T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1511.1 | Donvier Ice Cream Machine | BONOVX::BARRY | | Tue Nov 15 1988 12:17 | 24 |
| I know you said that you would definitely want the electric kind
but you may want to reconsider in favor of the Donvier Ice Cream
Machine. This is a fairly new Ice cream maker that needs no ice
or salt. The inner canister is stored in your freezer (hopefully
you have room in yours) and when its time to make the ice cream,
the mixture freezes agains the canister. As far as turning a
crank goes, you do this 2 or 3 turns only every 2 to 3 minutes.
This is primarily to scrape the ice cream away from the canister
walls to let more of the mixture freeze. The freezing process takes
about 20 minutes altogether. Its really not much work! I asked
Santa (my boyfriend) for one last year. We have really enjoyed
it.
The only down sides are 1.) If you have a very large family,
it doesn't make enough. 2.) once this summer on a very hot day,
the canister seemed to be losing its freezing ability too fast.
To solve this we just put the thing in the refridgerator. We
only had the problem once.
To me, the BIG plus with the Donvier is that you don't need the
salt and ice.
Lesa
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1511.2 | maybe I will change my mind... | PLANET::SILVA | I finally got a PONY of my OWNY | Tue Nov 15 1988 15:51 | 9 |
| Thanks Lesa! I will reconsider. I was under the impression that
the turn by hand types required *hours* of constant turning.
If my "Santa" had to wait a long time AND turn constantly he'd probably
just run to the store and by it!
I'm located @WJO in Westford, MA. Where are you? Is there any
particular store that sells this type of machine?
Thanks Again!
|
1511.3 | | BONOVX::BARRY | | Tue Nov 15 1988 16:36 | 12 |
| I think my "santa" bought it at Lechmere. I have also seen them
at Caldor. They come in (I believe) 3 sizes but I recommend the
largest which is what I have. I think it makes a quart. I don't
know why they don't make a larger one.
Also, most of the traditional manual ice cream makers do require
constant turning! This is one of the nice differences with the
Donvier.
Now I'm getting hungry for ice cream!!!
Lesa
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1511.4 | Make it small | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Wed Nov 16 1988 07:33 | 18 |
| Even the hand crank ones don't require hours of turning. About 30-45 minutes
if everything is properly chilled. I have an electric one that uses table
salt and ice cubes. It's made by one of the blender makers, I think, can't
remember the name though. Unless you plan to make ice cream for large crowds,
DON'T buy a big one. An old roomie bought one from Sears that made 2.5
gallons at a time. On the first try, he made a french vanilla that used about
3 doz. egg yolks. Not only did we have to store all the whites in the
freezer, but we did not have enough containers to store 2.5 gallons of ice
cream so we used tupperware salad bowls (big and round, and take up lots of
freezer space). Then the DEC turkeys arrived (3 of them)! So, we had lots of
friends over for turkey and ice cream.
By the way, one other mistake was the idea of adding strawberries without
sugar (the ice cream was sweet enough) to the mix. They froze very hard. The
end result was like having ice cream with seeds.
- JP
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1511.5 | Donvier = Cold Freezer | WITNES::MACONE | It's the story of a man named Brady | Wed Nov 16 1988 07:51 | 7 |
| I bought a Donvier for my sister 2 Christmases ago. Our only problem
with it has been that her freezer isn't cold enough, thus making
the cannister unable to freeze the icecream.
I guess that's what heppens when you have an old refrigerator.
-Nancy
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1511.6 | Simac | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike | Wed Nov 16 1988 09:30 | 7 |
| We have the small Gelataio by Simac. It makes great ice cream, and is
absolutely the easiest of any machine to set up, use, and clean
afterwards. To set it up and run it, you pour the ingredients into the
freezing bowl and turn it on. When it's done, you do have to transfer
the ice cream from the freezing bowl to another container, but then
the container pops out and cleans up with no trouble. It's also very
small - it takes up as much space as a small toaster over.
|
1511.7 | Waring's good | ISTG::COOPERMAN | | Wed Nov 16 1988 11:15 | 12 |
| I have a Waring electric model. It makes a quart at a time and
is quite easy to use. I don't think it's inconvenient to use ice
cubes and salt. We use about 3 or 4 trays (I think) at a time and
less than a box of salt. It makes very good ice cream and costs
about $30. We've had ours for about 3 years but I doubt the cost
is much different.
The ice cream these machines makes is much better when eaten shortly
after it is made. It doesn't freeze that well. I seem to recall
reading this recommendation someplace so it isn't just my machine.
Enjoy!
|
1511.8 | | NAC::ROBINS | question reality | Wed Nov 16 1988 12:53 | 4 |
| We also have a Donvier. It makes very good ice cream, with little
work. Santa bought it last year at Lechemere's.
ScottR, who doesn't get to use it much anymore because of my waistline
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1511.9 | SEARS has an electric machine | MOSAIC::M_BELANGER | Moe Belanger | Wed Nov 16 1988 14:36 | 9 |
| SEARS has an electric ice cream machine that sits in the refrigerator
turning while the ice cream freezes. It takes about 30-40 minutes
and when it is finished, there's a speaker that "tells" you that
the ice cream is ready ( it also plays a few bars of "Happy Days
are here Again" ). I found it in a SEARS surplus store for about
half the price and it works great!
Moe
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1511.10 | !THANKS! for all your help! | CSMADM::SILVA | I finally got a PONY of my OWNY | Thu Nov 17 1988 08:50 | 20 |
| Is it my (wild) sense of things or is it true that electric machines
ALWAYS require salt and ice? Are we talking rock type salt or shaker
type?
From one previous reply I think I'll skip the "put in the freezer"
to make mucho gallons type of machine. Our freezer is usually packed
(from belonging to a food delivery service). And it is *old*...
even older than me! So ?who? knows if it would get cold enough.
Do the electric ones just: fill, plug in, turn on, and wait --
right on the counter?
Boy! Can you tell I'm one of the lazier types who are used to just
buying the stuff! I can hardly wait to get this => for him! of
course!
THANKS FOR *ALL* YOUR INPUTS == KEEP'EM COMING!
Cher
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1511.11 | Simac - the lazy person's machine | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike | Thu Nov 17 1988 11:01 | 21 |
| > Is it my (wild) sense of things or is it true that electric machines
> ALWAYS require salt and ice?
> Do the electric ones just: fill, plug in, turn on, and wait --
> right on the counter?
Some electric models need salt and ice. Others have refrigeration
built in, and, as you say, just fill, plug in, turn on, and wait -
right on the counter.
These are naturally the most expensive machines, but they're the best
for lazy people. They also happen to make excellent ice cream, so you
don't sacrifice any quality. Be careful when picking one, though,
because some of them use an alcohol bath to transfer the cold from the
refrigeration coils to the bowl in which the cream will freeze. These
are a pain in the neck to set up and clean, and one test in Consumer
Reports showed that they can leak alcohol into the ice cream. We got
the Simac machine because it doesn't have this problem. In fact, it
doesn't have any problems at all. It just makes delicious ice cream
all by itself in 25 minutes or less right on the countertop. It takes
up only a little more space than a food processor.
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1511.12 | Can you improvise? | CSOA1::WIEGMANN | | Thu Nov 17 1988 13:10 | 9 |
| I, too, have been thinking of the Donvier for a gift, thinking that
we could make our own 'scream and cut out a lot of sugar and fat.
Do any of you that have one have lo-cal recipes, or are they in
the book that comes with it? Or is the sugar and fat part of what
makes it work the way it does?
Thanks!
Terry
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1511.13 | | WITNES::MACONE | It's the story of a man named Brady | Thu Nov 17 1988 14:15 | 9 |
| When I bought the Donvier for my sister, it came with a recipe book.
I recall that there were all sorts of recipes for ice creams and
sorbets as well as for making frozen fruit slushes and frozen yogurts
and I even think there may have been recipes for frozen drinks,
etc.
Unfortuneately, we never got to try any of the recipes since her
freezer was not cold enough. But, she just moved last month, and
hopefully her freezer is no longer as warm.
|
1511.14 | lowER | BONOVX::BARRY | | Fri Nov 18 1988 14:39 | 7 |
| Well, there are lowER calorie recipes included... For one thing
I always use light cream as opposed to heavy, skim milk and egg
beaters instead of eggs (I have high cholesterol). It helps some.
The sherbet recipes are usually lower in calories too.
Lesa
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1511.15 | A vote for Donvier!! | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Fri Nov 18 1988 16:05 | 15 |
| The Donvier comes with a suggestion or two about making low-cal
desserts, but a little imagination results in some WONDERFUL
concoctions! You can sweeten yogurt with Equal, add some fresh
fruit, freeze the mixture, and you would SWEAR you were eating ice
cream! I use a large proportion of fruit to yogurt, thereby reducing
even further the calories and also minimizing the "sour" taste of
the yogurt.
You can also freeze pure fruit juice with or without Equal, into
a really good frozen slush.
I've had mine only a month or so, but I don't know how I ever lived
without it!
Pat
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