Decorative Ice Cubes or Ice Mold

"The ice cubes are lovely served in summer drinks; the ice mold makes a very elegant addition to a punch bowl. This is from the Joy of Cooking. (Note: "cooking" time is freezing time.)"
 
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Ready In:
2hrs 20mins
Ingredients:
5
Yields:
1 tray of ice cubes or mold
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ingredients

  • Any combination of the following

  • citrus fruits, thinly sliced
  • sliced strawberry
  • fresh edible flower (such as marigolds, pansies, nasturtiums, rose petals)
  • mint sprig
  • maraschino cherry
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directions

  • FOR DECORATIVE ICE CUBES: put small chunks of fruit or mint sprigs into an ice tray, fill with water and freeze.
  • Serve the ice cubes directly in drinks, or put them out in a glass bowl or ice bucket with tongs.
  • FOR THE DECORATIVE ICE MOLD: you will need a glass bowl that is smaller than your punch bowl, plus a second shallow container of equal volume.
  • Fill the shallow container with water and let it sit at room temperature for 15-30 minutes, stirring it from time to time to get rid of any air bubbles.
  • Line the bottom (but not up the sides) of the empty glass bowl with fruit and/or flowers of your choice.
  • Take a tablespoon or so of water from the shallow container and pour this water over the fruit/flower layer, then put the glass bowl in the freezer, leaving it there until the fruit/flower layer is anchored in ice.
  • Next, pour another tablespoon or so of the reserved water over the first (now frozen), and allow this to freeze; continue adding water and letting it freeze until the fruit/flower layer is just barely covered in ice.
  • Now start going up the bowl, laying fruit and/or flowers against the side of the bowl, and pouring water over them a little at a time, allowing the water to freeze to anchor the fruit and/or flowers against the side of the bowl.
  • Continue adding water and allowing it to freeze until the bowl is full of ice.
  • When you're ready to use the mold, let the bowl sit at room temperature for 15-30 minutes; or alternatively, put it in a slightly larger bowl containing warm water for a couple of minutes.
  • When the ice has melted just enough so that it's no longer stuck to the side of the bowl, invert the whole thing inside your punch bowl; the result will be a mound of ice with fruit and flowers all over its surface (Note: when you pour some punch over it, the ice surface will become clear, though it's usually opaque when it first comes out of the mold).

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Reviews

  1. For crystal clear ice cubes, boil the water first, cool it, then freeze with the additions in each cube section of the tray. During the summer I keep a supply of these cubes in the freezer for refreshing cool drinks.
     
  2. I tried this wth mint sprigs. I had several issues with this. First, I used a mini muffin tin as the mold and the ice cracked and expanded out of the mold. But the funniest thing was that as the ice melted, the mint "bloomed" in the glass. It freaked out the kids. I no konger own an ice cube try because my refrigerator automatibits cally makes ice. I plan to buy a plasic try at the dollar store and try this again with bits of fruit instead. The I will re-rate this recipe.
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

<p>I am a native Californian, and a zealous fruit and vegetable gardener. Most of the produce I eat comes from my back yard. I'm very grateful for a climate that allows for a year-round harvest! <br /> <br />Quality of life is the primary yardstick by which I measure the choices in my life -- the question is always at the forefront of my mind: which option here will bring us (and anyone else involved) the most happiness and fun?! <br /> <br />Generally (not always!), I try to stay away from processed foods -- particularly hydrogenated fats &amp; high fructose corn syrup. I find I feel best when I follow the Zone diet, and I also aim for half my food intake to be vegetables (even at breakfast! I love a good egg-and-veggie scramble with onions, sweet and hot peppers, and summer squash!). No fanaticism however -- a little decadence is the spice of life... so I rationalize that indulging in two rich meals a week only makes up 10% of my total! ;-) <br /> <br />For me, investing in high-quality basics yields great rewards -- so naturally, good cooking ingredients are a big priority, e.g. freshly picked organic produce and high quality spices. And I am just thrilled that since consumer demand is steadily increasing for free-range poultry, grass-fed beef, and the like, these items are becoming more available. (I don't think it's a coincidence that when animals are treated kindly during their lives, given room to roam, fed the food their bodies were designed to eat, and killed humanely, the result is better quality meat. Makes sense to me!) <br /> <br />I love to travel the world and the U.S., and make an effort to take at least one international and one domestic trip every year.</p>
 
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