Cuisinart Plastic ICE-RFBR Replacement Freezer Bowl, 1-1/2-Quart Capacity, Red
Purchase options and add-ons
| Bowl Material | Plastic |
| Number of Pieces | 1 |
| Brand | Cuisinart |
| Color | 1.5-Quart Bowl |
| Style | Classic |
About this item
- 1 1/2 quart capacity
- For use with ice-21r
- Can also replace the ice-20r
- Hand wash for cleaning
- Dimensions - 7" x 7" x 5.5"
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Product Description
The Cuisinart power advantage 7-speed hand mixer flawlessly and easily mixes even the heaviest ingredients. From dense cookie dough to whipped cream, the powerful motor with automatic feedback can perform any mixing task. And the precision touchpad with digital display shifts speeds with just one touch!; Cuisinart power advantage 7-speed hand mixer, metallic red.
Product information
| Bowl Material | Plastic |
|---|---|
| Number of Pieces | 1 |
| Brand | Cuisinart |
| Color | 1.5-Quart Bowl |
| Style | Classic |
| Special Feature | Automatic |
| Shape | Bowl,Hand |
| Capacity | 1.5 Quarts |
| Included Components | Replcement Bowl |
| Pattern | Solid |
| Product Care Instructions | Hand Wash Only |
| Seasons | All Seasons |
| Is Dishwasher Safe | No |
| Is Microwaveable | No |
| Material | Plastic |
| Product Dimensions | 7"W x 5.5"H |
| Item Weight | 3.4 pounds |
| Manufacturer | Cuisinart |
| ASIN | B00DUF2QF4 |
| Item model number | ICE-RFBR |
| Customer Reviews |
4.7 out of 5 stars |
| Best Sellers Rank | #38 in Kitchen & Dining (See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining) #1 in Ice Cream Machines |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | August 6, 2014 |
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BUT It takes about 28 hours to make icecream " in Less then 20 minutes..."
You MUST pre freeze the bowl 24 hours;
16 minutes or less to mix ingredients;
add 1-2 hours to CHILL that mixture BEFORE use +++ (see below);
11-20 minutes to make ice cream;
Up to 2 hours MORE freezing time to thicken ice cream past soft serve consistancy;
"up to 15 minutes to thaw before serving" ,
and
A good 20 minutes to HAND wash all the gear used and clean up the kitchen.
Please don't be tempted to use the frozen bowl as the mixing bowl -as I and others did on first use.
THE PADDLE MUST BE INSERTED IN THE COLD BOWL BEFORE ADDING ANY LIQUID INGREDIENTS! Otherwise you risk burning out the motor when the liquids ice up, instantly, along the frozen bowl's sides and jam the paddle. (ALSO, After that happens, you can NOT install the paddle either until the whole mess thaws..)
ASSEMBLE THE MACHINE
AND
TURN IT ON BEFORE ADDING INGREDIENTS TO AVOID THESE PROBLEMS !!!
The ice21 series has been rated "most affordable" for a good reason: (Cuisinart cheaped out and put in a lightweight motor compared to thier 2 quart ICE 30 model).
You OUGHT to stand by and monitor the process and be ready to shut off the machine if you hear a buzz or hum and don't see the bowl moving!!!!
(And/or
when you see the final product creeping out the machine top , over the freezer bowl , after expanding into actual ice cream- to avoid a counter top mess..so DON'T "set it and forget it".
Please do NOT EVER LEAVE FINISHED ICE CREAM IN THE FREEZER BOWL AND RETURN TO FREEZER FOR STORAGE:
The ice cream will freeze into a solid ice cube that even a USA MADE scoop can't handle; Especially when the basic recipe is changed to higher liquid content such as adding, stawberry puree or espresso shots,etc.
THE MANUAL STATES THAT THE FREEZER BOWL CHILLS DOWN TO 21 DEGREES (SOMEHOW) Hence, the 24 hours cooling period.
And then, You can't just leave that frozen bowl on a counter to thaw like a regular carton of icecream either , because the bowl of frozen ice cream becomes a mini counter top open freezer that CAN NOT THAW for a while because the ice cream is inside a frozen hollow metal bowl that is sealed with freezer pack juice.
Now if you want to transport ice cream to a picnic or anticipate a power outage..let it freeze up in the freezer bowl..
BTW you are going to need 3 big bowls (or just 2 bowls if using a blender to mix..) a stiff spatula, and (probably a nylon dish cleaning brush / bottle brush, or at least sponge to clean up) a blender or hand mixer, or at least a wire whisk or big spoon AND of course, you'll want a sturdy ice cream scooper!!
You will need a blender or hand or stand mixer AND/ OR 1 bowl to mix the ingredients (IF you don't use a blender).
Another clean bowl to dump the padde in when done --(Unless you wash the 1st bowl while you wait )
along with a stiff spatula to scrape half the frozen ice cream off the paddle and out of the freezer bowl and
a 3rd bowl (2 qt or larger size ) to store the icecream left in the freezer bowl
and the icecream scoop to serve it all up!
I Suggest that when your batch is done: FIRST, yank the icecream paddle out of the freezer bowl and dump it into a waiting bowl. & LEAVE IT IN THERE!!
Then
2nd, Concentrate on getting as much ice cream out of the freezer bowl into a storage bowl, as quickly as you can - because the more ice cream you remove- the faster the leftover
will freeze up against the freezer bowl making it harder to remove;
And watch out because using a metal spoon WILL scratch up the auminum bowl!!
then,
throw the now filled up storage bowl into the freezer to chill down more so it can harden up.
Third, return to the bowl with the paddle and maybe it will have melted enough by now to scrape the paddle clean of frozen icecream with the spatula or even a butter knife might be useful here too;
Fourth, combine this last rescued icecream with either the bowl already in the freezer- or just
Give it to your "helpers. to lick or sppon clean" unless you just eat it yourself as a reward for your efforts.
Aside from the false advertising of "fast ice cream" it IS easy to use and makes great ice cream * !
* The basic recipie of 1 cup milk , 2 cups heavy cream, 3/4 cup granulated sugar, pinch of salt, 1 tablespoon PURE vanilla extract, yields a fast melting, thin, light, ice"milk" more akin to Hagandaz and Breyers- all-natural, than Ben & Jerry's.
Sugar note: Other Cuisinart , flavored ice cream recipies reduce sugar to 2/3 cup (instead of 3/4 cup in the basic recipie). Seems to work out and taste okay either amount.
THERE IS ALSO A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN "HEAVY CREAM & "WHIPPING CREAM" Heavy cream has more fat and is creamier BUT whipping cream works too if that's all that your store has.
+++ The basic recipie calls for dissolving the sugar & salt in the milk BEFORE adding the cream and other flavoring..THEN chilling the completed mixture for 1 to 2 hours !!! BEFORE making the icecream.
There is science involved here: cold milk won't easily disolve sugar; and the sugar and salt aren't just for flavor either- they both actually help change the ice cream texture !
I put the milk, sugar and salt in a BLENDER for 1- 2 minutes instead of using a hand mixer or mixing bowl for maximum sugar disolving- BEFORE adding the cream and flavorings for a final 30 second mix in the blender!! OR first bowl (- If your'e not using a blender).
Finally, If you DO want slower melting, creamier, thick ice cream you will need to add PASTURIZED eggs ( never raw!!!) Or carrageenan (seaweed), locust, guar, or zanthan gums LIKE MOST COMMERCIALLY MADE ICECREAMS have.
Thank you you have reached the End of my review.
You, deserve an icecream
Now.🍦
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 4, 2023
BUT It takes about 28 hours to make icecream " in Less then 20 minutes..."
You MUST pre freeze the bowl 24 hours;
16 minutes or less to mix ingredients;
add 1-2 hours to CHILL that mixture BEFORE use +++ (see below);
11-20 minutes to make ice cream;
Up to 2 hours MORE freezing time to thicken ice cream past soft serve consistancy;
"up to 15 minutes to thaw before serving" ,
and
A good 20 minutes to HAND wash all the gear used and clean up the kitchen.
Please don't be tempted to use the frozen bowl as the mixing bowl -as I and others did on first use.
THE PADDLE MUST BE INSERTED IN THE COLD BOWL BEFORE ADDING ANY LIQUID INGREDIENTS! Otherwise you risk burning out the motor when the liquids ice up, instantly, along the frozen bowl's sides and jam the paddle. (ALSO, After that happens, you can NOT install the paddle either until the whole mess thaws..)
ASSEMBLE THE MACHINE
AND
TURN IT ON BEFORE ADDING INGREDIENTS TO AVOID THESE PROBLEMS !!!
The ice21 series has been rated "most affordable" for a good reason: (Cuisinart cheaped out and put in a lightweight motor compared to thier 2 quart ICE 30 model).
You OUGHT to stand by and monitor the process and be ready to shut off the machine if you hear a buzz or hum and don't see the bowl moving!!!!
(And/or
when you see the final product creeping out the machine top , over the freezer bowl , after expanding into actual ice cream- to avoid a counter top mess..so DON'T "set it and forget it".
Please do NOT EVER LEAVE FINISHED ICE CREAM IN THE FREEZER BOWL AND RETURN TO FREEZER FOR STORAGE:
The ice cream will freeze into a solid ice cube that even a USA MADE scoop can't handle; Especially when the basic recipe is changed to higher liquid content such as adding, stawberry puree or espresso shots,etc.
THE MANUAL STATES THAT THE FREEZER BOWL CHILLS DOWN TO 21 DEGREES (SOMEHOW) Hence, the 24 hours cooling period.
And then, You can't just leave that frozen bowl on a counter to thaw like a regular carton of icecream either , because the bowl of frozen ice cream becomes a mini counter top open freezer that CAN NOT THAW for a while because the ice cream is inside a frozen hollow metal bowl that is sealed with freezer pack juice.
Now if you want to transport ice cream to a picnic or anticipate a power outage..let it freeze up in the freezer bowl..
BTW you are going to need 3 big bowls (or just 2 bowls if using a blender to mix..) a stiff spatula, and (probably a nylon dish cleaning brush / bottle brush, or at least sponge to clean up) a blender or hand mixer, or at least a wire whisk or big spoon AND of course, you'll want a sturdy ice cream scooper!!
You will need a blender or hand or stand mixer AND/ OR 1 bowl to mix the ingredients (IF you don't use a blender).
Another clean bowl to dump the padde in when done --(Unless you wash the 1st bowl while you wait )
along with a stiff spatula to scrape half the frozen ice cream off the paddle and out of the freezer bowl and
a 3rd bowl (2 qt or larger size ) to store the icecream left in the freezer bowl
and the icecream scoop to serve it all up!
I Suggest that when your batch is done: FIRST, yank the icecream paddle out of the freezer bowl and dump it into a waiting bowl. & LEAVE IT IN THERE!!
Then
2nd, Concentrate on getting as much ice cream out of the freezer bowl into a storage bowl, as quickly as you can - because the more ice cream you remove- the faster the leftover
will freeze up against the freezer bowl making it harder to remove;
And watch out because using a metal spoon WILL scratch up the auminum bowl!!
then,
throw the now filled up storage bowl into the freezer to chill down more so it can harden up.
Third, return to the bowl with the paddle and maybe it will have melted enough by now to scrape the paddle clean of frozen icecream with the spatula or even a butter knife might be useful here too;
Fourth, combine this last rescued icecream with either the bowl already in the freezer- or just
Give it to your "helpers. to lick or sppon clean" unless you just eat it yourself as a reward for your efforts.
Aside from the false advertising of "fast ice cream" it IS easy to use and makes great ice cream * !
* The basic recipie of 1 cup milk , 2 cups heavy cream, 3/4 cup granulated sugar, pinch of salt, 1 tablespoon PURE vanilla extract, yields a fast melting, thin, light, ice"milk" more akin to Hagandaz and Breyers- all-natural, than Ben & Jerry's.
Sugar note: Other Cuisinart , flavored ice cream recipies reduce sugar to 2/3 cup (instead of 3/4 cup in the basic recipie). Seems to work out and taste okay either amount.
THERE IS ALSO A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN "HEAVY CREAM & "WHIPPING CREAM" Heavy cream has more fat and is creamier BUT whipping cream works too if that's all that your store has.
+++ The basic recipie calls for dissolving the sugar & salt in the milk BEFORE adding the cream and other flavoring..THEN chilling the completed mixture for 1 to 2 hours !!! BEFORE making the icecream.
There is science involved here: cold milk won't easily disolve sugar; and the sugar and salt aren't just for flavor either- they both actually help change the ice cream texture !
I put the milk, sugar and salt in a BLENDER for 1- 2 minutes instead of using a hand mixer or mixing bowl for maximum sugar disolving- BEFORE adding the cream and flavorings for a final 30 second mix in the blender!! OR first bowl (- If your'e not using a blender).
Finally, If you DO want slower melting, creamier, thick ice cream you will need to add PASTURIZED eggs ( never raw!!!) Or carrageenan (seaweed), locust, guar, or zanthan gums LIKE MOST COMMERCIALLY MADE ICECREAMS have.
Thank you you have reached the End of my review.
You, deserve an icecream
Now.🍦
So my first batch didn't turn out so well. I used half and half, sugar, salt, and vanilla extract. I'd have used regular cream, but I can't find any pure heavy cream in my area that isn't full of preservatives and additives containing free glutamic acid and other scary stuff.
I froze the bowl for 14 hours. The gel was frozen solid. The manual said that the bowl should be in the freezer for 16-24 hours, but it also said that when you didn't hear the liquid gel swishing, it was sufficiently frozen. So I thought optimistically, "Oh! That must mean my freezer's just a super-freezer and got it cold enough in record time! Yay!" Um, no.
I have learned that just because the gel is frozen, that doesn't mean its temperature is as low as it can go - or should go. As I discovered, it needs to go a lot lower than "frozen solid" to work with this machine. Since it probably freezes around 32 degrees F (0 Celsius), the manual probably shouldn't say to use the lack of swishing sound as an indicator to readiness. (It's less misleading to say that hearing liquid is a definite sign it's NOT ready.)
The actual problem I encountered in my unsuccessful first try was that the mix stopped moving. Parts of it stayed on top of the paddle in a semi-frozen slushy state and parts of it remained on the sides, still unfrozen, and that was the stuff that wouldn't freeze up at all. Since I was confident my bowl was cold enough (uh, yeah!) and the manual cautioned not to stick things in the bowl while the machine was on, I kept turning it off and moving the solid stuff to the sides, then turning it back on. Rather ungainly way to get what turned out to be a milkshake that, when frozen, turned into ice crystals.
The next time, I did three things differently, and got very nice, acceptably smooth ice cream without omnipresent ice crystals.
First, I used our non-self-defrosting freezer to chill the gel bowl. Freezers that are set to self defrost work by warming up every so often to control frost. Stand-alone freezers like chest freezers or upright freezers come in two styles: Self-defrosting and non-self-defrosting. We use the latter type, the one that has to be manually defrosted, because colder freezers are necessary for long-term storage of meat. A freezer that doesn't self-defrost keeps its cold temperature steady, with the exception of when the freezer is opened or loses power. So I stuck the bowl in that one at the almost-coldest setting, 7 out of 8.
Second, I chilled the mixture overnight in the fridge. Not sure that did anything much to improve things, because it seemed about the same amount of cold as my first try.
The last thing I did differently was that while the ice cream machine was working, when parts of the mixture started freezing up on top, I used a rubber spatula to recirculate them. I kept using the spatula pretty vigorously the entire churning time. That worked well and was kinda fun.
I was left with something that was definitely ice cream. Not slushy, not prone to melting at all. The ice cream didn't melt instantly and the inner bowl was coated with a thin, hard-frozen layer of ice cream in places that stayed there. I rushed to get the ice cream into freezer containers, but I don't think it was necessary this time. Whatever was in that bowl stayed frozen for a long, long time. Fifteen minutes later, I could still eat it frozen with a wooden spoon.
So I came away the wiser and with better ice cream. Cold is key. I don't think you need to use a non-self-defrosting freezer like I did, necessarily, but if you chill it the full 24 hours at the coldest setting and it still isn't cold enough, it's possible your self-defrosting freezer isn't doing the job.
I was left with two more tips to offer anyone who might be interested. One, if the bowl is that cold, don't wash it right away, or it will freeze some of the washing water on it in an almost invisible layer. Two, I swear that bowl seemed cold enough to possibly make another batch. Had I had one ready, I'd have tried it. If I try it, I'll report back.
Hope that helps someone else who encounters the same problem of partially frozen slushy-milkshake ice cream. It's most likely because the bowl isn't cold enough.
UPDATE 10/23/2014: Well, it's the next day, and I am thrilled to report I got extra mileage out of the ice cream maker. I froze the bowl at the almost-coldest setting in my non-self-defrosting freezer for about 20 hours. I had a large batch of butterscotch ice cream mix ready and a small batch of coffee ice cream mix ready, my own recipes. I first ran the machine with the large batch for about 18 minutes. (I learned something important here: The larger batches circulate MUCH better than the smaller ones. This one hardly needed to be coaxed with the spatula. On the downside, there was so much aeration that I had to scoop out some at the top to prevent its warming up because it was leaving the icy part of the bowl.) Then I scooped most of the ice cream into a container and popped it in the freezer. I left a bit of the ice cream on the paddle, since the flavors weren't bad to mix with the next batch and I wanted to preserve any coldness I could. I did not wash the bowl out for the same reason, and also because I didn't want it warmed by delays or water. So I then reassembled everything and started the machine and added the small batch of coffee custard mix. It took about 12 minutes to freeze this mini-batch into gorgeous ice cream. Didn't even start to melt. So I basically got 1 1/2 bowls out of one freezer day. Yay! Hopefully I didn't do anything to risk the ice cream maker's breaking - I was pretty careful to mix in the frozen part with the non-frozen part together.
I learned something else here, too, that many of you must already know - the more fat, the more like store-bought ice cream. Half and half alone without cream or butter added wasn't quite smooth enough, though it's darn good. I thought it would work because some recipes in the book call for 2 cups milk and 2 cups cream, and it did make nice ice cream, but it occurred to me that I don't know if half & half is half cream, half milk by weight or by volume. Anyone know?
UPDATE 9/23/2021: It's years later and it's still working. Haven't used it tons, but somewhat, with a variety of dairy and nondairy ice creams. Pretty pleased with this machine holding up and upgraded it two stars.
UPDATE: 5/3/2023: My inner bowl is just starting to flake a bit on the rim, though I have taken a lot of care with washing it and not using abrasives. I found out an interesting factoid from the manufacturer whom I contacted. (Conair) They said of the inner bowl, "The bowl is aluminum covered with a xylan non-stick coating." So apparently the part that comes in contact with the food is fluoropolymer-based and has similarities to Teflon and PTFE. If one were to heat it past a certain temperature, I presume it might not be safe for birds/parrots/avian pets who are nearby. But I imagine/hope that in its normal use, and washing in warm water, it would be fine.
I ordered it and an extra bowl. I followed the directions in the instruction to the tee. Made the base with heavy cream, whole milk, sugar, salt and vanilla extract (recipe was in the instructions). I was expecting soft serve like ice cream but this was so much smoother and creamy. Truly the best vanilla ice cream I've ever tasted. The 1.5 quart bowl makes a perfect amount for two people. We even had small bowls left over for another treat night. Can't wait to experiment more with flavors and alcohol like Bailey's and Frangelico (Nutty Irishman).
Not very loud at all in my opinion. We just turned up the tv volume a little bit for the 20 minutes it was making ice cream. Even before the 20 minutes was up, my wife was spooning ice cream out while it still was churning. Considered returning the unit as I can see packing on some serious pounds with this maker but decided I could be diligent enough to limit my ice cream making to once a week.
Very interesting design as the paddle stay stationary but the bowl is what actually spins. Was also easy to clean. When you are done and pull the paddle from the bowl, you need a small spatula to get all the ice cream off the paddle or you will end up wasting ice cream. Can't have that!!!
Top reviews from other countries
without having to plan 24 hours in advance to freeze bowl. Happy I bought it..
手作りでアイスクリームを作っていたが、冷凍庫で凍らせては混ぜるをどんなに頑張っても氷の粒度が大きくなり、出来に不満があった。凍らせる間、絶えず混ぜ続けるアイスクリームメーカーなら、この問題を解決できると期待した。
2 求めた性能等
・一度にたくさん作れること(一般的な配合で,生クリーム200mlパックを使い切った場合の分量を一度に作れること)
・洗浄等の手入れが簡単であること
・故障等のリスクが少ないこと
・フリーザーボウルが冷凍庫に入るサイズであること
・なるべく安価であること
3 検討した製品
・クイジナート ICE-21(本製品)
・クイジナート ICE-30BC
・ハイアール アイスデリ グランデ
4 本製品に決めた理由
・値段が比較的手ごろ
ICE-30BCに対して、こちらは1万円しない。
・フリーザーボウルが冷蔵庫に入る大きさ
ICE-30BCの方は、高さが怪しかった
・手入れのしやすさ・耐久性
ボウル側が回転する機構で、部品点数が少ない。一方、アイスデリは冷却装置ごと洗わないといけなかったり、羽があまり丈夫そうではなかった
・十分なボウル容量
700mlの材料投入可。ICE-30BCより少ないが、自分の使用状況からみて十分。一方、アイスデリは容量が足りず、2回に分けて作る羽目になりそうだった
5 購入後に感じた本製品の良いところ
・容量、価格のバランス。
・メンテナンス性、耐久性。
6 本製品のいまいちなところ
・電源コードが短い。場所によっては、別途延長コードが必要。
・ICE-30BCと比較すると、デザイン性は劣る。全体的にプラスチック。
・羽についたアイスをとるのが面倒くさい。もたついていると溶けていく。
7 総じて
大変満足している。容量も必要十分。アイスクリームメーカー導入前よりも格段に滑らかな舌触りのアイスクリームを作ることができた。これのおかげでアイスクリームを作る回数が増えた。
8 その他
・自分の家には冷蔵庫とは別に冷凍庫がもう一台あるので、フリーザーボウルの大きさはそんなに気にならないが、冷蔵庫が狭い場合は入らなかったりスペースを取りすぎる可能性がある。購入検討の際は、ご家庭の冷凍庫に縦置きできるスペースがあるかをよく確認しておいたほうがいい。また、本体も炊飯器を2個重ねたぐらいでかい。
・連続使用不可(洗わない・事前に材料を氷結手前まで冷やしておく等すれば2回ぐらいは行けるかも)。
・説明書等が英語。使い方はネットに動画があるので困ることはないが。
・大きさや値段的に、初めてアイスを作るような初心者向けではない。アイスクリームメーカー無しでもアイスは作れるので、何回か試して、自分に必要なスペックを把握してからでも遅くはない。
・ある程度アイスが固まってくると、ボウルは回転しているがアイスは動かなくなってくる。その状態だとちょっと緩いのでゴムベラ等で押し込んでやるといい感じの硬さになってくる。
・フリーザーボウルを洗う時に、ある程度温まっていないとうまく水分を除けない(キッチンペーパーで拭いたそばから薄く凍り付いていく)。ボウルの中で液体の音がするまではボウルを温める必要がある。
・洗って水分を拭いた後、薄く油を塗ってやると、次回のアイスでボウルに付着したアイスがはがれやすい気がする。
・ボウルに付着したアイスを剥がすのは、プラスチックのしゃもじがおすすめ。
Reviewed in Mexico 🇲🇽 on May 18, 2021
ネットでググって自分好みのレシピでアレンジして楽しんでいます。
下準備の冷凍時間が長いのと容量が少ないのがマイナスポイント。
















































