Lemon Frozen Yogurt, à la Jeni’s Splendid Ice Cream
Medically reviewed by Christiana George Updated Date: June 8, 2023

A couple weeks back, I mentioned how I got to try Jeni’s Splendid Ice Cream for the first time ever. And while the famous salted caramel was lip-smackingly good (intensely salty AND sweet), I couldn’t stop thinking about the lemon and blueberry fro-yo, particularly because of the lemon frozen yogurt base. It was tangy and delicate, falling just short of palate-cleansing because it was still quite creamy.
So even though it’s not really frozen desserts weather anymore (oh hell, who am I kidding? I could eat frozen desserts any time of the year (although I think that claim’s actually going to be tested this winter (and are parentheses within parentheses within parentheses grammatically incorrect?))), I couldn’t wait until next year to try out this recipe.

Like Molly said, the recipe’s a bit fussy. It requires very exact timing and the use of many many bowls. And I didn’t even make the blueberry swirl because I wanted the unadulterated taste of lemon. But I didn’t mind it—following directions gets to be kind of meditative after awhile. Just know that you’ve been warned, if you decide to go through with it.
If you follow the directions precisely—ROOM TEMPERATURE cream cheese! I can’t stress that enough—you will most certainly end up with a lovely quart of fro-yo in the lightest shade of yellow. It doesn’t turn icy even after it’s been in the freezer for a few days, it doesn’t melt too fast (or too slow for that matter). It really is the perfect way to savor Jeni’s at home.


LEMON FRO-YO
Recipe from Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams at Home via Orangette
Yields over a quart
Ingredients:
For the lemon syrup:
2 to 4 lemons
3 Tbsp sugar
For the frozen yogurt base:
1 quart plain low-fat yogurt
1-1/2 cups whole milk
2 Tbsp corn starch
2 oz. (4 Tbsp) cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup heavy cream
2/3 cup sugar
1/4 cup light corn syrup
Zest from one lemon, reserved from lemon syrup
Directions:
One day in advance, Put a mesh sieve lined with 2 layers of cheesecloth over a bowl and pour the plain yogurt into the sieve. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate 6 to 8 hours (I kept it in the fridge for over 24 hours and it turned out fine).
For the lemon syrup, first use a vegetable peeler to peel the zest off one lemon in long strips. Reserve for the frozen yogurt base. Then juice enough of the lemons to yield 1/2 cup. Combine the lemon juice and sugar in a small saucepan and bring to a boil over medium-high heat, stirring to dissolve the sugar. Remove from heat and set aside to cool.
For the frozen yogurt:
Remove the plain yogurt from the fridge and measure out 1-1/4 cups worth. Set aside.
Combine 2 Tbsp of the milk in a small bowl with the corn starch.
In a bowl (that will eventually need to fit the entire fro-yo base), whisk the cream cheese until smooth (very smooth! The cream cheese should definitely be at room temperature or it will whisk into clumps).
Combine the remaining milk, heavy cream, sugar, corn syrup, and strips of lemon in a large pot (Jeni specifies a pot with 4-quart capacity, but I really don’t think it’s necessary for this particular recipe. A large-ish pot will do). Bring to a rolling boil over medium-high heat and boil for exactly 4 minutes. Towards the end of the 4 minutes, whisk the corn starch and milk until it’s a smooth slurry. Remove the pot from the heat and slowly whisk in the corn starch mixture. Return the pot to the heat, and continue to cook, stirring consistently, for 1 more minute, until the liquid starts to thicken. Remove from heat, and gradually whisk the milk mixture into the bowl with the cream cheese until smooth. Add the reserved 1-1/4 cup plain yogurt and the lemon syrup. Whisk until smooth.
Let cool, then refrigerate the mixture for about 6 hours. Remove from fridge, pick out the strips of lemon (you could pour the mix through a sieve, but it’s quite thick and unmanageable at this point). Pour the mixture into the canister of an ice cream machine, and spin until thick and creamy.
Once done churning, pour the fro-yo in a container and refrigerate it until firm.
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Slow-Roasted Tomatoes, and other Weekend Stories

This weekend was beautiful, warm but not hot, today especially. So I took a break from the kitchen.
I bought grapes, the first of the season! While I was sad to learn that my favorite kind, muscat, is not grown in this area, I was delighted to discover many other varieties that smelled like perfume and tasted as sweet as candy. Apparently a lot of grapes are grown up near Ithaca. That’s not so very far away from here, is it?
I saw a man walking nonchalantly by my favorite home on Manhattan. It’s beautiful, and he didn’t even bat an eye. Maybe he walks by it all the time, maybe he lives just a few doors down, maybe he has no appreciation for lush, gorgeous ivy covering a stately brick exterior. Or maybe I’m just particularly sensitive towards the aesthetically pleasing. All I know is, whenever I pass it, I have stop, sigh, and admire.
I went to Chinatown and bought boba, also known as bubble milk tea. Have you ever had it? It’s probably my favorite beverage in the world, un-eclipsable by anything else, alcoholic or non-. Truthfully, Chris and I make the trip to Chinatown often to buy boba, at least twice a week. Our favorite spot is located on Canal Street, but it’s too expensive for addicts like us. So we go to another spot that’s decent, but made all the sweeter by the fact that it has a 2-for-1 deal. Alas, Chatime we’ll have to reserve for special occasions.
I had two credit cards stolen. I believe the theft occurred in a coffee shop near NYU, the unlikeliest of places if you ask me. And the funny thing is, I’d scooted my purse in closer because I’d felt uncomfortable by how near the party behind me sat. The exact same thing had happened to me in Bolivia: a man who’d sat a little too close for comfort, me preemptively pulling my purse in. He’d managed to get away with about $7 worth of cash. The thief in New York had unsuccessfully tried making a $900+ purchase at the Apple store on both cards. It serves her (her? him? Would a man try to pass a card with a woman’s name on it as his?) right.

Before all this happened, on Friday, I roasted tomatoes.
I think I might’ve mentioned that I like my tomatoes raw, with just a touch of olive oil and salt. But in the case of cherry tomatoes, well, roasting them slowly on low heat, is a one-up.
The taste pierces. It’s so sharply sweet and intense, tomato condensed and condensed some more until all its taste is packaged in a shriveled, innocuous mass. For these tomatoes, I’m willing to turn my oven on, the oven that had traumatized me weeks ago, the oven that I’d vowed to part ways with until after Labor Day, until after temperatures dip below the 80′s once and for all.
A little goes a long way. I’ll be tossing them in salads, on sandwiches, on bagels, in pasta, whenever I need a boost of tomato action. Which could be anytime inspiration strikes, like when I walk by the fridge.

Yup, my weekend was punctuated by tomatoes. They’re a good thing to have around when I’m dealing with my credit card companies’ fraud departments on the phone. And for easing myself back into the work week.
Happy Monday, friends.


SLOW-ROASTED TOMATOES
Ingredients:
Cherry tomatoes
Olive oil
3 to 4 cloves of garlic, unpeeled
salt and pepper
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 250 degrees (Note: My oven only goes down to 300 degrees, so I had to roast them at this temperature.)
Cut the tomatoes in half. Toss with the olive oil (so they’re lightly covered) and lay the halves on a baking sheet, cut side up, along with the garlic cloves. Sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste. Roast the tomatoes for 2 to 3 hours until they shrivel but are still juicy on the inside. (Note: Because my oven was at 300 degrees, I had to turn the oven off after about an hour and 15 minutes because the tomatoes in the corners had started burning. I won’t lose any to the carbonizing effects of heat!)
To store, let the tomatoes cool and put them in a covered jar in the fridge. You may need to cover them with some extra olive oil.
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