gelato, type of ice cream with Italian origins.
Sweets and drinks have been cooled using ice or snow since ancient times, and most cultures around the world have their own histories of iced desserts, from the cone-shaped kulfi of India to Turkey’s salep dondurma, but it was probably in 16th-century Italy that the first gelato was made. An account of a Florentine banquet in 1595 recalls the carved shapes of sorbetti (water-based ices) and gelati being consumed at the court of the Medici dukes. As Italy’s gelato makers migrated, their recipes spread rapidly across Europe and beyond.
Gelato (Italian for “frozen”) is handmade from whole milk, sugar, and other flavourings, typically fruit, chocolate, and nuts. It uses high-quality fresh ingredients. These ingredients slowly incorporate air as they are frozen, resulting in a thick soft cream that is slow to melt. Gelato contains less air than the ice cream produced in the United States (which has more butterfat), and it is denser and more intensely flavoured. Industrial ice cream, often made with powdered milk, tastes completely different from real gelato. The best artisanal gelato does not contain any ice crystals and should have a well-balanced intensity of flavour and creaminess without being too sweet.