• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Contact us at 1-(855) 2-ITALIA or Send an Email |  Follow us on

Luxury Italian Tours

Luxury Italian Tours

  • About us
  • Destinations
    • Italian Destinations
    • France, Croatia, Spain, Portugal, Greece, U.K. & Malta
  • Experiences
    • The Adventurer
    • The Culture Connoisseur 
    • The Family Trip
    • The Foodie 
    • Wine Tasting and Tours
    • Honeymoons
    • Small Group Tours
  • Accommodations
  • Blog
  • Contact
The Scoop On Gelato

The Scoop On Gelato

May 27, 2025 by Luxury Italian Tours Leave a Comment

Deliciously smooth, silky, and refreshing—it’s gelato. The word gelato derives from the Italian verb gelare, meaning to freeze. This world–famous, intensely flavored, and gently frozen sweet treat is part of a family of Italian desserts. To know gelato is to love gelato.
 
Whether you’re a gelato addict, have a growing admiration, or are a complete novice, we’re rolling up our sleeves and going in. Join us in this Luxury Italian Tours blog as we explore the world of gelato.
 
Keep reading for the inside scoop on the interesting history of this handmade delicacy. We’re covering everything from the Italian origins and the decadent details to our favorite gelato shops in Florence, Venice, and Rome!
 
A scoop of pink gelato is held with a little cookie and a plastic spoon
Photo Credit: @jennaday

Gelato’s Tasty History

Gelato has a complex history. Gelato’s origins begin in Ancient Rome and Greece, where snow was mixed with honey and wine for a refreshing treat. It’s said they also chilled their wine with snow, creating alcoholic snow cones. Emperor Nero (37-68 CE) ordered ice to be brought from the Apennine Mountains for the creation of these admirable, sweet frozen treats.

The Renaissance Era in Florence is where the first official recipe for gelato is attributed. The 16th-century alchemist and astrologist for the Medici family, Cosimo Ruggieri, holds credit for this recipe. Ruggieri has a claim to inventing the fior di latte flavor. This new “sorbet” began in Florence but was exported to France before spreading across Europe. However, these icy treats were costly and were a delicacy that only the rich could afford, as salt and ice were costly ingredients during this era.

As gelato took shape during the Renaissance, Catherine de’ Medici married King Henry II of France and brought her Italian chefs and gelato to France.

It was the Italian architect and chef, Bernardo Buontalenti, who gets credit for perfecting the Medici court’s gelato recipe. Buontalenti’s creamy rendition combined milk, sugar, eggs, and honey.

It was not until in 1686 when the Sicilian chef Francesco Procopio Cutò opened the Café Procope in Paris. Cutò had a gelato-making machine, providing high-quality, consistent gelato flavors, which he sold at his shop, which popularized this sweet treat across Europe.

Gelato flourished in France, Italy, and throughout Europe during this time. Traveling gelato makers brought the refreshing treat across many lands. In the second half of the 18th century, the Benito School began shaping gelato into balls using a scoop, differing from the usual flat metal spatula.

 

A neon sign that says Gelateria
Photo Credit: @joshchiodo

The Regional Schools of Gelato: Sicily, Tuscany & the Veneto 

There are three distinct regional gelato schools in Italy and each have their own unique richness and flavor profiles

Sicily: Sorbetto & Crema di Sicilia

Sultry Sicilian summers may have inspired the oldest Sicilian gelato schools, excelling in fruit and nut flavors. This dairy-based gelato has no egg yolks, making it a leaner treat. Expect brilliant almond, pistachio, or hazelnut flavors in Sicilian gelato. And, for a gelato panino of sorts, when in Sicily, try the sweetened brioche rolls filled with gelato.

 

Two brioche rolls are filled with gelato
Photo Credit: Photo: Joe Lingeman; Food Styling: Barrett Washburne

Tuscany: Creamy, Eggy Traditions

The Tuscan School of Gelato is said to have been founded by Bernardo Ente in the 16th century. However, the Tuscan tradition predominantly dates back to the 1930s, beginning with a handful of shops that sold milk and sweetened whipped cream. These treats evolved, eventually becoming gelato with milk, cream, custard, water bases, boasting fruity flavors. Influenced by Buontalenti’s original recipes, Tuscans enjoy a richer, creamier gelato style. Tuscan gelato is silky and luxurious thanks to the egg yolks that are commonly used, creating a crema, or custard-like base.

Veneto: Light, Elegant & Innovative

In the Northeast part of Italy, there is a tradition in the Veneto, the region where Venice is located.  It’s tied to alpine snow and valleys with grazing cows that provide high-quality dairy products for the richest, most elegant style of gelato. Milk and cream are combined in dairy bases and are even used in some fruit flavors. The style is a slightly lighter, more refined gelato, balancing richness and freshness.  Venetian gelato masters opt for smooth and fluffy textures with an emphasis on cream over eggs and lighter emulsifiers, with slow churning and aeration techniques.

 

A woman with red nails is holding out a cone filled with Italian gelato
Photo Credit: @julianamalta

How to Spot Quality Gelato from Imposters

Gelato’s not to be confused with your average ice cream. Often enriched with egg yolks, nuts, coffee, dried fruit, or liquor, gelato isn’t overwhelmingly milky or heavy on the dairy. You can even find plenty of dairy-free, water-based, and non-fat gelato.

What to look for:

#1. High Quality Ingredients

  • Made with fresh and natural ingredients like milk, cream, sugar, real fruits, nuts, or cocoa. Avoiding artificial colors, flavors, and preservatives. Imitation gelato is often contains artificial flavorings, powdered mixes, synthetic stabilizers, and excessive sugars.

#2. Texture & Consistency

  • High-quality gelato is smooth, creamy, soft, melting evenly in your mouth. This is due to less air than in ice cream. Imitation gelato is overly fluffy or dense, due to excessive air or the use of emulsifiers and stabilizers.

#3. Temperature

  • High-quality gelato is soft and easy to scoop, but doesn’t melt instantly. It’s served at a slightly warmer temperature than ice cream. Imitation gelato is very cold, which masks flavors. Too warm makes it overly soft and watery.

#4. Appearance

  • High-quality gelato has natural colors, reflecting the real ingredients used. Strawberry gelato should have a soft pink or reddish hue. Pistachio gelato should be a muted green, not bright green. Imitation gelato is often bright, owing to artificial colors. An overly glossy appearance indicates synthetic

#5. Flavors

  • High-quality gelato has bold yet natural flavors. Each bite tastes like the ingredients it represents. There’s no overpowering sweetness or artificial aftertaste. Imitation gelato is overly sweet and artificial flavors, often lacking depth. Your gelato should taste like the actual fruit. If a fruit-flavored gelato tastes like candy instead, it might be imitation.

#6. Storage and Display

  • High-quality gelato is typically stored in covered metal containers or under minimal air exposure to preserve freshness. Imitation gelato is often displayed in large mounds with overly dramatic swirls, often piled high above the container edges. This can indicate excessive stabilizers or emulsifiers.

Our Favorite Gelato Spots

We’ve saved the best for last! Here’s the inside scoop on where to find the best gelato in Venice, Florence, and Rome!

Two scoops of gelato are held with the Italian owner in the background
Photo Credit: @la_mela_verde_venezia

Venice

  • Bacaro del Gelato – Fondamenta de la Misericordia, 2499
  • Gelatoteca Suso – Sotoportego de la Bissa, 5453
  • Gelateria Ca’ d’Oro – Strada Nova, 4273/b
  • Gelato di Natura – Piazza San Marco, 1164/A
  • La Mela Verde – Fondamenta de l’Osmarin, 4977/A
Green gelato in Italy
Photo Credit: https://www.lasorbettiera.it/

Florence

  • Galleria Iginio Massari – Via de’ Vecchietti, 3 – Florence’s version of Paris’ Ladurée & Milan’s Marchesi
  • Gelateria Artigianale La Sorbettiera – Piazza Torquato Tasso, 11r
  • Sbrino– Via dei Serragli, 32r
  • Gelateria della Passera– Via Toscanella, 15/red
  • La Gelatiera– Via de’ Ginori, 21R
  • Edoardo Il Gelato Biologico– Piazza del Duomo, 45/R
  • Gelateria La Carraia – Piazza Nazario Sauro, 25/r
  • Vivoli – Via Dell’Isola delle Stinche, 7r – Go for the affogato
  • Gelateria Carabe – Via Ricasoli 60/r
Photo Credit: https://www.gelateriafatamorgana.com/web/index.php

Rome

  • Gelateria dei Gracchi – Via dei Gracchi 272
  • Gelateria del Teatro – Via di San Simone 70
  • Fatamorgana – Via dei Chiavari, 37A
  • Otaleg – Via di San Cosimato 14 / A
  • Gunther – Piazza di Sant’Eustachio 47
  • Al Settimo Gelo – Via Vodice, 21

Happy Gelato Hunting Across Italy

As our guide to gelato comes to a close, we hope you’ve learned a few things along the way. And, we send you off, wishing you happy gelato hunting. We hope that you’ve found a few tasty places to have your next scoop.

If you’d like to discover more tips or you’re ready to embark upon the trip of a lifetime, get in touch with our professional travel agents and start booking your dream vacation to Italy.

Filed Under: Other

More Blogs

< Is Sardinia the New Amalfi Coast?The Palio di Siena: The Most Thrilling Horse Race in the World >

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Experience the Ultimate Luxury of Italy

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

1-855-2-ITALIA
1-855-248-2542

174 WEST 4TH ST.
Suite #155
New York, NY 10014

  • About us
  • Accommodations
  • Destinations
  • Activities
  • Contact

Terms and Conditions

Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2025 Luxury Italian Tours | Developed by Anania Bailey