No-Churn Ice Cream: One Base, Five Easy Flavours
Slug: no-churn-ice-cream-recipes-easyPillar: Food and Drink > RecipesKeyword: no churn ice cream recipeExcerpt: Make creamy no-churn ice cream with just double cream and condensed milk — no machine needed. One 10-minute base plus five flavour variations to try.
You can make proper, scoopable ice cream with two ingredients and no machine: whip 600ml of double cream to soft peaks, fold in a 397g tin of sweetened condensed milk, freeze for six hours. That's it — a creamy vanilla-ready base that rivals shop-bought tubs and takes ten minutes of actual work. Below is the master method, why it works, and five flavours worth making this summer.
Why This Works Without a Machine
Traditional ice cream needs churning to stop large ice crystals forming as the custard freezes. No-churn cheats the physics twice. Whipping the cream first folds in millions of tiny air bubbles — the job churning normally does. And sweetened condensed milk is so high in sugar that much of its water can't freeze solid, keeping the texture soft and scoopable straight from the freezer. No eggs, no custard-making, no equipment beyond a whisk.
The Master Base
Ingredients:
- 600ml double cream (heavy cream), cold
- 1 tin (397g) sweetened condensed milk, cold
- 1 tsp vanilla extract (or paste, which we'd actually choose — the seeds make it look homemade in the best way)
- Pinch of salt
Method:
- Whip the cream with the vanilla and salt to soft-medium peaks — it should hold its shape but still look glossy. Stop before it turns grainy; over-whipped cream makes greasy ice cream.
- Pour in the condensed milk and fold gently with a spatula until fully combined. Fold, don't beat — you're protecting those air bubbles.
- Scrape into a loaf tin or freezer-safe container, press baking paper onto the surface, and freeze at least 6 hours or overnight.
It keeps well for about two weeks — after that it slowly picks up freezer flavours. Cost-wise, you're looking at roughly £3–4 for a litre-ish batch, which lands between supermarket own-brand and the posh tubs, but tastes closer to the posh ones.
Five Flavours to Try
1. Cookies and Cream
Crush 8–10 Oreos (or any chocolate sandwich biscuit) and fold through the finished base, saving a handful for the top. The biscuits soften slightly in the freezer into proper cookies-and-cream territory.
2. Salted Caramel Ripple
Swirl 4–5 tablespoons of thick caramel (Carnation caramel works perfectly) through the mixture in the tin with a skewer, and add an extra generous pinch of flaky salt. Don't over-swirl — you want distinct ribbons, not caramel-coloured ice cream.
3. Strawberry
Cook 300g chopped strawberries with 2 tablespoons of sugar and a squeeze of lemon for 10 minutes until jammy, cool completely, then ripple through. Cooking matters: raw berries freeze into icy bullets, while the jammy version stays soft.
4. Mint Choc Chip
Replace the vanilla with ¾ teaspoon of peppermint extract and fold in 100g of finely chopped dark chocolate. Chopped chocolate beats chocolate chips here — whole chips freeze too hard to bite cleanly.
5. Coffee
Dissolve 2 tablespoons of instant espresso powder in 1 tablespoon of boiling water, cool, and fold in with the condensed milk. And if you're already making cold coffee drinks at home, this pairs dangerously well with an affogato — see our cold brew guide (https://eight2infinity.com/how-to-make-cold-brew-coffee-at-home/).
Serving It Like You Mean It
No-churn freezes slightly firmer than commercial ice cream, so take the tub out ten minutes before scooping and run your scoop under hot water — you'll get those clean, café-style curls instead of splinters. For an easy dessert that looks deliberate, sandwich a scoop between two shop-bought cookies, or drown a coffee-flavoured scoop in a shot of hot espresso for an instant affogato. And if you're serving kids at a summer party, scoop balls onto a tray in advance, refreeze them, and hand out cones assembly-line style. Nobody waits, nothing melts, and you look organised.
Mistakes That Ruin the Batch
Three things account for almost every no-churn failure. Over-whipping the cream — stop at soft-medium peaks. Stirring instead of folding — you'll knock the air out and get a dense, icy block. And adding watery mix-ins — fresh fruit, juice or anything wet needs cooking down first, or it turns to ice shards. Get those right and it's hard to make this badly.
Want more low-effort kitchen wins? Our food and drink (https://eight2infinity.com/category/food-and-drink/) section has plenty, including the sourdough discard recipes readers keep coming back to.
FAQ
Can I use single cream or milk instead of double cream?
No — you need at least 36% fat to whip and hold air. Single cream and milk won't whip, and the result freezes rock solid. Whipping cream (35%+) is the minimum.
How long does no-churn ice cream last in the freezer?
Best within two weeks. It stays safe far longer, but the texture firms up and it starts absorbing freezer odours. Pressing baking paper onto the surface slows both.
Why did my no-churn ice cream turn out icy?
Usually one of three causes: the cream was under- or over-whipped, the mixture was stirred rather than folded, or a wet ingredient (fresh fruit, syrup, alcohol) added too much water.
Can I make it less sweet?
The condensed milk sets the sweetness, and cutting it changes the texture — less sugar means harder ice cream. Better fixes: add a pinch more salt, use dark chocolate mix-ins, or ripple through something tart like lemon curd or cooked berries.










