Snow-white custard ice cream packed with big cookie chunks has a way of disappearing faster than anything else in the freezer. The contrast is the whole point here: a rich vanilla base that stays smooth and scoopable, plus pockets of chocolate cookie that soften just enough to taste like they belong there. When it’s done right, each spoonful has cream, crunch, and that familiar Oreo-style flavor in balance.
The custard base gives this version a clean, dense texture that no shortcut can quite match. Tempering the egg yolks keeps the dairy from scrambling, and cooking the mixture to 175°F gives you enough body without turning it eggy. The cookies go in at the very end so some pieces stay bold and crunchy while others bloom into the cream and turn it into cookies-and-cream territory instead of plain vanilla with mix-ins.
Below, I’m walking through the part that matters most: how to cook the custard without curdling it, how to cool it fast enough for a smooth churn, and how to add the cookies so the texture stays interesting after freezing.
The custard turned out silky and the cookie pieces stayed big instead of getting soggy. I chilled it overnight and it churned into the smoothest cookies and cream ice cream I’ve made at home.
Keep this cookies and cream ice cream in your back pocket for the smooth custard base and those big Oreo chunks.
The Custard Has to Thickly Coat the Spoon Before You Chill It
Ice cream base that looks thin in the pot turns icy in the freezer. The goal here is not a boil and not a loose warm milk mixture. You want the custard to reach 175°F, and you want it to leave a clean line on the back of a spoon when you swipe a finger through it. That’s the moment the yolks have done their job and the base has enough body to freeze smoothly.
The other failure point is heat. If the burner runs too hot, the eggs curdle before the custard can thicken evenly. Keep the heat at medium-low and stir constantly, scraping the bottom and corners of the pan so nothing sits still long enough to seize. If you see tiny bits of cooked egg, strain the base immediately through a fine mesh sieve before chilling.
What the Cookies and Cream Base Needs From Each Ingredient

- Heavy cream — This gives the ice cream its plush texture and keeps the churned base from freezing hard. There isn’t a true substitute if you want the same body, but you can swap in part-half-and-half in a pinch and expect a lighter, less rich scoop.
- Whole milk — The milk loosens the custard enough to churn cleanly without making it heavy like frozen pudding. Lower-fat milk works, but the finished ice cream will taste thinner and pick up more iciness after a day or two in the freezer.
- Egg yolks — These are what turn the mixture into real custard ice cream instead of sweet cream with mix-ins. Don’t replace them with whole eggs; the whites change the texture and make the base less silky.
- Granulated sugar — Sugar sweetens the base, but it also controls how hard the ice cream freezes. Cutting it much lower makes the ice cream icy and harder to scoop.
- Vanilla extract — Vanilla is the quiet background note that makes the chocolate cookie flavor read as cookies and cream instead of just dairy plus cookies. Use real extract if you can, because the base is simple enough that cheap vanilla can stand out in a bad way.
- Chocolate sandwich cookies — Roughly crushed cookies give you the best mix of chunks and dark cookie flecks. If you crush them too finely, they’ll disappear into the base; if you leave them in huge pieces, they freeze into hard shards instead of pleasant bites.
The Churn That Keeps the Cookies From Going Soft
Tempering the Yolks
Whisk the sugar into the egg yolks first, then stream in the hot cream and milk slowly while whisking constantly. That gradual heat shift keeps the eggs from scrambling on contact. If you dump the dairy in all at once, the yolks can seize into tiny bits before the pan even goes back on the stove.
Cooking to the Right Thickness
Return the mixture to the saucepan and stir over medium-low heat until it reaches 175°F. The custard should coat the spoon and hold a visible trail when you run your finger through it. Pull it off the heat as soon as it gets there; pushing much hotter is how you end up with a grainy base that tastes cooked.
Straining and Chilling Completely
Pour the custard through a fine mesh sieve, then stir in the vanilla and salt once it’s off the heat. Straining catches any tiny cooked bits and gives you a smoother finish, which matters in a dessert this plain. Chill it for at least 4 hours, and longer if you can, because a cold base churns faster and freezes with less ice crystal formation.
Adding the Cookies at the End
Churn the custard until it looks like soft-serve, then add the crushed cookies in the last 2 minutes. That timing keeps the pieces from breaking down completely in the machine. Some cookies should stay chunky, while others stain the base slightly and create that classic cookies-and-cream swirl.
How to Adapt This for Different Freezers, Diets, and Cookie Preferences
Dairy-Light Version
You can swap part of the heavy cream for half-and-half, but the ice cream will freeze less rich and a little firmer. This works best if you plan to serve it soon after churning rather than letting it sit for days in the freezer.
Extra Cookie Chunks
If you want a more dramatic cookie bite, hold back a handful of roughly crushed cookies and fold them in by hand after churning. That gives you bigger pieces than the machine can keep intact, which is useful if you like clear pockets of crunch in every scoop.
Gluten-Free Option
Use gluten-free chocolate sandwich cookies in the same amount and crush them the same way. The base itself is naturally gluten-free, so the cookies are the only part that needs changing.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: The churned base before freezing can sit in the fridge for up to 24 hours if needed, but the finished ice cream doesn’t belong there.
- Freezer: Freeze in a shallow, airtight container for up to 2 weeks for the best texture. After that, it gets harder and the cookies lose some of their contrast.
- Reheating: Let the container sit at room temperature for 5 to 10 minutes before scooping. If you try to force a spoon through it straight from the freezer, the texture can feel brittle instead of creamy.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Cookies and Cream Ice Cream
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Heat the heavy cream and whole milk in a saucepan over medium-low heat until steaming, not boiling, with small bubbles forming around the edges.
- In a bowl, whisk the egg yolks with the granulated sugar until smooth and slightly lighter in color.
- Slowly whisk the steaming cream mixture into the egg yolks in a thin stream to temper, keeping the egg mixture moving.
- Return everything to the saucepan and cook over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until the custard reaches 175F and thickens enough to coat the back of a spoon.
- Strain the custard through a fine mesh sieve into a clean container to remove any bits of cooked egg.
- Stir in the vanilla extract and salt, then cool completely at room temperature before refrigerating.
- Refrigerate at least 4 hours (until very cold and set enough to churn).
- Churn the cold custard in an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s instructions, until it reaches a soft-serve consistency.
- During the last 2 minutes of churning, add the crushed chocolate sandwich cookies, letting some stay chunky while others dissolve slightly for a cookies-and-cream swirl effect.
- Transfer the churned ice cream to a container and freeze until firm.


