Please bear with me. I have never written a Kos diary before. I'm hopeless at coming up with introductory statements. If something strikes me as a good idea, then it obviously must be a good idea for other people. And thus my creative juices cease to flow. This morning I checked one of my very favorite website, popurls.com. There were two links to information so simple and so divergent. One happy and carefree, the other profoundly sad. Both descrbe novel uses for a plastic bag. Each idea by itself --by now, unfortunately, not that remarkable. But the juxtaposition--breathtaking. Take a look and see if you share my feelings.
USE #1 Use a Plastic Bag to MAKE ICE CREAM!!
1 tablespoon Sugar
1/2 cup Milk or half & half
1/4 teaspoon Vanilla
6 tablespoons Rock salt
1 pint-size Ziploc plastic bag
1 gallon-size Ziploc plastic bag
Ice cubes
How To Make It
Fill the large bag half full of ice, and add the rock salt. Seal the bag.
Put milk, vanilla, and sugar into the small bag, and seal it.
Place the small bag inside the large one and seal again carefully.
Shake until mixture is ice cream, about 5 minutes.
Wipe off top of small bag, then open carefully and enjoy!
Tips
I always have sprinkles and nuts to top it off, and sometimes fruit.
To make a larger amount I would try doubling the recipe. Anything larger might be too big for kids to pick-up, because the ice itself is quite heavy.
Bob LaFara, rlafara@indy.net, shares some tips to go with Janice Krieger's Ice Cream in a Bag.
I just tried the project. I didn't have the exact ingredients, so I improvised.
1/4 tsp butternut flavored imitation vanilla
1 tbs. sugar
1/2 cup 1% milk
Ziploc sandwich bag
12 water softener pellets
1 tray of ice (Mine breaks it into small pieces and it is really only about half tray)
Large plastic bag (I didn't have a ziploc.)
I put the ice cream ingredients in the small bag and then put it, salt and ice in the big bag. I held the bag shut and sort of stirred it around on the floor for about 5 minutes. Although the salt pellets hardly dissolved, I got ice cream. It was not as smooth as ice cream, probably because of the low-fat milk -- it was a little like sherbet. I think if I had more ice in the bag I could have shaken it better. I'd recommend wearing gloves. It is incredible that it is ready in 5 minutes (not counting assembling the ingredients.)
Next, I changed the recipe. A tablespoon of cocoa, a tablespoon of sugar, and a cup of milk. I really wanted to use carob but we didn't have any. It was a tad too chocolate, but good! My daughter has milk allergies, so I suggested she try this with fruit juice. She used straight pineapple juice and got terrific fruit sorbed.
Use #2 Torment an ENTIRE GENERATION