Protein Ice Cream with Allulose (Coconut or A2 Dairy)

This recipe has been a bit of a family relay race.

My mom picked up the original idea from somewhere (if I ever track it down, I’ll happily credit it properly), then she modified it to bump the protein by using egg whites.

I modified it again, because I’m not interested in throwing away egg yolks if I don’t have to. Yolks are rich in choline, fat-soluble vitamins, and nutrients that matter for hormones and brain health — and in my testing, using whole eggs still gives the soft-scoop texture we loved about Mom’s version.

The sweetener here is allulose, a rare sugar that tastes like sugar but behaves differently in the body than standard sugar. I’m not making medical claims, but I will say this: it’s one of the few sweeteners that doesn’t leave me regretting it.

Jump to recipe ↓


Why This Works

  • Whole eggs = more nutrition + more satiety.
  • Allulose helps with texture. It tends to freeze softer than many low-carb sweeteners.
  • Coconut or A2 dairy both work beautifully.

Important: If you’re using granulated allulose, powder it first in a blender or food processor. It dissolves better and gives a smoother texture.


A Brief Note on Allulose & GLP-1

Emerging research suggests that allulose may modestly stimulate GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1), a hormone involved in appetite signalling and blood sugar regulation.

Some small human studies have also shown reduced post-meal glucose and insulin responses when allulose is consumed alongside carbohydrates.

That does not make this ice cream a medical intervention. It simply means the sweetener behaves differently from conventional sugar — and for some people, that difference matters.


Choose Your Base

  • Coconut (my favourite): half coconut cream + half coconut milk
  • A2 Half-and-Half
  • A2 Heavy Cream + A2 Whole Milk (richer, more classic)

Coconut tends to stay slightly softer once frozen. A2 dairy gives you a more traditional custard feel.


Flavours Included

  • Vanilla Coconut or A2 Vanilla
  • Chocolate Coconut or A2 Chocolate

The same method applies whether you choose coconut or A2 dairy.


Method Notes (Read Once)

  • Heat the base to 170–175°F to dissolve sweetener and safely temper eggs.
  • Temper slowly: drizzle hot liquid into eggs while whisking.
  • Chill thoroughly before churning for best texture.

Protein Ice Cream with Allulose (Coconut or A2 Dairy)

Protein ice cream made with allulose
Yield: ~1 quart
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Chill Time: 2+ hours
Churn Time: 20 minutes

Ingredients (Base)

  • 3 whole eggs (or 5 egg whites)
  • 1 can coconut milk + cream or 2 cups A2 half-and-half or A2 cream + A2 whole milk
  • 1/2 cup allulose, powdered
  • Pinch salt
  • 1 tsp vanilla

Chocolate Variation

  • Add 1/2 cup cocoa powder
  • Optional: 4 oz chopped dark or keto chocolate

Instructions

  1. Powder allulose in a blender.
  2. Heat milk/cream mixture to 170–175°F.
  3. Whisk in powdered allulose.
  4. Whisk eggs separately.
  5. Slowly drizzle hot mixture into eggs while whisking to temper.
  6. Return mixture to saucepan and whisk until slightly thickened.
  7. Add cocoa (if using) and whisk smooth.
  8. Add vanilla and salt.
  9. Cool 2 hours or overnight.
  10. Churn in ice cream maker ~20 minutes, or freeze and stir every 20 minutes until set.

Nutrition Snapshot (approximate)

Calories: ~250 per serving

Protein: ~8–10g

Carbs: very low (allulose not fully absorbed)

Fat: varies by base

Values vary by coconut vs A2 dairy and egg choice.

Notable nutrients:

• Choline (if using whole eggs)

• Fat-soluble vitamins

• Higher satiety than typical ice cream

Estimated Cost

Coconut version: $8–$12 per batch

A2 dairy version: $9–$14 per batch

Cost varies by brand and egg sourcing.

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