Big Little Recipes

No-Churn Pumpkin Ice Cream With 5 Ingredients & No Pumpkin Spice

Gasp! Cover the latte's ears.

October 30, 2018

A Big Little Recipe has the smallest-possible ingredient list and big, BIG everything else: flavor, ideas, wow factor. Psst: We don't count water, salt, pepper, and certain fats (say, olive oil to dress greens or sauté onions), since we're guessing you have those covered. This week: a make-ahead pumpkin dessert that really wants to come to your Thanksgiving.


Most pumpkin desserts don’t taste like pumpkin. They taste like pumpkin spice (as it’s known at Starbucks) or pumpkin pie spice (as it’s known at your supermarket). Like all spice blends, there’s no set formula here. McCormick includes: “cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, allspice, and sulfiting agents.” Trader Joe’s: “cinnamon, ginger, lemon peel, nutmeg, cloves, cardamom.” Whole Foods 365: “organic cinnamon, organic ginger, organic cloves, organic nutmeg.” The Spice Hunter: “cinnamon, ginger, lemon peel, nutmeg, cloves, cardamom, star anise, fennel, black pepper.”

Cinnamon wins Most Valuable Ingredient (MVI) in all of these—and ginger is always runner-up. A few add lemon peel. Spice Hunter brings fennel and black pepper (and you know how much I love black pepper in desserts). Despite the variants, all pumpkin spice blends bring bam-bam-bam flavor, which is why they make such a fan-favorite latte (I’ve still never tried one, should I?) and A+ seasoning for roasted vegetables (seriously, try it).

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But when it comes to pumpkin desserts, I’m not so sure. Taste a spoonful of canned pumpkin and you’ll probably be surprised by how mild and squashy it is. Stir in a little sugar and cream and now we’re talking. Stir in a little pumpkin spice and—whoosh—your brain immediately jumps to pumpkin pie. That’s not because of the pumpkin, though. It’s because of the pumpkin spice.

Photo by Mark Weinberg

This ice cream skips that ingredient.

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Top Comment:
“Emma, I would like to share a 4 or 5 ingredient recipe for macaroni and cheese. Pound of elbows or other small pasta. 3/4 pound each of cheddar and monterey jack (substituting one cheese for two makes this a 4 ingredient recipe). Milk, as needed. Butter, as needed. Cook the pasta in salted water until nearly al dente. Mix with shredded cheese in a 9 x 13 baking dish. Pour about one-half inch of milk in the bottom of the baking dish. Dot the top of the dish generously with pats of butter. Bake at 400 degrees until crispy and browned to your liking. This does not make a creamy, gooey mac and cheese. Instead it is a crispy, cheesy, buttery, well-browned mac and cheese. This was my mother-in-law's recipe, and it is pretty similar to Pearl Bailey's recipe in her Pearl's Kitchen cookbook. I'm sure this is the wrong place to submit this and I apologize for that.”
— CooksForFun
Comment

Like many no-churn ice creams, the recipe is also no-cook. You just mix together this and that, then freeze. Also like many no-churn ice creams (like, say, this Big Little sundae!), it relies on two components: sweetened condensed milk and whipped cream. Basically, the sweetened condensed milk imitates the custard present in French-style ice creams and the whipped cream mimics your ice cream churner, which incorporates air as it freezes.

Adding pumpkin puree throws a wrench in the mix. Unlike the sweetened condensed milk and cream, pumpkin is not a fat-rich dairy product. Which means when you stir it into your ice cream base, you’re compromising the creamy factor (we want this) and heading toward Icy Town (let’s not go there).

Photo by Mark Weinberg

Bourbon helps. In Martha Stewart’s no-churn ice cream, she includes bourbon, which not only brings cozy, boozy flavor, but improves the ice cream’s texture to boot. Alcohol lowers the ice cream’s freezing temperature (think about the still-liquid vodka in your freezer), making it easier to scoop. If you’re dining with lil’ ones, you can lower the amount of bourbon or lose it altogether—the end result will just be slightly icier; as is, it amounts to just over 1 teaspoon bourbon in each 1-cup ice cream serving.

Other than the bourbon, this is basically pumpkin in ice cream form, which is just right for the end of a big Thanksgiving meal. From the host’s perspective, it can be made in advance, eliminating day-of stress when it comes to dessert. From the guest’s perspective: Who doesn’t love ice cream?

You could keep it simple and serve the scoops naked, but I’m always down for toppings. Here are a few of my favorites, which all just happen to be one ingredient:

  • Coffee or espresso for an affogato
  • More bourbon because why not
  • Maple syrup or honey for makeshift caramel sauce
  • Whipped cream, mascarpone, sour cream, Greek yogurt
  • Nut brittle, graham crackers, ginger snaps (store-bought is fine, you just roasted a turkey).

Put out the container of ice cream, plus assorted toppings, and tell people to have at it. It’s less formal and a lot less traditional than pumpkin pie. But it’s fun. And it really tastes like pumpkin.

Do you know what pumpkin dessert you’re making for Thanksgiving yet? Tell us about it in the comments!

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Emma was the food editor at Food52. She created the award-winning column, Big Little Recipes, and turned it into a cookbook in 2021. These days, she's a senior editor at Bon Appétit, leading digital cooking coverage. Say hello on Instagram at @emmalaperruque.

12 Comments

Ann September 8, 2019
Wanted to like this but just didn’t. I couldn’t get past the texture, which seemed too soft and almost marshmallow-y. The ice cream never really got hard enough. Also, the bourbon taste was too strong, and I say this as a bourbon drinker. I’m going to dry adding something on top, like the espresso or nut brittle as suggested. Maybe this will help. All in all, though, a miss for me. Sorry.
 
CooksForFun November 20, 2018
Emma, I would like to share a 4 or 5 ingredient recipe for macaroni and cheese. Pound of elbows or other small pasta. 3/4 pound each of cheddar and monterey jack (substituting one cheese for two makes this a 4 ingredient recipe). Milk, as needed. Butter, as needed.

Cook the pasta in salted water until nearly al dente. Mix with shredded cheese in a 9 x 13 baking dish. Pour about one-half inch of milk in the bottom of the baking dish. Dot the top of the dish generously with pats of butter. Bake at 400 degrees until crispy and browned to your liking.

This does not make a creamy, gooey mac and cheese. Instead it is a crispy, cheesy, buttery, well-browned mac and cheese. This was my mother-in-law's recipe, and it is pretty similar to Pearl Bailey's recipe in her Pearl's Kitchen cookbook.

I'm sure this is the wrong place to submit this and I apologize for that.
 
Emma L. November 20, 2018
Hi! This sounds wonderful—wish I had some right now. Thanks so much for sharing the recipe!
 
Dina L. January 18, 2019
Yummmmmmmmmmm❤️
 
Donna November 17, 2018
How far in advance can I make this recipe?
 
Emma L. November 19, 2018
Hi Donna! Someone asked a similar Q on the Hotline. Here's a link to my full reply: https://food52.com/hotline/40411-a-question-about-a-recipe-no-churn-pumpkin-ice-cream.
 
Sara November 14, 2018
I'm not a bourbon drinker, but I have brandy left over from another recipe - could that sub or would the flavor clash? Alternatively, could I sub in vodka since it's flavorless?
 
Emma L. November 14, 2018
Hi Sara! You could definitely substitute brandy. Or, if you don't love the taste of brandy and want something more flavor-neutral, vodka works, too.
 
Sara November 14, 2018
Thank you!!!
 
jane November 5, 2018
I would love to try this in a dairy free version. Coconut milk? Coconut cream? Anyone have advice?
 
Derrick November 6, 2018
Gemma Stafford has a recipe option for coconut sweetened condensed milk on her blog at https://www.biggerbolderbaking.com/how-to-make-condensed-milk/ I can't see why it wouldn't work.
 
Emma L. November 14, 2018
Hi Jane! There was a similar Q on the recipe page. Copying my reply from there below:

The first ingredients that come to mind are coconut cream and sweetened condensed coconut milk, but that would be a pretty big swap in a recipe like this, and I'm not sure how it would turn out. A safer bet would be starting with a vegan ice cream recipe and pumpkin-fying that. This is a great article about how to make vegan ice cream without a recipe, so it's ripe for adaptation: https://food52.com/blog/20169-how-to-make-any-vegan-ice-cream