Homemade Peach Ice Cream (No Eggs Needed)
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This easy homemade peach ice cream recipe uses only 3 ingredients (and no eggs). The sweet and juicy peaches and cream flavor makes for the perfect summer treat.
I’ve had a lot of folks ask for homemade ice cream recipes lately and there are a few already floating around on Southern Plate. This includes no-fry fried ice cream, no-churn cherry vanilla ice cream (do we sense a pattern?), and ice cream grahamwiches. So today I wanted to bring you one of the easiest ones around, with only three ingredients!
The great thing about this homemade peach ice cream recipe is how incredibly low maintenance and customizable it is. The three ingredients are simply sweetened condensed milk, canned peaches or fresh peaches, and flavored soda. So you can customize it however you like, including using your favorite flavored carbonated drink and fresh fruit of your choice. For example, combine fresh strawberries and strawberry crush soda to make homemade strawberry ice cream. What a treat!
This peach ice cream recipe is so easy to make and I’ve included two options below. You can use an ice cream maker or not, the choice is yours. I just love the real sweet and juicy peach flavor this homemade ice cream delivers. When combined with the creamy condensed milk, it’s the perfect summer dessert.
If you have more you don’t know what to do with, make and one of these recipes: peach kuchen, old-fashioned peach cobbler, and peach dump cake.
Recipe Ingredients
- Sweetened condensed milk
- Canned peaches or fresh peaches
- Flavored soda (peach, strawberry, orange, lemon-lime, grape, etc)
How to Make Homemade Peach Ice Cream
If you are going to be adding fruit, drain it if it is in a can and place it in a blender.
Puree your fruit and then pour it into a medium bowl.
Now we’re gonna mix up our sweetened condensed milk and soda in the blender.
Notice that I didn’t clean the blender out after I chopped up my fruit. No sense in it since we’re just about to mix it all up again anyway.
Just pulse that a bit until it is mixed well.
Here is your warning: Make sure to leave plenty of headroom when doing this in your blender. That peach soda is gonna put a lot of pressure on things with the carbonation and if you have your blender too full the pressure will build AS SOON AS you hit that button and you will have QUITE a mess. A very STICKY mess that will take you ten forevers to clean up. I don’t know how I’d know that… but learn from my mistakes!
Using an ice cream machine
Now, I’m going to take you through the process of making peach ice cream using an ice cream machine and not. First, remember you need to freeze the ice cream maker bowl beforehand for at least 12 hours.
For an ice cream machine, pour your ice cream base into the tank and stir in your fruit.
Add just enough of the leftover soda to bring it to the fill line.
Depending on how much fruit you add you may not be able to add a lot of soda or you may end up adding the remainder of it. With a 2L bottle, I added all but about four ounces.
Place your paddle stirrer into the ice cream machine.
Put your lid on it and then fill the sides of your ice cream maker with alternate layers of ice and a sprinkling of rock salt.
See your maker’s instructions on exactly how much to add.
Put the top on and start churning. You’ll need to keep adding ice as it melts down and let it run for about an hour or so.
Once it gets to looking like this, you can go ahead and take it out or let it run a little longer.
I’m gonna go ahead and take it out because I have the patience of a gnat.
Freezing ice cream without a machine
Now, we’re going to follow a similar process to make homemade peach ice cream without an ice cream maker. First, combine the condensed milk and soda mixture with the peach puree in a large metal bowl.
Then we’re going to add more soda as we did in the other step (about 1.6L or 4.5 cans altogether).
Now begins the freezing process! Place the metal bowl in the freezer for 90 minutes to begin.
Take the bowl out of the freezer, whisk the really well (or use a hand mixer), and then place it back in the freezer.
Repeat this process every 30 to 45 minutes until it reaches the soft-serve stage.
The key is to whip as much air into the ice cream as possible.
This process does take several hours. But to speed this up, you can pour the mixture into two containers or bowls.
Freeze overnight and it will look a little bit like this in the morning.
Enjoy this crowd-pleasing summer dessert!
Storage
Store leftovers in a freezer-safe container for up to 2 weeks.
Recipe Notes
- If you have difficulty finding the peach soda head online and it’s usually available from Target or Walmart. I used 1 can when blending and a total of 4.5 cans when blending the final mixture, which equals just shy of 1.7L.
- If the mixture is too icy and not creamy after freezing overnight, then pulse the ice cream in a food processor until creamy. Pour it back into the containers and freeze for a minimum of 3 to 4 hours.
- Make ice cream sandwiches with homemade ginger cookies. The paired with ginger is a match made in heaven!
- A 29-ounce can of peaches equals about 3 cups of fresh chopped peaches. While I haven’t tried it, I can see this recipe also working with frozen peaches. Just ensure the are thawed before pulsing in the blender.
Check out these other enticing ice cream recipes:
Oreo Ice Cream Cake (A Family Favorite)
Ingredients
- 2 cans sweetened condensed milk
- 1 can peaches, drained and diced 29 ounces
- 2 liters peach-flavored soda
Instructions
- Pulse fresh chopped peaches or canned peaches in a blender and then pour the puree into a medium bowl.1 can peaches, drained and diced
- Mix up the sweetened condensed milk and soda in the blender and pour into a different large metal bowl.2 cans sweetened condensed milk, 2 liters peach-flavored soda
- Combine the peach puree with the ice cream base in the metal bowl and mix well.
- Let it freeze for 90 minutes then whisk the ice cream mixture together really well (a hand mixer will work too) and place it back in the freezer.
- Repeat this process every 30 to 45 minutes until it reaches the soft-serve stage (the key is to whip as much air into the ice cream as possible). To speed up the process, pour the mixture into two containers or bowls.
- Freeze overnight.
Notes
- If you have difficulty finding the peach soda head online and it's usually available from Target or Walmart. I ended up using 1 can when blending and a total of 4 1/2 cans when blending the final mixture.
- If the mixture is too icy and not creamy after freezing overnight, then pulse the ice cream in a food processor until creamy. Pour it back into the containers and freeze for a minimum of 3 to 4 hours.
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We love homemade ice cream! I have fond memories of ice cream making growing up!! Our tradition is that ALL must take a turn at hand cranking the maker if you plan on eating any ice cream!! Many friends had never had home made and have a great time! My hint is to always take your turn early in the making unless you want to really give those arms a work out!! Now I know I could go out and buy an electric maker but I just can’t do it…yet!!:) I’m so fond of the “old” way!! Thanks for another great recipe Christy! Love ya!
Bountiful Blessings!
This sounds REALLY good!
I was thinking about using Cherries and Diet Cheerwine. Just wonder how many cherries I would need. I don’t have an ice cream freezer but have really been thinking of getting one. This may just push me into getting one! Any recommendations from anyone? (Sorry Christy! If you don’t allow product recommendations)
BTW…I made your fried corn recipe the other night. It was AMAZING!! The only change I made to it was that I fried about 3 strips of fat-back to get the oil for the corn. It tasted just like my grandmother’s corn. YYUUMMMMM!!
One tip…Use a potato peeler to cut the corn from the cob and then scrape the cob with the back of a knife to get the corn “milk”. This greatly simplifies the prep work.
Really enjoy your site, blog, and recipes!
Ok Christy, made the peach. YUM! It was so easy I went to the store, (or grocery store but never the “market”) and bought strawberry “drink” and made another batch with frozen berries from my freezer. Anxiously waiting for this to “cure” because it is still over 90 degrees here!
Thanks again!
mmm, this looks good. I’ll have to dig out the old ice cream maker and try it. Good thing it takes about an hour, since I’m guessing that’s about how long it took to clean up that counter after you discovered the “head room” concept. 😉
I can vouch for ice cream made this way. We make it like this quite often at work, even in the winter. I love it made with grape coke. (Yes, it’s all coke, doesn’t matter what the label says the brand is.) Matter of fact, we’re making some today I believe, but I don’t know what flavor coke we have. (When you work 12 1/2 hour shifts, three to six days a week, day or night, a fully equipped kitchen is handy.)
We also love banana pudding ice cream. It tastes really, REALLY close to homemade banana pudding (hint, hint, wink,wink, Christy! Maybe good for 4th of July at your house….)
1 (8 ounce) container Cool Whip
1 (14 ounce) can sweetened condensed milk
3/4 gallon whole milk
2 (3 1/2 ounce) packages banana cream instant pudding
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
4-5 bananas (chopped)
1 (12 ounce) box vanilla wafers (crushed)
In a bowl, mix Cool-Whip, condensed milk, pudding, and about 1/4 gallon milk. Add chopped bananas and crushed Nilla Wafers.
Pour mixture into ice cream machine. Add milk to the fill line in the ice cream maker.
Stir mixture and begin freezing process as directed by manufacturer’s procedure. This makes two quarts.
You can substitute different flavors of pudding mix, cookies, and/or fruit for different flavors. Vanilla pudding and crushed Oreos (do not remove cookie filling before crushing) with no fruit makes a great Cookies N Cream-like ice cream.
Thank you, Thank you. I have wanted to try making ice cream for the longest. But, only found complicated recipes. This one is so simple. I will be making this for the 4th. Thank you for sharing and I love you website.
This recipe came from an Aunt, she said it was in a recipe book in her first refrigerator, when they got married most people did not have refrigerators, so I am assuming this was a early model.
5 eggs beaten real good
2 1/2 c. sugar
1 qt. of sweet milk
1 large can of pet milk
Mix well and freeze.
For those of you who don’t like raw eggs, you are missing out.