Mexican restaurants I've been to do not fry it. Without batter the ice cream would melt into the fryer. Not a good thing. Otherwise it's exactly as PP said.
I was curious since I have never noticed a batter so I looked up a few recipes. Looks like many are dipped in some kind of egg mixture before the cereal coating...in the case of the recipe I found, eggs and vanilla. Then fried for a few seconds.
It's not usually REALLY fried. It's called that because the coating looks and tastes like it's fried. It's just usually ice cream rolled in either cereal or cookie crumbs that are very crunchy.
You couldn't even fry ice cream for "a second". It would melt, and "a second" is not enough to do a darned thing to anything coating it. You'd need at least a minute in a deep fryer to harden a battered coating. "A second" will only serve to make whatever is coating the ice cream excessively oily.
Fried ice cream is not fried.
It's not usually REALLY fried. It's called that because the coating looks and tastes like it's fried. It's just usually ice cream rolled in either cereal or cookie crumbs that are very crunchy.
You couldn't even fry ice cream for "a second". It would melt, and "a second" is not enough to do a darned thing to anything coating it. You'd need at least a minute in a deep fryer to harden a battered coating. "A second" will only serve to make whatever is coating the ice cream excessively oily.
Fried ice cream is not fried.
It's not usually REALLY fried. It's called that because the coating looks and tastes like it's fried. It's just usually ice cream rolled in either cereal or cookie crumbs that are very crunchy.
You couldn't even fry ice cream for "a second". It would melt, and "a second" is not enough to do a darned thing to anything coating it. You'd need at least a minute in a deep fryer to harden a battered coating. "A second" will only serve to make whatever is coating the ice cream excessively oily.
Fried ice cream is not fried.
It's not usually REALLY fried. It's called that because the coating looks and tastes like it's fried. It's just usually ice cream rolled in either cereal or cookie crumbs that are very crunchy.
You couldn't even fry ice cream for "a second". It would melt, and "a second" is not enough to do a darned thing to anything coating it. You'd need at least a minute in a deep fryer to harden a battered coating. "A second" will only serve to make whatever is coating the ice cream excessively oily.
Fried ice cream is not fried.
Mexican restaurants I've been to do not fry it. Without batter the ice cream would melt into the fryer. Not a good thing. Otherwise it's exactly as PP said.