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Creamy Chocolate Oreo Ice Cream Made From Scratch
Let’s be honest: vanilla cookies and cream is great, but we all know chocolate makes everything better. This Homemade Chocolate Oreo Ice Cream is what happens when a classic, deeply satisfying chocolate ice cream gets a massive upgrade. It’s rich, undeniably creamy, and studded with perfectly sized Oreo chunks. It’s the kind of dessert that makes you want to “accidentally” eat straight from the pint.

The Secret to the Perfect Chocolate Base
Great ice cream starts from scratch. We are using a dreamy combination of heavy cream, whole milk, and just 2 egg yolks. This gives us that luxurious, velvety texture without feeling overly heavy. To get that incredible, complex chocolate flavor without being too sweet, we double down: unsweetened cocoa powder joins forces with semi-sweet chocolate callets. (Pro tip: if you only have dark or milk chocolate chips on hand, those work beautifully, too!)
Oreos: To Crush or Not to Crush?
I like to use about 15 Oreo cookies for this batch, broken into medium-sized pieces. You want them small enough to fit on your spoon, but big enough that you still get that satisfying cookie crunch. We toss them into the ice cream maker during the last 5 minutes of churning so they stay chunky and don’t turn your beautiful base into a muddy mess. Want more Oreos? Measure with your heart. Want less? You do you.
Keep It Simple: A Standalone Chocolate Dream
Not in the mood for cookies? You can absolutely skip the Oreos. Without the mix-ins, this recipe yields a spectacular, classic homemade chocolate ice cream that pairs perfectly with a slice of cake or stands gloriously on its own.
Equipment Check: Let’s Get Churning
You will need your trusty ice cream maker for this one. Once your gorgeous chocolate base is chilled and ready to go, it only takes a total of 20 minutes of churning to reach that perfect soft-serve consistency. Just remember to set a timer so you know exactly when to drop those cookie pieces in!


















What’s in the chocolate Oreo ice cream
- heavy cream
- whole milk
- egg yolks
- chocolate callets
- cocoa powder
- granulated suagr
- vanilla
- Oreo cookies

Homemade Chocolate Oreo Ice Cream
A decadent, creamy homemade chocolate ice cream loaded with chunky Oreo cookies. Made from scratch using a rich egg yolk base, high-quality cocoa powder, and semi-sweet chocolate, this perfectly balanced treat is the ultimate dessert for cookie lovers. Churns in just 20 minutes!
Ingredients
- 2 cups heavy cream, divided
- 1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
- 6 ounces semisweet chocolate (chopped if not using callets or chips)
- 1 1/2 cups whole milk
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 2 egg yolks, beaten
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Freeze the bowl of your ice cream maker in the freezer.
- In a small saucepan on medium heat, whisk 1 1/4 cups of heavy cream and cocoa powder. Bring to a simmer and reduce the heat to low. Stir constantly for 1 minute and remove from heat.
- Add the chocolate callets and let that sit in the hot cream mixture for 1 minute, then whisk until it forms a smooth mixture. Add the remaining 3/4 cup of heavy cream and whisk to combine. With a silicone spatula, transfer the cocoa cream mixture to a medium bowl and set it aside.
- In the same saucepan, now empty (no need to wash), add the milk, sugar and salt and whisk over medium heat. Watch it closely as it just starts to get hot, almost to a simmer, then remove the pan from the heat. Slowly drizzle about 3/4 cup of the milk mixture into the beaten yolks, whisking constantly and careful not to scramble cook the eggs. This slow drizzle and whisk should take about 1 minute. After you have drizzled in about 3/4 cup of milk, reverse course and slowly drizzle the egg mixture back into the saucepan with the remaining milk.
- On medium-low heat, continue to cook the custard while stirring constantly until it reached 170°F. The mixture should be thick enough to coat a spoon.
- Set a fine-mesh strainer over the bowl with the cocoa/cream. Pour the egg/milk mixture through the strainer and discard anything left on the strainer. Add the vanilla and stir the mixture until combined. Let the mixture cool for about 30 minutes, then cover the bowl and refrigerate for at least 5 hours or overnight.
- Add the custard mixture to the frozen bowl of your ice cream maker and churn according to manufacturer’s instruction. My ice cream maker takes about 20 minutes to churn until it gets to a perfect soft serve texture.
- Enjoy right away as a soft serve or transfer to a freezer safe container for freeze for a few hours.
❓ FAQ’s for Chocolate Oreo Ice Cream
Technically, no — but honestly, yes. An ice cream maker gives you that signature creamy, scoopable texture by churning air into the base as it freezes. Without one, you’ll need to use the freeze and stir every 30 minutes for hours method, which works but tests both your patience and your willpower.
You can, but you’ll lose that luxurious custard-style richness. The egg yolks are what make this ice cream taste like it came from a fancy gelato shop instead of a freezer aisle.
Adding them in the final 5 minutes keeps the cookies from turning to mush. You want chunky, crunchy pockets of Oreo throughout the ice cream — not a uniformly gray, soggy base. Trust the timing.
Absolutely. The chocolate ice cream base is rich, creamy, and completely showstopping on its own. Skip the cookies and you’ve got a beautiful homemade chocolate ice cream ready for cones, sundaes, or eating straight from the container at 11 p.m.
Absolutely! Dark or milk chocolate chips work beautifully in place of semi-sweet chocolate callets. Use whatever you have on hand — just make sure it’s real chocolate and not chocolate-flavored coating, which can affect texture and flavor.
I use about 15 Oreos broken into not-too-small pieces, but this is a you-do-you situation. Add more for a cookies-and-cream-forward experience, or fewer if you want the chocolate to stay the star.
Churn for a total of 20 minutes — that’s the sweet spot for getting a soft-serve consistency before transferring to the freezer to firm up.
You can — but check your ice cream maker’s capacity first. Most home machines work best with batches that fill no more than two-thirds of the bowl. If yours is smaller, churn in two batches for the best texture.
Oh, now you’re thinking outside the box — we love it! Chocolate sandwich cookies of any kind work great. You could also experiment with graham crackers, shortbread, or even brownie chunks. The chocolate ice cream base is a wonderful canvas.
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