Culinate

Ice cream, dressed up

Homemade sauces and other ice cream treats

By Culinate staff
June 9, 2008

While we all like our ice cream served straight up — cone or bowl optional — we recognize that sometimes the pure stuff can seem plain jane. So we appreciate ice cream dolled up with sauces, fruit, crunchy snacks, and other goodies. (And no, we’re not going to take sides in the West Coast/East Coast war over sprinkles vs. jimmies.)

It’s hard to resist banana splits, even if you really need two or more people to finish one off. Grownups like crêpes served belle hélène style: with poached pears, vanilla ice cream, and chocolate sauce, while kids can appreciate the simple pleasures of a “dusty road”: cocoa sprinkled on top of vanilla ice cream — and stirred together until it’s as smooth as soft-serve.

And the truly hard-core like their scoops drowned the Italian way: affogato, or doused with a shot or two of fresh espresso.

Here are some ways we enjoy the cold stuff:

  1. raspberry coulis in glass
    Raspberry Coulis. You can use this sauce in cocktails or over panna cotta, but it’s fab over vanilla ice cream, too.
  2. brownies
    Blackberry-Sangiovese Coulis. A rich berry sauce for grownups, with a kick from red wine. Try it on chocolate ice cream.
  3. Caramel Sauce. This thick sauce is ready in almost no time, and it’s far superior to anything you can buy at the store.
  4. chocolate syrup
    Chocolate Syrup. The classic — except that this time you’ve made it yourself instead of opening a can of Hershey’s syrup.
  5. Toffee Brittle. Make a batch of this candy (it’s faster to make than you think) and smash it up good for sprinkling on ice cream.
  6. Ice Cream Sodas. Ina Garten’s take on ice-cream sodas is a quick-assembly dessert that can be easily served to a crowd — say, at your next garden party.
  7. ice cream with bananas
    Ice Cream with Bananas, Rum, and Cream. Diane Morgan’s quick-but-fancy banana dessert requires no cooking.
  8. ice cream sandwich
    Ice Cream Sandwiches with Honey-Oatmeal Raisin Cookies. Not a topping, but this David Lebovitz dessert is a grownup’s version of those freezer-burned, paper-wrapped sandwiches you ate as a kid. And hey, the oatmeal and raisins make it healthy, right?