This ice cream has a very specific effect on people. Someone opens the freezer “just to check if it’s ready” and suddenly half the container has mysteriously vanished. The cookies were never safe. Neither was your self-control honestly.
The texture is rich and creamy with little crunchy cookie pieces tucked into every bite. Some crumbs melt slightly into the vanilla base and turn the whole thing into that classic cookies-and-cream flavor everybody somehow turns feral for at midnight with a spoon directly out of the loaf pan.
For the Ice Cream Base:

No-churn ice cream is a magical invention for home cooks, and this Cookies and Cream version is a testament to its simple genius. While many modern no-churn recipes rely on sweetened condensed milk, this classic method uses a simple cream, milk, and sugar base. The magic happens during the freezing process, where periodic, vigorous stirring mimics the action of an ice cream maker's churn, breaking down ice crystals to create a remarkably smooth and creamy texture without any special equipment.
Dissolve the sugar
In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together the whole milk, granulated sugar, and salt until the sugar fully dissolves. Rub a little mixture between your fingers to check. If it still feels gritty, keep whisking.
Add the cream and vanilla
Pour in the heavy whipping cream and vanilla extract. Stir gently until fully combined and smooth.
Chill the mixture
Cover the bowl and refrigerate for at least 1 hour. Cold mixture freezes faster and forms a creamier texture with fewer ice crystals.
Start the first freeze
Pour the chilled mixture into a freezer-safe container or loaf pan. Cover tightly and freeze for 45 minutes.
Break up the ice crystals
Remove the container from the freezer and whisk the mixture vigorously. You can also use a hand mixer or immersion blender. This step breaks up early ice crystals and helps create that soft creamy texture instead of frozen dairy cement.
Add the cookies
Fold in the chopped chocolate sandwich cookies. Use a mix of bigger chunks and fine crumbs for the best texture in every scoop.
Continue freezing and mixing
Return the container to the freezer. Every 30 minutes for the next 2 to 3 hours, remove it and stir vigorously again. This repeated mixing mimics the churning process of an ice cream machine.
Freeze until scoopable
Once the ice cream is firm and creamy, let it freeze fully for another hour if needed before serving.
Serve and enjoy
Scoop into bowls or cones and serve immediately. Cold creamy vanilla, crunchy cookie pieces, tiny pockets of chocolate everywhere. Freezer peace lasts about twelve minutes around this recipe.