Lemon Ice Cream
Lemon ice cream is one of those desserts that feels fancy but is secretly one of the easiest things you’ll ever make.
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Prep Time30 minutes
Servings8 Servings
If you’re looking for a homemade lemon ice cream that tastes like sunshine in a bowl, this is the one. It’s bright, creamy, and just tart enough to make your taste buds do a little happy dance – and it comes together with just five simple ingredients you probably already have on hand.
The secret to this recipe is starting with a good balance of fresh lemon juice and a touch of lemon extract. The juice gives you that real, natural citrus flavor, and the extract makes sure it punches through the cream so you actually taste lemon in every single bite. I love serving this alongside a slice of Blueberry Lemon Bread or piled into a cone on a hot summer afternoon – it’s the kind of dessert that disappears fast, so plan accordingly.
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Why this Works
Lemon and cream are a classic pairing for a reason. The acidity of the lemon juice cuts right through the richness of the heavy cream and half & half, giving you a scoop that feels indulgent but still refreshing. It’s a balance that’s hard to beat.
Using both lemon juice and lemon extract is the key move here. Fresh juice alone can sometimes get lost in the fat of the cream during churning, but the extract acts as a flavor anchor, keeping that bright citrus front and center from the first bite to the last.
Heather’s Recipe Notes
- Dissolve the sugar completely. Stir the lemon juice and sugar together until the sugar is fully dissolved before adding anything else. Undissolved sugar can lead to a grainy texture in the finished ice cream.
- Chill your base thoroughly. Don’t rush the pre-chill step. A cold base (at least 2 hours, overnight is even better) churns faster and produces a creamier result.
- Taste before you churn. The base will taste slightly sweeter and less tart than the finished ice cream, so keep that in mind. If it tastes perfectly balanced cold, it’ll be perfect scooped.
- Don’t skip the freeze after churning. Freshly churned ice cream is more like soft-serve. Transfer it to a freezer-safe container and let it firm up for at least 2 to 4 hours before serving.
- Use a chilled ice cream maker bowl. If your machine uses a freeze-ahead bowl, make sure it’s been in the freezer for a full 24 hours before you churn. A not-quite-frozen bowl means soft, soupy ice cream.
Ingredients in Lemon Ice Cream
- Fresh Lemon – the juice of 2 large lemons. Make sure you give them a good roll on the counter to get the internal juices flowing before cutting the lemon in half.
- Lemon Extract – adds a touch more lemon flavor and is not overpowering.
- Granulated Sugar – white sugar for sweetness. The recipe calls for 2 cups, which sounds like a lot, but I promise it’s not overly sweet.
- Heavy Whipping Cream – use the highest fat content – such as 36% or 40%.
- Half & Half – you can also substitute whole milk, but the half and half will make it creamier.
Subs & Variations
- No ice cream maker? Pour the chilled base into a shallow freezer-safe dish and freeze it, stirring vigorously every 30 minutes for 2 to 3 hours to break up ice crystals.
- Add lemon zest. Stir in the zest of 1 to 2 lemons for extra floral, fragrant citrus flavor.
- Make it a lemon blueberry swirl. Once churned, layer in a quick blueberry compote before the final freeze.
- Swap the half & half for whole milk. You’ll get a slightly lighter, icier scoop, more of a lemon gelato vibe, which is totally delicious on its own.
- Try lime or orange. This recipe works beautifully with fresh lime juice and extract for a tropical twist, or with orange for a dreamy creamsicle flavor.
Tips for Storing
- Store in an airtight container. Press a piece of plastic wrap directly onto the surface of the ice cream before putting the lid on. This prevents ice crystals from forming on top.
- Use a shallow container. A wider, shallower container means the ice cream freezes and scoops more evenly than a deep, narrow one.
- Best within 2 weeks. Homemade ice cream doesn’t have stabilizers, so it’s at its creamiest within the first week or two. After that, it can get icier.
- Let it sit before scooping. Pull it from the freezer and let it sit at room temperature for 5 minutes before scooping. It makes a big difference.
- Don’t refreeze melted ice cream. If it fully melts, don’t refreeze it. The texture won’t recover and the dairy safety window has passed.
People Also Ask
Yes! Pour your chilled base into a shallow, freezer-safe dish and freeze it. Every 30 minutes for about 2 to 3 hours, take it out and stir or whisk it vigorously to break up the ice crystals. It won’t be quite as creamy as churned, but it’s a solid no-machine option.
Cold temperatures dull our perception of flavor, which is why ice cream bases always need to taste slightly stronger before churning. If your finished ice cream is too mild, add a little more lemon extract next time – it holds up better through the freeze than juice alone.
Fresh lemon juice gives you the best flavor, but bottled will work in a pinch. Just make sure it’s 100% lemon juice with no added sweeteners or preservatives, which can throw off the flavor balance.
It’s best enjoyed within 1 to 2 weeks. After that, ice crystals start to develop and the texture becomes less creamy. Store it with plastic wrap pressed directly on the surface to slow that process down.
Lemon sorbet is dairy-free and made with just lemon juice, sugar, and water – it’s icy and refreshing. Lemon ice cream is cream-based, giving it a rich, smooth texture with that tart citrus flavor layered in.
Absolutely, just make sure your ice cream maker bowl is large enough to handle the volume. Most standard home machines hold 1.5 to 2 quarts. If you’re going bigger, churn in two batches for best results.
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Ingredients
- ½ cup lemon juice, 2 large lemons
- 2 cups granulated sugar
- 1 cup heavy whipping cream
- 3 cups half & half, or whole milk
- ½ tsp lemon extract
Instructions
- Stir together lemon juice and sugar in a small bowl. Let sit 5 minutes to dissolve the sugar.
- Add the cream, milk, and lemon extract an whisk to combine. Cover with plastic wrap and chill for at least 2 hours, or overnight. Whisk to combine before adding to ice cream maker.
- Pour into cold ice cream maker and churn until thick, soft-serve consistency. Add to an airtight container or loaf pan covered tightly with plastic wrap. Freeze 3-4 hours before serving.
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Notes
Nutrition
* Nutritional information is not guaranteed to be accurate.
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Hi! I’m Heather
I’m Heather, a recipe developer and content creator based in Vancouver, Washington. I started Farmgirl Gourmet in 2006 because I believed weeknight dinners shouldn’t be boring and gourmet shouldn’t mean complicated. I’m also the co-founder of Spiceology, so safe to say I think about food for a living. Stick around for recipes that actually make it into your regular rotation.
So creamy and delish!!