Crooked Road Cuisine: Cottage Cheese Ice Cream

Cottage Cheese Ice Cream has a cheesecake-like flavor.

What better way to showcase regional culture than through its food? Here at the office, we received a copy of the book “Grazing Along the Crooked Road: Recipes and Stories – Past and Present” by Betty Skeens and Libby Bondurant that does just that.

The authors gathered recipes from folks in 10 counties that comprise the Crooked Road, some of whom shared the history behind cherished family favorites. From fried green tomatoes to old-fashioned stack cake, I had a hard time choosing which recipe to test. Several salivation-inducing pages later, I paused upon cottage cheese ice cream in the Franklin County section. Angelia Naff of Boones Mill had shared a 100-year-old recipe that was a favorite of her mother-in-law’s mother.

“She called the cottage cheese ‘smearcase’ in the old days. She would put it in the ice house before serving,” Naff explained in the book.

An ice cream fanatic, I was intrigued. Admittedly, I turned my nose up about cottage cheese being a main ingredient. But it’s ice cream, how bad could it be? With cream cheese and sugar accompanying the curds, it turned out to be a decadent concoction with a cheesecake-like flavor. I recommend adding favorite toppings, such as chocolate syrup or fresh strawberries to elevate the deliciousness. Enjoy!

Cottage Cheese Ice Cream

2 (3 oz.) packages cream cheese

2/3 cup cottage cheese

1 cup sugar

3 beaten egg yolks

1 tsp. vanilla

1 pt. whipping cream

3 stiffly beaten egg whites

graham cracker crumbs

• Cream the cream cheese and cottage cheese well. Add sugar and egg yolks. Mix thoroughly. Add the vanilla and whipping cream that is already whipped. Fold in the egg whites.

• Line a 9×9 inch pan with graham cracker crumbs. Pour mixture in pan and top with graham cracker crumbs. Freeze, cut in squares and serve. Serves 6.

For more information on the book, visit crookedroadcookbook.com.

You Might Also Like:

White jelly snow fungus growing in the author’s Botetourt County, Virginia woodlot.

May’s Wild Edible: White Jelly Snow Fungus

“Pass the fungus,” is not common dinnertime conversation in the Blue Ridge Mountains region, but that’s because folks perhaps have not heard of the white jelly snow fungus.
Owner Jennifer Hughes is a constant and comforting presence at Elizabethton’s City Market.

Connecting a Community Through Chicken Salad and Chocolate Pie

City Market in East Tennessee has always stepped up to take care of its neighbors.
Wild garlic growing in Fayette County, West Virginia.

April’s Wild Edible: Wild Garlic

Fayette County, West Virginia’s Mitchell Dech is one of my foraging mentors, and when he wants me to try an edible new to me … I’m ready to learn about it.
The Giovanni is an Italian-American creation born in West Virginia.

Discovering the West Virginia Giovanni

This flavorful sandwich is a product of the rich Italian heritage of the Mountain State.
A May apple in bloom in Southwest Virginia.

March’s Wild Edible: May Apple

Sometime this month in the Blue Ridge Mountains, one of these highlands’ signature spring plants will ease from the soil … the May apple (Podophyllum peltatum).
Pokeweed growing in Floyd County, Virginia.

January’s Wild Edible: Pokeweed

Pokeweed is one of the wild plants that is most associated with the Blue Ridge Region.
The pawpaw version of Ale-8-One debuted in the summer of 2025, in a limited edition.

Ale-8-One: Welcome to ‘Tropical’ Kentucky

This 124-year-old soft drink company continues to innovate and thrive.
Arkansas Black apples sport an attractive reddish black color.

December’s Blue Ridge Mountain Apple Profile: Arkansas Black

Originating in the 1870s in, obviously, The Natural State, this variety is reputed to be a part of the Winesap family, which includes such esteemed members as the Black Twig, Stayman, and, of course, the Old Fashioned Winesap.
A purple-spored puffball growing in a field in Botetourt County, VA.

December’s Wild Edible: Purple-Spored Puffball

The purple-spored typically grows in this region’s fields, often appearing from October through December and into early January.
The Fork and Plough name reflects the professions of the owners — chef and farmer.

Fork and Plough: Neighborly and Nimble

At this Greenville, South Carolina, eatery, the menu changes literally every day, based on what’s available locally.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS