blog and take a sneak peak at my cookbook, Hadia... Lebanese Style Recipes .