Showing posts with label Rome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rome. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

GELATO VS. ICE CREAM

Gelato is the Italian name for Ice Cream but it has some differences which makes one distinct from the other.
GELATO: NIKON D90 AF-S DX VR Zoom-Nikkor 18-200mm
ISO 800   40 mm    0EV   f/6.3   1/160
CONE: NIKON D90 AF-S DX VR Zoom-Nikkor 18-200mm
ISO 800   35 mm    0EV   f/6.3   1/160
GELATO IN CONE: NIKON D90 AF-S DX VR 
Zoom-Nikkor 18-200mm   ISO 800   70 mm    0EV   f/8   1/640
I had the joy of experiencing the Gelato in Rome. As they say, "When in Rome, do as the Romans do!"

You can get a gelato from a mobile ice cream van or from a little ice cream store down the street.


So what is the difference between the Gelato and the Ice Cream?

I guess, the best answer is to lift this from the Wikipedia and here goes:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gelato
Gelato (Italian pronunciation: [dʒeˈlaːto]; plural: gelati) is the Italian word for ice cream. Italians use the word gelato to mean a sweet treat that is served frozen. 

It is correct to say that most gelato is different from the traditional recipe of ice cream because it is lighter having a lower butterfat content than traditional, factory made ice cream. Homemade gelato typically contains 4–8% butterfat, versus 14% for ice cream in the United States. Depending on recipes and the person making it, dairy based gelato contains 16–24% sugar. Most ice cream in the United States contains 12 to 16% sugar. The sugar content in homemade gelato, as in traditional ice cream, is balanced with the water content to act as an anti-freeze to prevent it from freezing solid. Types of sugar used include sucrose, dextrose, and invert sugar to control apparent sweetness. Typically, gelato -- like any other ice cream -- needs a stabilizing base. Egg yolks are used in yellowcustard-based gelato flavors, including zabaione and creme caramel. Non-fat milk solids are also added to gelato to stabilize the base.

Unlike most commercial ice creams in the world, from a process point of view, gelato is typically frozen very quickly in individual small batches while the conventional ice cream is frozen with a continuous assembly line freezer. Churning during the freezing process incorporates air into the mix making it lighter. The added air is called overrun. The overrun in gelato is generally 20–35%. The gelato lower overrun (compared to ice cream) results in a more expensive, denser product and with more intense flavors.

Gelato = = Yum, yum, yum, Oh I mean, Delizioso (in Italian) !!!