Ingredients
- 1 cup grade B maple syrup
- 4 cups half-and-half
- 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar, divided
- 5 egg yolks
- 1/2 pound thick-cut bacon (about 6 slices)
- Special equipment: candy thermometer, ice cream maker
Directions
In a medium saucepan over moderate heat, reduce the maple syrup to 1/2 cup. Set aside.
Over moderate heat in a medium saucepan, heat the half-and-half with 1/2 cup sugar until hot and just bubbling around the edges.
In a medium bowl, whisk the yolks with 1/2 cup sugar, then add 1 cup hot half-and-half mixture in a slow stream, whisking constantly. Pour the whole egg mixture back into the saucepan and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon, until the mixture coats the back of the spoon and registers 170 degrees F on a thermometer. Do not let boil. Pour the mixture through a fine mesh sieve into a medium bowl and whisk in the maple syrup. Cover with parchment paper letting the paper touch the surface of the mixture, to prevent a skin from forming. Chill the mixture until very cold, at least 6 hours and up to overnight.
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.
Line a rimmed sheet pan with heavy foil. Place a baking rack over the lined sheet pan and arrange the bacon slices across the rack next to each other. Bake until crispy, about 15 minutes. When cool enough to handle, finely chop.
Line a sheet pan with parchment paper and set aside. Place the remaining 1/2 cup sugar in the saucepan and cook over medium heat, stirring with a fork, until the sugar starts to melt. Stop stirring and cook until the sugar is a golden caramel color, about 10 minutes. Add the bacon and stir to coat. Pour onto prepared baking sheet and let harden. Chop the candied bacon into small pieces.
Freeze the custard in an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer's instructions, 20 to 30 minutes and at the last minute, add the candied bacon and let churn until just combined. Transfer to an airtight container and freeze.
BYOC: Try adding some cayenne pepper to your chopped bacon before you stir it into the melted sugar.
Photo: Maple Bacon Ice Cream Recipe
















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By ataraxia_me
gso, NC
on July 16, 2012
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In honor of July 15th national ice cream day I made an attempt on Maple Bacon Ice Cream...not sure if it worked out as it only made 1 quart. OH MY Gosh so creamy, almost like Foie Gras. I did substitute 1 cup fake sugar and low (not NO fat half & half...and my eggs were farm fresh jumbo yolks. Candied applewood smoked bacon. The one quart through me off, I expected it to expand. Any ideas or perhaps a woot woot...good job?
By margaretalson
on May 09, 2012
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I made two variations and everyone LOVEd it! I have people ordering it for their parties,etc.
1. I made with coconut cream instead of half and half which I think adds another lovely complexity to the flavor and meshes so well with the maple and bacon.
2. Used no sugar. So many people said it was too sweet, plus I know so many people who do not eat refined sugar. I cooked the bacon with a maple glaze then just added a cup of grade A maple syrup. Maybe the sweetness of the coconut cream lent to the sweetness but it was not lacking at all.
Very delicious! Thanks for the inspiration!
By MrsBigA
on January 12, 2012
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I made a similar recipe and the only critique I would add is that you MUST get all the FAT off the bacon. After baking cooling and chopping the bacon, it seemed perfect - heavenly in fact. But what I didn't notice was the solidified FAT remaining on the bacon. When I sat down to enjoy the dessert, the bacon fat left a gross film on the roof of my mouth. So other that that... sweet/salty yummy.
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