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Easy Dairy-Free Chocolate Ice Cream

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Dairy-Free Chocolate Ice Cream is a rich and creamy homemade soft frozen dessert.

This recipe is no-churn, no-cook, and no machine—just whip, mix and freeze for a delicious, eye-rolling non-dairy chocolate treat.

It’s also incredibly simple to make in one bowl with only 5 ingredients, but with no coconut milk or coconut cream.

Three scoops of creamy dairy free chocolate ice cream dessert without coconut milk or coconut cream in a clear dessert dish on a white wood background

This is an easy, no-cook, no-churn recipe for soft chocolate ice cream that’s dairy-free!

And no need for an ice cream maker!

It’s a great non-dairy, chocolatey way to treat yourself.

This ice cream will really hit the spot after a summer backyard BBQ and goes wonderfully with cake, making it terrific for parties.

Prefer dairy? Switch out the whip and use a dairy version instead!

Even if you’re a chocolate lover, you’ve got to try these other flavors as well:

Small tub of chocolate ice cream with a scoop missing and a used ice cream scoop on a white wood background

Recommendation to have in your kitchen for baking and desserts:

Equipment:

  • a stand mixer for dough
  • a hand mixer
  • a kitchen scale
  • baking pans, including loaf pans
  • mixing bowls (or just large bowls)
  • cookie sheets 
  • pie dishes
  • dry measuring cups
  • liquid measuring cups
  • measuring spoons
  • whisks
  • rubber spatulas
  • rolling pins
  • a baking mat for rolling out dough
  • baking strips
  • a good supply of baking (or parchment) paper (also round for layer cakes)

Ingredients

  • flour
  • white granulated sugar
  • brown sugar (light/dark—I usually keep dark)
  • confectioners’ sugar (powdered sugar)
  • salt
  • baking powder
  • baking soda 
  • cocoa powder
  • ground cinnamon
  • ground nutmeg
  • ground ginger
  • ground cloves
  • baking chocolate
  • chocolate chips
  • instant dry yeast
  • vanilla and/or vanilla sugar
  • cooking oil/cooking spray
  • margarine or butter
  • eggs
  • honey
  • instant coffee
  • various extracts (real or imitation)
  • whipping cream
  • powdered pudding mix
  • powdered sugar
  • packaged pie dough or ready-made pie crusts
  • puff pastry dough

It’s also not a bad idea to keep fun toppings, such as chopped walnuts, raisins, and the oh-so-important container of sprinkles.

A little about ice cream

Ice cream is made by an involved process using milk, milk protein, sugar, ice, water, and air, which turns the mixture into foam as frozen air cells.

Ice cream was initially sold by small businesses until a milkman, Jacob Fussell, began making small batches of it from leftover milk and cream. Fussell opened the first ice cream factory in 1851 in Pennsylvania and moved his successful business to Baltimore in 1854.

Fussell, known today as the Father of the Ice Cream Industry, opened more factories in other cities and taught the business to others who opened their own factories. The mass production of ice cream made it more affordable and more accessible to everyone and was no longer a dessert just for the rich.

Popularity increased even more with the invention of the household freezer in the 1920s, when it became much easier to store the frozen dessert.

Before refrigeration, making ice cream took quite a bit of effort and was only served for special events or on special occasions. Ice had to be cut from frozen lakes and ponds in the winter. The ice was then stored for later use (even in the summer) in ice houses or even in holes dug in the ground.

The pot-freezer method of preparing ice cream was by making it in a large bowl, which was placed in a tub filled with crushed ice and salt to reduce the temperature of the ingredients to below the freezing point of water.

French confectioners used a method similar to the pot-freezer method but used a covered pail with a handle attached to the lid (called a sorbetiere).

The hand-cranked churn replaced the pot-freezer method and also used ice and salt for cooling. This method was quicker than the pot-freezer method and produced a smoother ice cream.

Ice cream is a beloved dessert, and some people will go to some extreme lengths to get their hands on the treat.

For example, during World War II, American fighter pilots in the South Pacific found an ingenious way of making ice cream.

They attached 5-gallon cans to their aircraft. The cans were fitted with small propellers spun by the slipstream, which drove a stirrer, which agitated the mixture, which froze in the high altitude of the planes as they flew. B-17 crews and others found similar methods of making ice cream during the war.

The history of ice cream

Yield: 4 servings

Easy Dairy-Free Chocolate Ice Cream

scoops of dairy free chocolate ice cream in a clear dessert dish on a white wood background

Delicious and easy soft chocolate ice cream. No-cook, no-churn, and no need for an ice cream machine!

Prep Time 10 minutes
Total Time 10 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 8-ounce container dairy free whipping cream
  • 3 eggs
  • 3/4 c sugar
  • 6 tablespoon cocoa
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla flavoring or to taste

Instructions

  1. Whip whipping cream until stiff.
  2. Add eggs, sugar, cocoa, and vanilla into the whipped cream.
  3. Whip together well.
  4. Freeze for 8 hours or until stiff *

Notes

* This is a soft ice cream so it won't get hard and the freezing time depends on your freezer.

Nutrition Information:

Yield:

4

Serving Size:

1

Amount Per Serving: Calories: 439Total Fat: 26gSaturated Fat: 15gTrans Fat: 1gUnsaturated Fat: 8gCholesterol: 207mgSodium: 70mgCarbohydrates: 44gFiber: 2gSugar: 40gProtein: 8g

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