Whip cold cream, fold in sweetened condensed milk and flavor, freeze 6–8 hours, then scoop a smooth no-churn ice cream.
No ice cream maker? No problem. Sweetened condensed milk is the shortcut that turns a home freezer into real ice cream. The sugar and milk solids help keep the mix soft enough to scoop, while whipped cream builds the airy structure you’d normally get from churning.
This recipe keeps the moving parts simple: clear ratios, tight steps, and a few texture guardrails so you don’t waste a batch.
What You Need Before You Start
You can do this with three core ingredients. All other extras are there to steer flavor.
Core Ingredients
- Heavy cream (cold): Whips into a foam that holds the frozen mix up.
- Sweetened condensed milk: Sweetens, thickens, and helps limit hard ice crystals.
- Flavoring: Vanilla, cocoa, espresso, fruit purée, nut butter, or spices.
Tools That Make It Easier
- Hand mixer or stand mixer
- Large bowl (metal chills fast)
- Rubber spatula
- Loaf pan or freezer-safe container with a lid
- Parchment paper (blocks ice crystals and freezer odors)
Making Ice Cream With Sweetened Condensed Milk At Home
This is the no-churn method. The main trick is temperature control. Cold cream whips higher, and a colder freezer sets the mix faster with smaller crystals.
Step 1: Chill The Setup
Put the bowl and beaters in the fridge for 15 minutes. Keep the cream in the coldest part of your fridge until you pour it.
Step 2: Whip The Cream To Stiff Peaks
Pour 2 cups (480 ml) cold heavy cream into the bowl. Beat on medium-high until you get stiff peaks. The cream should hold a point that stands up, yet still look glossy. If it starts to look grainy, stop right away.
Step 3: Stir The Sweet Base
In a second bowl, stir together 1 can (14 oz / 396 g) sweetened condensed milk, 1–2 teaspoons vanilla, and a pinch of salt. Add cocoa, coffee, nut butter, or a thick fruit purée here.
Step 4: Fold Without Deflating
Scoop about a third of the whipped cream into the condensed milk base and fold to loosen it. Add the rest in two additions, folding with a wide spatula. Use gentle, sweeping strokes so you keep the trapped air.
Step 5: Pack And Freeze
Scrape the mix into a loaf pan. Press parchment directly on the surface, then add the lid. Freeze at least 6 hours; overnight gives the cleanest scoops.
Step 6: Scoop Cleanly
Let the container sit on the counter for 2–4 minutes, then scoop. A warm scoop (rinsed, then dried) glides through the first serving.
Flavor Builds That Stay Balanced When Frozen
Cold dulls sweetness and aroma. Mixes that taste a touch bold before freezing tend to taste “just right” after they set.
Vanilla Bean
Use vanilla paste or the seeds from one vanilla bean. Add a pinch of salt. Keep it plain, then top with fruit, chocolate, or nuts at serving.
Chocolate Fudge
Whisk 1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa into the condensed milk. Add 2 tablespoons melted, cooled chocolate for a deeper note. Fold in chopped chocolate at the end for chips that stay snappy.
Coffee Or Espresso
Dissolve 1–2 tablespoons instant espresso in 1 tablespoon hot water, cool it, then stir it into the condensed milk. Coffee reads softer when frozen, so build it a bit stronger than you’d drink it.
Fruit Swirl
Cook berries with a spoon of sugar until thick, then cool fully. Drop spoonfuls into the pan and drag a knife through once to marble it. Thick swirls freeze better than thin juices.
Texture Rules That Keep It Smooth
No-churn ice cream can land creamy, or it can land icy. These rules steer you to the creamy side.
Keep Water Low
Water freezes into hard crystals. That’s why juicy fruit can make the texture rough. For fruit flavor, use a cooked fruit reduction, a thick purée, or a jammy swirl.
Use Fat For Body
Heavy cream is doing the lifting here. Lower-fat cream won’t trap air as well, and the mix may freeze dense and hard.
Freeze Fast, Store Tight
A freezer set to 0°F (−18°C for safe frozen storage) sets ice cream quickly and helps hold texture. Press parchment on the surface and close the lid tight.
Batch Planner Table For No-Churn Ice Cream
Use this table to pick flavors, add-ins, and handling moves without guessing. It’s built around one standard batch: 2 cups cream plus 1 can sweetened condensed milk.
| What You’re Changing | What To Do | What You’ll Notice |
|---|---|---|
| Stronger vanilla | Use vanilla paste or bean seeds; add salt | Cleaner “ice cream shop” vanilla |
| Chocolate base | Whisk cocoa into condensed milk; add melted chocolate | Richer flavor, firmer set |
| Nut butter | Stir 1/3 cup smooth nut butter into condensed milk | Denser body, less airy |
| Fruit flavor | Use cooked fruit reduction or thick purée, cooled | Less icy, brighter fruit taste |
| Crunchy mix-ins | Fold 1 to 1 1/2 cups right before freezing | Even mix, less sinking |
| Swirl | Add thick sauce in layers, then drag a knife once | Marbled ribbons, clean scoops |
| Soft scoop | Store in a shallow container; freeze on coldest shelf | Easier serving, smaller crystals |
| Longer storage | Press parchment on top; keep the lid sealed | Fewer ice crystals, cleaner flavor |
Food Safety And Storage Notes
Ice cream is low-risk when it’s made with pasteurized dairy and kept frozen, yet good habits still count. Wash hands and keep tools clean, and keep the base cold while you work.
Freezer Temperature And Time
Frozen foods stored at 0°F stay safe, and time limits are mainly about quality, as stated on FoodSafety.gov’s Cold Food Storage Chart. For home ice cream, the freshest texture is usually during the first 1–2 weeks.
Why Sweetened Condensed Milk Works
Sweetened condensed milk is milk with water removed and sugar added, and it’s pasteurized during processing. The product standard in 21 CFR 131.120 for sweetened condensed milk describes minimum milkfat and milk solids, which helps explain the thick base it creates in no-churn ice cream.
Mix-In And Swirl Table For Clean Scoops
These amounts fit one batch. Keep sauces thick and mix-ins dry so they don’t seed ice crystals.
| Mix-In Or Swirl | Amount For One Batch | Prep Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Crushed cookies | 1 to 1 1/2 cups | Freeze cookies 10 minutes, then crush |
| Chocolate chunks | 3/4 to 1 cup | Chop small so scoops stay smooth |
| Toasted nuts | 3/4 cup | Cool fully so warmth doesn’t melt the base |
| Caramel swirl | 1/3 to 1/2 cup | Use thick caramel; layer, then drag once |
| Berry reduction | 1/3 cup | Cook until jammy; chill before swirling |
| Brownie bites | 1 cup | Freeze pieces so they stay distinct |
| Peanut butter ribbon | 1/4 to 1/3 cup | Warm slightly, then cool so it pours |
How To Make Ice Cream With Sweetened Condensed Milk? Fixes For Common Problems
When a batch comes out off, it’s usually one of three things: the cream wasn’t whipped enough, the mix got deflated during folding, or the freezer took too long to set it.
It Froze Too Hard
- Give it 3–5 minutes on the counter before scooping.
- Store in a shallow container so it softens evenly.
- If you used low-fat cream, switch back to heavy cream next time.
It Tastes Icy
- Use thicker fruit mixes (reductions, jammy swirls) instead of watery juice.
- Press parchment on the surface to limit ice crystals.
- Freeze on the coldest shelf and keep the door closed.
It Feels Dense
- Whip to stiff peaks with a glossy look.
- Fold gently with a spatula, not a whisk.
- Give it a full 6–8 hours to set.
Mix-Ins Sank
- Fold them in right before the pan goes into the freezer.
- Chill mix-ins so they don’t melt the base.
- Layer the base and mix-ins in the container, then drag a knife once.
Make-Ahead And Freezer Setup Tips
If you plan to keep a batch around for more than a few days, setup matters. Ice cream picks up freezer smells, and repeated warming and refreezing builds crystals.
- Choose the right container: A shallow, wide tub freezes faster than a deep quart. Faster freeze means a smoother bite.
- Block air: Press parchment right on the surface, then add the lid. Less air contact means fewer dry, icy patches.
- Label it: Write the flavor and the date on tape. You won’t have to guess what that “mystery tub” is later.
- Keep it steady: Store the tub toward the back of the freezer, away from the door, so it doesn’t warm each time you grab something.
Serving Ideas That Don’t Need Extra Work
You can dress this up without turning dessert into a project. Pick one add-on and call it done.
- Warm-cold contrast: Spoon hot espresso over vanilla for a quick affogato-style treat.
- Crunch on top: Sprinkle toasted nuts or crushed cookies right before serving so they stay crisp.
- Easy sundaes: Keep a thick sauce in the fridge. Cold sauce stays thick and won’t melt the scoop as fast.
- Neat slices: Freeze in a parchment-lined loaf pan, lift out, then slice with a warm knife.
Power-Outage Tip For Frozen Desserts
If you lose power and the ice cream softens, avoid tasting to judge safety. Use official steps for keeping food cold and deciding what to toss on the CDC emergency food safety page.
References & Sources
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“Are You Storing Food Safely?”Explains safe freezer temperature and how freezing affects bacteria growth.
- FoodSafety.gov (U.S. government).“Cold Food Storage Chart.”Lists refrigerator and freezer storage guidance and quality timelines.
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations (eCFR).“21 CFR 131.120 — Sweetened condensed milk.”Defines the product standard and composition for sweetened condensed milk.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“Keep Food Safe After a Disaster or Emergency.”Gives steps for keeping foods cold during outages and when to discard items.