Blue Moon Ice Cream

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Electric blue scoops of Blue Moon ice cream have a texture that lands somewhere between silky custard and old-school parlor ice cream, with that unmistakable almond-vanilla-fruity note that keeps people guessing after the first bite. It melts slowly, scoops cleanly once fully frozen, and tastes nostalgic in a way that’s hard to pin down but easy to love.

The base starts as a proper custard, which gives the finished ice cream a richer body than a simple no-cook mix. The extracts do the heavy lifting here: almond and vanilla build the familiar backbone, raspberry or blue raspberry adds that signature mystery, and a touch of lemon keeps the flavor from tasting flat. The blue food coloring is added at the end, after the custard is cooked and cooled a bit, so the color stays vivid without muddying the base.

Below, I’ll walk through the one point that keeps this flavor from tasting artificial in the wrong way, plus a few swaps and storage notes that matter once the ice cream is in the freezer.

The custard turned out so smooth and the flavor was spot on — that little bit of lemon kept it from tasting flat, and the color was exactly the fun blue I remembered.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Save this Blue Moon ice cream for the custard-style version with that classic almond-fruity flavor and electric blue color.

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The Part That Keeps Blue Moon from Tasting Flat

The biggest mistake with Blue Moon ice cream is treating it like plain vanilla with blue dye. The color matters, but the flavor is what makes the whole thing work. Almond extract gives it that familiar Midwest-ice-cream-parlor backbone, while raspberry and lemon pull the taste toward something fruity and bright without turning it into sorbet or bubblegum.

The custard base matters too. Egg yolks and gentle cooking give the ice cream a dense, scoopable body that carries those extracts evenly. If the mixture gets too hot after the yolks go in, you’ll get bits of scrambled egg or a grainy base, so the heat stays controlled and the custard is strained before chilling. That extra step is what keeps the final texture smooth.

  • Heavy cream — This is what gives the ice cream its rich body and slow melt. There isn’t a true substitute if you want the same plush texture, though half-and-half can work in a pinch if you accept a lighter result.
  • Whole milk — It balances the cream so the custard doesn’t turn greasy or too dense. Lower-fat milk makes the ice cream icier.
  • Egg yolks — They thicken the base and help it freeze with a finer, creamier texture. Temper them slowly so they don’t curdle when the hot dairy goes in.
  • Almond extract — This is the flavor most people recognize first in Blue Moon. Don’t skip it, and don’t overdo it or the ice cream can start tasting like marzipan.
  • Raspberry extract or blue raspberry flavoring — This adds the fruity note that makes the flavor feel familiar but hard to name. Blue raspberry flavoring is punchier; raspberry extract tastes a little softer and more rounded.
  • Lemon extract — Just a little keeps the base lively and keeps the almond from reading too heavy. A tiny bit goes a long way.
  • Blue food coloring — Add it drop by drop after the custard has cooled slightly. You want a vivid electric blue, not a gray-blue base.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Ice Cream

Scoop of homemade ice cream in a bowl
  • Base ingredient (cream, milk, or custard) — This provides the foundation and richness. Quality matters.
  • Sweetener (sugar, honey, or condensed milk) — This sweetens and prevents ice crystals. The ratio is critical.
  • Flavor element (vanilla, fruit, chocolate, coffee, or other) — This defines the ice cream personality. Use quality ingredients.
  • Egg yolks (if making custard base) — These create richness and silky texture. Optional but elevates ice cream.
  • Churning (if using ice cream maker) — This incorporates air and prevents ice crystals. Critical for smooth texture.
  • Freezing temperature and time — Proper freezing prevents rock-hard texture. Store at 0°F or below.
  • Mix-ins (chocolate, cookies, fruit, or swirls) — These add texture and prevent one-dimensional flavor. Add near end of churning.
  • Serving temperature (slightly soft, not rock hard) — This provides creamy mouthfeel. Remove from freezer 5 minutes before serving.

Building the Custard Without Scrambling the Yolks

Warming the Dairy

Heat the cream and milk together until they’re steaming, not boiling. You want enough heat to temper the yolks, but not so much that the dairy boils and picks up a cooked flavor. If you see tiny bubbles around the edge of the pan, you’re in the right place. Pull it off the burner before it gets aggressive.

Tempering the Eggs

Whisk the yolks and sugar until they look pale and slightly thickened, then stream in the hot dairy while whisking constantly. This gradual addition keeps the yolks from seizing into little bits. If you dump the hot mixture in all at once, the eggs can curdle before they ever get a chance to thicken the custard. Slow and steady gives you a smooth base.

Cooking to the Right Thickness

Return everything to the saucepan and cook over medium-low heat until it reaches 175°F. The custard should coat the back of a spoon and leave a clean trail when you swipe a finger across it. Stop there. If you push it much higher, the eggs can overcook and the texture gets sandy instead of velvety.

Flavoring and Chilling

Strain the custard, then stir in the extracts and food coloring once it has cooled slightly. This is the moment to adjust the blue shade a few drops at a time. Chill the base completely before churning; warm custard won’t freeze properly in the machine and can leave you with a loose, icy texture. Four hours is the minimum I’d give it, and overnight is even better if you have the time.

Ways to Shift the Flavor or Make It Fit Your Kitchen

Dairy-Free Blue Moon

Use full-fat canned coconut milk in place of the cream and whole milk. The texture will be a little softer and the coconut note will show through, but the custard-style base still gives you a scoopable ice cream. Keep the extracts the same so the Blue Moon flavor stays recognizable.

More Classic, Less Fruity

Use raspberry extract sparingly or cut it back slightly if you want the almond to lead. That gives you a softer, more old-fashioned parlor flavor and keeps the ice cream from tasting like blue raspberry candy.

No Ice Cream Maker

Pour the chilled custard into a shallow freezer-safe pan and freeze, whisking or stirring every 30 minutes for the first 2 to 3 hours. The texture won’t be as airy as churned ice cream, but breaking up the ice crystals as it freezes keeps it from turning into a block.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: The base can be held covered for up to 2 days before churning. Give it a good stir before it goes into the machine.
  • Freezer: The finished ice cream keeps well for about 2 weeks with plastic wrap pressed directly on the surface. After that, it can get icy around the edges.
  • Reheating: Not applicable here, but for the best scoops, let the ice cream sit at room temperature for 5 to 10 minutes before serving. Straight-from-the-freezer scoops can shatter the texture and make the color look dull.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use blue food coloring gel instead of liquid?+

Yes. Gel coloring is a good choice because you need less of it to get that bright electric blue. Add it after the custard has cooled slightly so the color stays even, then adjust a little at a time until it looks right.

How do I keep my Blue Moon ice cream from tasting like straight almond extract?+

Use the almond extract as the main note, but don’t let it carry the whole recipe. The raspberry or blue raspberry and lemon are what round it out and keep it from tasting flat or one-dimensional. If the almond seems too sharp, the batch probably needs a little more chilling time too, because warm custard makes extracts taste harsher.

How do I know when the custard is thick enough?+

It should lightly coat the back of a spoon and hold a clean line when you draw your finger through it. If it looks watery, it hasn’t cooked long enough; if it starts to look grainy, it’s gone too far. 175°F is the sweet spot for a smooth, set custard.

Can I make Blue Moon ice cream without egg yolks?+

You can, but the texture won’t be as rich or smooth. An egg-free version will freeze harder and tend to taste a little flatter, so the custard method is worth keeping if you want that classic parlor-style body. If you skip the yolks, expect to let the ice cream soften longer before scooping.

How do I keep homemade ice cream from getting icy in the freezer?+

Chill the base completely before churning, churn until it looks like soft-serve, and freeze it in a tightly covered container. Pressing plastic wrap directly onto the surface helps a lot. Ice crystals usually show up when the base went into the machine warm or when the finished ice cream sat uncovered in the freezer.

Blue Moon Ice Cream

Blue Moon ice cream is an electric-blue, nostalgic dessert made with a custard base, almond-vanilla fruity notes, and a vivid color created by adding blue food coloring a few drops at a time. The mixture is cooked to 175°F, chilled for 4 hours, churned, then frozen until firm for scoopable softness.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
chilling + freezing 4 hours
Total Time 4 hours 35 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Calories: 380

Ingredients
  

heavy cream
  • 2 cup heavy cream
whole milk
  • 1 cup whole milk
granulated sugar
  • 0.75 cup granulated sugar
egg yolks
  • 4 egg yolks
almond extract
  • 1 tsp almond extract
vanilla extract
  • 0.5 tsp vanilla extract
raspberry extract or blue raspberry flavoring
  • 0.5 tsp raspberry extract or blue raspberry flavoring
lemon extract
  • 0.25 tsp lemon extract
blue food coloring
  • 1 blue food coloring Add a few drops at a time until the desired electric blue is achieved.

Equipment

  • 1 Dutch oven
  • 1 ice cream maker

Method
 

Make the custard base
  1. In a saucepan, heat the heavy cream and whole milk until steaming, with small bubbles forming at the edges. Keep it just steaming so the dairy doesn’t boil over.
  2. Whisk together the egg yolks and granulated sugar in a bowl, then slowly whisk the hot dairy into the yolks in a thin stream to temper. Continue whisking until the mixture looks smooth and glossy.
  3. Return the mixture to the saucepan and cook, stirring constantly, until it reaches 175°F. You’ll see it thicken enough to lightly coat the back of a spoon.
  4. Strain the custard, then cool slightly so it’s ready for flavoring. Stop when warm but not hot to the touch.
Flavor and color
  1. Stir in the almond extract, vanilla extract, raspberry extract or blue raspberry flavoring, and lemon extract until evenly combined. Taste is not needed—just mix thoroughly for consistent flavor.
  2. Add blue food coloring a few drops at a time, stirring well after each addition, until the mixture turns vivid electric blue. Stop when the color looks dramatic and uniform.
Chill, churn, and freeze
  1. Cool completely, then refrigerate for 4 hours to chill the base thoroughly. Cover the surface to prevent a skin from forming.
  2. Churn the chilled custard in an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Churn until it has the texture of soft-serve and looks light and aerated.
  3. Transfer to a freezer-safe container and freeze until firm. Freeze long enough that scoops hold their shape.

Notes

Pro tip: when cooking to 175°F, keep stirring to avoid scrambling the egg yolks—if you don’t have a thermometer, cook until the custard coats the back of a spoon. Store in the freezer in a covered container for up to 2 weeks; thaw in the fridge for 10–15 minutes for easier scooping. No—freezing the base again after churning isn’t recommended. Dietary swap: for a lighter version, use half-and-half in place of half the heavy cream (texture will be softer).

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