"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
Two baked chocolate chip cookies sandwiching cookie dough ice cream.
What these ARE:
Two luxurious layers of
egg-free chocolate chip cookie dough sandwiching creamy cookie
dough ice cream.
Because, really, can
one ever have too much cookie dough?
At first glance
(especially when gazing upon the step-by-step), it might seem like
too much work for ice cream sandwiches. All I can say is a) these are
so (like, so, so, so) simple and once you get the stacking
technique down, you’ll be able to whip out a billion of these
babies and b) when a girl has a craving for cookie dough ice cream
sandwiches, it cannot be ignored.
Right out of the
freezer, the cookie dough is firm but still soft enough to bite into
which results in sublime cookie dough overload. If you want to be a
total rock star, make your own cookie dough ice cream (um, which I
did not) and report back. I’ll bow down to your feet and beg
for a sample.
Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Ice Cream Sandwiches
Yield: Makes 9 ice cream sandwiches (more if you cut them smaller)
Ingredients
1/2 cup (1 stick) butter
1/3 cup packed light brown sugar
1/4 cup granulated sugar
2 tablespoons milk
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup mini chocolate chips
Nonstick cooking spray
Quart cookie dough ice cream, softened to spreadable consistency
Directions
For the cookie dough, in a large
microwave-safe bowl, melt the butter with the brown and granulated
sugar. Stir to combine. Stir in the milk, vanilla, and salt until
well blended. Stir in the flour until completely smooth. Let the
mixture cool completely (so the chocolate chips don't melt) then
stir in the chocolate chips.
Line an 8X8-inch baking pan
(preferably with very straight sides) with two pieces of parchment
paper (cut into 8-inch strips) so they extend well beyond the edges
of the pan on all four sides; this will help to lift up and easily
remove the frozen sandwiches.
Scatter half of the dough into the
pan and use your hands to press it into an even layer.
Top with a second set of parchment
strips that extend over each side. Lightly coat the parchment with
nonstick cooking spray. Scatter the remaining dough over the top and
press into an even layer.
Fold the overhanging parchment
over the dough and freeze for at least an hour (can be frozen for
several days in advance.)
Use the parchment strips hanging
over the edge to lift out the top layer of cookie dough. Then remove
the second layer.
Place another set of parchment
slings (I know, enough with the parchment already!) in the pan. Peel
the parchment from one square of cookie dough and set it inside the
pan with the smoothest side down.
Spread the softened ice cream over
the top into an even layer. Peel the parchment from the remaining
square of cookie dough and place it, smoothest side up, on the ice
cream. Gently press it into the ice cream.
Cover the pan (with the parchment
overhangs, if desired) and freeze for at least 2-3 hours but
preferably 6-8. Using a long, sharp knife, run it under hot water,
wipe dry, and slice the cookie dough ice cream sandwiches into
squares, repeating with hot water after each slice (you can lift up
on the handles to remove it from the pan before slicing — I
found I had to run a knife around the edges to loosen any ice cream
that had stuck to the pan corners). Eat fast so they don't melt!
Melanie Gunnell is a food-loving, chocolate-obsessed mom who has a desperate need to share
her favorite tried-and-true recipes with the world. In a past life she graduated from Brigham
Young University with a degree in public health, but for the past ten years, stay-at-home
motherhood has been her job along with blogging-from-home for the past five.
She resides in the brilliantly cold tundra of Northern Minnesota with her husband and their brood
of five children: four boys and one tiny, bossy girl. Dark chocolate (particularly the act of
shoving chocolate chips in her mouth whilst hiding in the pantry) is her coping skill of choice for
both the never-ending winters and the never-ending wrestling matches in her front room.