
Blue Raspberry Ice Cream is the recipe I make when I want a playful berry ice cream without a long custard step. The base churns creamy from cold heavy cream and sweetened condensed milk, with raspberry extract, vanilla, blue gel color, and preserves or fresh berries.
I have made enough batches to know where it can go wrong: raspberry extract gets perfumey if I free-pour it, and too much blue gel color can look more like frosting than ice cream. I keep that in mind from the first bowl to the final serving.
Why I keep coming back to this
- The base mixes in one bowl before churning.
- Raspberry extract gives clear blue-raspberry flavor without cooking syrup.
- Preserves make a smooth fruit note, while fresh berries taste brighter.
- The 4-6 hour freeze turns soft churned cream into scoopable ice cream.
- It uses familiar ingredients without asking for restaurant equipment.
- The leftovers are useful, which is one of my favorite tests for a recipe.
What you need (and what each one is doing)
- 1/4 teaspoon raspberry extract.
- 1 drop blue gel food coloring.
- 1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract.
- 1 cup cold heavy cream.Cold cream gives the richest texture, whether I am whipping it, churning it, or folding it into custard.
- 5 oz. raspberry preserves or 1 cup fresh raspberries.
- 1/2 7-ounce can sweetened condensed milk (about 7 oz).It sweetens, and it also changes browning, scoopability, or tenderness.
How I make it
Step 1 — Prep
Whisk sweetened condensed milk and cold heavy cream until smooth.
Step 2 — Mix
Stir in vanilla, raspberry extract, and blue gel coloring.
Step 3 — Add
Fold in preserves, or puree fresh raspberries and stir them in.
Step 4 — Shape
Churn 20-30 minutes until thick and creamy.
Step 5 — Bake or chill
Transfer to an airtight container and freeze at least 4-6 hours before serving.
Step 6 — Finish
Scoop into bowls.
What I watch for
The churned base should look like thick soft serve before I pack it into a container. This is the point where I slow down and use my eyes instead of cooking on autopilot.
I keep the container shallow and covered tightly so the ice cream freezes evenly. I would rather make a small adjustment here than try to fix a finished recipe later.
Tips from my kitchen
- Keep everything cold.Cold cream churns faster and smoother.
- Measure the extract.A little raspberry extract goes a long way.
- Add color slowly.One drop gives a soft blue; more can take over visually.
- Cover the surface.Press wrap against the ice cream if storing more than a day.
Variations I have actually tried
- Fresh swirl:save raspberry puree and ripple it in before freezing.
- Chocolate chip:add finely chopped dark chocolate at the end of churning.
- Lemon berry:add 1/2 teaspoon lemon zest.
- No-churn:whip the cream, fold everything together, and freeze.
- Mixed berry:use strawberry or blackberry preserves.
Storing and reheating
I store it in an airtight freezer container for up to 2 weeks. A shallow container makes scooping easier.
Let it sit at room temperature for 5-10 minutes before scooping. If frost forms, I scrape that layer away.
What I serve with it
I serve it in cones, bowls, or between vanilla cookies. Fresh raspberries on top help the flavor read as fruit as well as fun color.
Frequently asked questions
Can I make it without an ice cream maker?
Yes. Whip the cream to soft peaks, fold in the remaining ingredients, and freeze in a shallow dish, stirring once or twice early on if you remember.
Can I skip the food coloring?
Yes. It tastes the same and will look pale pink or lavender depending on the berries.
Why is it icy?
The base may have been warm or loosely covered. Chill the base and seal the container well.
Can I use jam?
Yes. Jam is smoother and often sweeter, so taste the base before freezing.
How strong is the raspberry?
It is noticeable but not sour. Add a spoonful of berry puree if you want stronger fruit flavor.
If you make it, tell me whether you went pale blue or full ice-cream-shop blue.
For the cleanest texture, I treat this like a small-batch ice cream instead of a quick frozen dessert. I chill the bowl if my kitchen is warm, scrape the corners of the mixing bowl so condensed milk does not hide there, and pack the churned base into a container with as little empty space as possible. Those small habits help the ice cream freeze creamier.
If I am serving kids, I keep the color cheerful and the raspberry flavor mild. For adults, I sometimes make the fruit side stronger by swirling in a spoonful of tart raspberry puree just before freezing.
I also label the container with the date because homemade ice cream never looks old until it tastes a little tired. Two weeks is my comfortable window for the best texture, especially with fruit in the mix.
I keep notes on the freeze time because every freezer sets a little differently.

Blue Raspberry Ice Cream
Description
A creamy blue raspberry ice cream made with heavy cream, sweetened condensed milk, raspberry extract, vanilla, blue gel color, and berries.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Whisk sweetened condensed milk and cold heavy cream until smooth.
- Stir in vanilla, raspberry extract, and blue gel coloring.
- Fold in preserves, or puree fresh raspberries and stir them in.
- Churn 20-30 minutes until thick and creamy.
- Transfer to an airtight container and freeze at least 4-6 hours before serving.
- Scoop into bowls.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 4
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 1kcal
- Iron 0.0 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Keep everything cold. Cold cream churns faster and smoother.
Measure the extract. A little raspberry extract goes a long way.
Add color slowly. One drop gives a soft blue; more can take over visually.
Cover the surface. Press wrap against the ice cream if storing more than a day.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Whip the cream to soft peaks, fold in the remaining ingredients, and freeze in a shallow dish, stirring once or twice early on if you remember.
Yes. It tastes the same and will look pale pink or lavender depending on the berries.
The base may have been warm or loosely covered. Chill the base and seal the container well.
Yes. Jam is smoother and often sweeter, so taste the base before freezing.
It is noticeable but not sour. Add a spoonful of berry puree if you want stronger fruit flavor.