Fried ice cream

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fried ice cream is an Americanized Mexican/Asian dessert.

Fried ice cream is commonly found at Mexican food chain restaurants in the United States (e.g. El Torito or Chi-Chi's) and fairs and carnivals. It is made by taking a scoop of deep-frozen ice cream (frozen well below the standard temperature at which ice cream is generally kept), possibly rolling it in egg, then rolling in cornflakes or cookie crumbs, and then briefly deep frying -- the extremely low temperature of the ice cream prevents it from melting while being fried. Finally it might be sprinkled with cinnamon and sugar.

Fried ice cream has also become a common dessert served in Chinese and Japanese restaurants. The recipe at such restaurants is slightly different, in that tempura batter is usually used instead of cornflakes or cookie crumbs.

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