
I've been having so much fun with my ice cream maker ever since we were reunited after seven long years apart. I still can't believe it's been seven years.

Making ice cream is not only easy, the end result of having a big container of it in the freezer is kind of nice. Although I loved the mango ginger ice cream I made last time, I was craving strawberry, and kind of curious if the texture would still work without the mangoes. Yes, it does. In the freezer, the ice cream stayed the consistency of soft serve for a number of hours. Much to my surprise, it took about eight hours for it to reach a firm scooping consistency. That's about the same as for the mango, and I don't know if it's because of my freezer, or if that's normal. Of course, you can eat the ice cream before it gets to the firm stage — nothing wrong with soft serve. Though, unless you have a soft serve dispenser, it's easier to eat with a spoon than in a cone! And once the ice cream gets really hard, you have to let it sit on the counter for about five to 10 minutes before it gets soft enough to scoop. I find that to be also true for ice cream I buy at the store.

Strawberry ice cream sweetened with dates
- 1 cup raw cashews (soaked 4 hours or overnight, and drained)
- 1-1/2 cups cold, unsweetened rice milk (plus 1/4 cup extra if needed)
- rounded 1/2 cup medjool dates, pitted and packed very tightly
- 1 very ripe banana (at least 1 cup of slices)
- 2 cups frozen strawberries plus generous 1/2 cup extra
- 2 teapoons pure vanilla extract
- 1/3 cup of vegan dark chocolate chips (optional)
- Add the dates to the rice milk and leave in the refrigerator at least one hour or overnight.
- Place cashews, rice milk with dates, banana, 2 cups strawberries and vanilla into the jar of a high speed blender. Blend until the mix is totally creamy and smooth. If the mixture is too thick to blend, you may have to add up to an extra 1/4 cup of rice milk. Leave the additional half cup of frozen berries out to defrost slightly while you prepare the blender mix.
- Thinly slice the slightly defrosted strawberries and stir into the blended mix. Work quickly to keep everything as cold as possible. If you are using chocolate chips, add them now.
- Freeze in an ice cream machine according to the manufacturer's directions.
- Enjoy!
Update: slightly revised recipe — even more delicious
Strawberry ice cream sweetened with dates
- 1 heaped cup raw cashews (soaked 4 hours or overnight, and drained)
- 1-1/2 cups cold, unsweetened rice milk (plus 1/4 cup extra only if needed)
- rounded 1/2 cup medjool dates, pitted and packed very tightly
- 2 very ripe, cold bananas
- 1-1/2 cups frozen strawberries plus generous 1/2 cup extra
- 1/2 cup frozen mango
- 2 teapoons pure vanilla extract
- Add the dates to the rice milk and leave in the refrigerator at least one hour or overnight.
- Leave the additional half cup of frozen berries out to defrost slightly while you prepare the blender mix for step 2 so they defrost slightly.
- Place cashews, rice milk with dates, banana, 1-1/2 cups strawberries, 1/2 cup mango and vanilla into the jar of a high speed blender. Blend until the mix is totally creamy and smooth. If the mixture is too thick to blend, you may have to add up to an extra 1/4 cup of rice milk.
- Thinly slice the slightly defrosted strawberries and stir into the blended mix. Work quickly to keep everything as cold as possible.
- Freeze in an ice cream machine according to the manufacturer's directions.
- Enjoy!
No oil fries in the convection oven

* Here's what I said in my last post on the subject of air fryers: " I've recently become aware of something called an air fryer, that fries foods with little or no oil. I read about it here on JL's blog. After doing some additional research and reading, I've learned that a convection oven, because it cooks with hot, moving air, can possibly accomplish the same thing. It so happens that my oven has a button to turn it into a convection oven, and I tried it out for the first time on the polenta I made to accompany the chili. I placed the polenta squares on a parchment-paper-lined cookie sheet and baked them in my convection oven, turning them over once during the baking. They turned out crispy on the outside and soft on the inside. I intend to experiment more with using the convection oven to roast veggies, tofu, potatoes, burgers, etc. If I don't 'have to' buy another kitchen appliance for my already crowded little kitchen, all the better. We'll see. The air fryer sounds pretty great."