Enjoy a nostalgic scoop that blends toasty malted milk with a rich custard base. This Malt Ice Cream recipe shows how simple ingredients—milk, cream, and a dash of vanilla—become a plush, scoopable dessert that feels both classic and special.
Make it your own with an optional malted chocolate fudge ribbon that cooks up quickly and folds into the churned batch for ribbons of intense chocolate flavor. A short simmer, a stir of butter and vanilla, and you have a sauce that keeps well in the fridge.
This guide walks you through the custard method, chilling and churning tips, and simple storage tricks. Expect clear steps, pro tips for texture, and ideas for mix-ins so the final pint is ready for company or a quiet night in.
Key Takeaways
- One classic custard base delivers a smooth, scoopable texture.
- Malted milk adds a toasty, cereal-like flavor that pairs with vanilla and chocolate.
- An easy fudge ribbon brings sundae-level richness without fuss.
- Chill well, churn, then freeze at least two hours for best results.
- Store covered pints up to three months; sauce keeps in the fridge.
Malt Ice Cream
4
servings30
minutes40
minutes300
kcal1
hour10
minutesCreamy malt ice cream using everyday ingredients for a delightful homemade treat.
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Ingredients
1 cup 1 heavy cream
1 cup 1 whole milk
0.75 cup 0.75 sugar
0.25 cup 0.25 malted milk powder
2 tablespoons 2 vanilla extract
3 large 3 egg yolks
0.25 teaspoon 0.25 salt
Directions
- In a medium saucepan, combine the heavy cream, whole milk, sugar, and malted milk powder over medium heat. Stir until the mixture is smooth and just begins to simmer.
- Remove from heat and let the cream mixture cool slightly. In a separate bowl, whisk together the egg yolks, vanilla extract, and salt until well combined.
- Slowly pour a little of the warm cream mixture into the egg yolks, whisking constantly to temper the yolks and prevent curdling.
- Gradually add the yolk mixture back into the saucepan with the remaining cream. Cook over medium-low heat while stirring constantly until it thickens slightly, coating the back of a spoon.
- Pour the custard through a fine-mesh strainer into a clean bowl to remove any cooked egg bits. Cover the surface with plastic wrap to prevent a skin from forming.
- Chill the mixture in the refrigerator for at least 4 hours, or until thoroughly cold for enhanced flavor and texture.
- Once chilled, pour the custard into an ice cream maker and churn according to the manufacturer's instructions. This usually takes about 20-25 minutes.
- Transfer the ice cream to an airtight container and freeze for at least 2 hours to firm up. Serve and enjoy your malt ice cream.
Nutrition Facts
- Total number of serves: 6
- Calories: 180kcal
- Cholesterol: 125mg
- Sodium: 80mg
- Potassium: 150mg
- Sugar: 14g
- Protein: 3g
- Calcium: 100mg
- Iron: 0mg
- Thiamin: 0mg
- Riboflavin: 0mg
- Niacin: 0mg
- Folate: 0mg
- Biotin: 0mg
- Phosphorus: 0mg
- Iodine: 0mg
- Magnesium: 0mg
- Zinc: 0mg
- Selenium: 0mg
- Copper: 0mg
- Manganese: 0mg
- Chromium: 0mg
- Molybdenum: 0mg
- Chloride: 0mg
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Why this malt ice cream recipe belongs in your freezer today
You’ll find this version earns a permanent spot in your freezer thanks to its balanced, old‑school flavor and simple technique. Non‑diastatic malted milk powder brings a layered taste—slightly toasty, gently savory, and sweet—that pairs beautifully with dairy fat in milk and cream.
Gentle heat and timing matter. The custard is cooked just until it steams and coats a spoon, never boiled, so yolks thicken the mixture without curdling. Tempering warm milk into beaten yolks yields a silky, stable custard that holds up in the bowl and the freezer.
Expect short stovetop minutes, a cooling period that sets texture, and a churn that finishes the transformation. Vanilla rounds the profile while a touch of chocolate can deepen it without stealing the spotlight.
- Reliable results: predictable custard stability from non‑diastatic powder.
- Fast to make: minimal hands‑on minutes and simple chill time.
- Flexible base: welcomes swirls or stays purely malted for a nostalgic finish.
Want more technique or a swirl idea? See the full malted milk ice cream recipe for step‑by‑step guidance and optional chocolate ribbons.
Malt ice cream recipe: creamy custard base with optional chocolate malt swirl
A smooth custard starts with good mise en place. Measure the milk, heavy cream, malted milk powder, sugar, and egg yolks before you heat anything. Having a cold bowl and a ready saucepan makes the steps simple and calm.
Ingredients and substitutions
Use whole milk and heavy cream for a rich base. Stir in non‑diastatic malted milk powder and a split vanilla bean, or swap the bean for extract. For a chocolate direction, melt 1 cup semi‑sweet chips into the warm custard after cooking.
Equipment checklist
- 2‑quart saucepan
- Large heatproof bowl and fine‑mesh strainer
- Ice cream maker (follow manufacturer instructions)
- Airtight container for final storage
Key steps
Gently heat the milk mixture until scalding or just simmering. Whisk yolks with sugar, then temper with hot liquid to avoid scrambling. Return to the pan and stir until the custard coats the back of a spoon; do not boil.
Strain the custard, stir in vanilla, then chill 2–5 hours. Churn the cold base according manufacturer instructions. For ribbons, add about 3/4 cup room‑temperature malted chocolate fudge in the last turns and fold in 3/4 cup crushed malted milk balls off the machine.
Finish: Transfer to an airtight container, press plastic onto the surface if you like, then freeze at least two hours. Properly stored, pints keep best for about three months.
Flavor boosts and creative variations
A few smart additions unlock layers of cocoa, crunch, and ribboned sauce. These options let you tailor the base into chocolate ice cream, sundae-ready pints, or a crunchy-studded treat.
Chocolate malt direction
Make chocolate malt by stirring in 1 cup semi‑sweet chocolate chips into the hot custard so they melt cleanly into the mixture. Chill the base before churning for best texture.
Malted chocolate fudge ribbon
To make a ribbon, boil sugar, cocoa, corn syrup, malted milk powder, and half‑and‑half. Simmer 3 minutes, then finish with butter and vanilla. Cool to room temperature and add the sauce in the last 3–4 turns of the machine.
Crunch factor
Fold in about 3/4 cup slightly crushed malted milk balls after churning to keep airy crunch. Aim for bite-sized pieces so each scoop has both soft and crisp elements.
- Tip: Use about a cup of ribbon for bold bands, or 3/4 cup for a balanced stripe.
- Mix-in care: Keep add-ins at room temp to avoid shocking the churned base.
- Split the batch: Half with ribbon, half with mix-ins lets everyone taste both versions.
The science and sourcing: malted milk powder, custard cues, and pro tips
A few ingredient choices and visual cues turn a simple custard into a reliably smooth frozen treat. Choose ingredients that work with temperature and time to protect texture and flavor.
Choose the right powder
Non-diastatic malted milk powder is the one to buy for this recipe. It adds that classic flavor without the enzymes used in baking.
Diastatic powder belongs in bread; its enzymes can keep working and alter sweetness and structure in frozen custards.
Custard doneness and stove cues
Watch for light steam and the moment the mixture coats the back of a spoon. Swipe your finger across the spoon; the line should hold.
“Never boil the custard—gentle heat preserves eggs and keeps the base velvety.”
When you see those cues, quickly remove heat and strain into a clean bowl to catch any bits.
- Scrape vanilla seeds into the custard and return the pod to steep while it chills for 4–5 hours.
- Chill fully before churning; a cold base helps produce small ice crystals and smoother texture.
- Store in a freezer-safe container and press plastic on the surface to reduce frost.
Conclusion
Finish strong, transfer the churned base to cold pints, press plastic directly onto the surface, then seal the lid and freeze until firm.
Give it at least two hours before scooping so texture sets and flavors meld. Well-covered pints keep up to three months for easy treats.
Save any cooled fudge sauce in the fridge for up to three months; use it to dress bowls later.
You now have everything to make malt ice cream with a rich custard core and optional chocolate ribbons that elevate each scoop.
Start simple, trust the gentle steps, and split batches to try new swirls when you want variety.
Store smart, label dates, and enjoy—homemade results turn ordinary nights into small celebrations.















