Gelato is Italian for ice-cream, right? Wrong!

I took my friend from Italy to Gelato Messina in Sydney – probably the best frozen dessert shop in the country. My friend agreed that it was the best ice-cream she’d had in Australia, but that it wasn’t gelato. There’s a big difference between the two.

Like Italian cooking, Italian gelato depends on fresh ingredients and easy flavours. though similar to ice-cream, there are some essential differences that make gelato much more delicious.

Gelato is made with a higher ratio of milk than cream so has a lower fat content than ice-cream. Gelato is also churned at a slower speed so it includes less air. This denser texture and lower fat content implies the flavours are much more intense.

Now, when you’re in Italy you will be tempted to stop at any gelato place but not all gelaterias are made the same.

Most gelaterias near traveler areas are made with powder mix and are the fast food of Italy. Instead, look for where the locals go and look for stores with signs that say ‘Produzione Artigianale’ or ‘Produzione Propria’. ‘Produzione Artigianale’ implies they make the gelato themselves and ‘Produzione Propria’ implies the gelateria makes their product from scratch with local ingredients.

Gelato is – or ought to be – kept a few degrees warmer than ice-cream but the places that sell the powder mix gelato have product that they can freeze easier. For this reason, they are typically the ones that have it piled high in colourful mounds for all to see.

The upshot of this is that this gelato is colder and for that reason icier than the gelato that is covered. and we don’t want ice in our gelato, do we? That would make it literally ‘ice cream’!

Images by Mrs Romance.