Make a Slurpee (no special equipment required)

Chris Young August 18, 2023
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Chris Young

@chrisyoungcooks

About

Hello, I'm Chris Young. I'm the coauthor of the James Beard award winning books Modernist Cuisine with Nathan Myhrvold. I've also started companies like ChefSteps, and created products like the Joule sous vide circulator and the Combustion Predictive Thermometer. Before this I was the head development chef for Heston Blumenthal at The Fat Duck restaurant. And before that I studied mathematics and biochemistry, which has proven incredibly useful as a lifelong curious cook.

Video Description

What’s the story behind the Slurpee? And, more important, is it possible to make your own without an industrial frozen carbonated beverage machine? In this video, I uncover a long-forgotten and expired patent that describes a recipe and method for turning ordinary soda into a Slurpee without any special equipment. RECIPE 500mL Coca Cola or similar soda (ice cold) 28g Sugar 1.5g Low-methoxyl pectin: https://amzn.to/3ODUwth 0.4g Guar gum: https://amzn.to/3qylOJw 1.0g Yucca extract: https://amzn.to/3OYE6g9 1. Weigh and combine pectin, guar gum, yucca extract, and sugar. Blend these powders thoroughly, and then add to an empty and dry soda bottle. 2. Pour 100g of ice cold CocaCola into the bottle with the gums and sugar, cap the bottle, and then shake aggressively to disperse the sugar and gums. Refrigerate for 1 hour to allow the gums to rehydrate. 3. Pour out 150g of the remaining CocaCola, then slowly pour in the hydrated gum syrup from step 2 into the bottle. Try to have the gum syrup just flow across the surface of the soda without mixing to avoid the soda foaming up and making a mess. 4. Cap the bottle, shake it vigorously to mix the gum syrup into the remaining soda. You will feel the bottle re-pressurize. Carefully crack open the bottle slightly to allow CO2 to force all of the air out of the “headspace” above the liquid. Tighten the cap firmly as soon as soda starts to leak out. 5. Freeze for approximately 4 hours, shaking the bottle after the first hour to break up the ice. Shaking the bottle as it freezes from time to time will result in a finer texture of ice. When the bottle feels slushy like it’s filled with heavy wet sand, crack the bottle open to let the DIY slurpee foam up and enjoy. NOTE: You can use other carbonated sodas, but may need to increase or decrease the amount of additional sugar to achieve a 16 to 18 °Brix sugar concentration in the final recipe. PRODUCT LINKS Combustion Predictive Thermometer: https://combustion.inc Acaia scale: https://acaia.co/collections/coffee-scales/products/pearl?variant=42295495327972 Alternative scale: https://amzn.to/3R7xzSb Refractometer: https://amzn.to/3QKX0Zl FIND ME HERE Combustion Inc: https://combustion.inc​ Twitter: https://twitter.com/chefchrisyoung Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chrisyoungcooks PAST WORK ChefSteps: https://chefsteps.com​ ChefSteps Joule: https://amzn.to/3jSxpvg​ Modernist Cuisine: https://amzn.to/2MXB5zR​ The Fat Duck: https://thefatduck.co.uk TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 Intro 2:15 History of the Slurpee 4:15 The frozen carbonated beverage machine (FCB) 5:31 Why does the DIY Slurpee need more sugar? 8:31 Adding plenty of fizzy bubbles 8:58 The (expired) patented idea behind the DIY Slurpee 10:10 Making a DIY Slurpee start to finish CREDITS Quillaja saponaria in bloom image by Amber Kerr

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