TasteWorcester.com Address: 84 Winter St, Worcester, MA 01604
Main Worcester dining web page Bookmark Taste Worcester for our worcester restaurant reviews Email TasteWorcester employees for more information on your favorite Worcester restaurants

Taste Worcester Advertisement

Drinks > Chill Out!

Digg This Page!

07.07 Chill Out!

By Leslie Marin

There’s nothing better on a hot summer night ~ or day, for that matter ~ than a sweet, frozen, and refreshing treat. We’re all familiar with ice cream, but with very subtle changes it can become a completely different dessert:

Sorbet: The French came up with this simple frozen confection that contains none of the dairy ingredients (milk, eggs, cream) that ice cream does. Sorbet is most often fruit ~ although there are some delicious wine, coffee and chocolate versions), sugar, water and lemon juice. Sorbet has a very intense flavor and contains no fat.

Sorbetto: This Italian interpretation of sorbet typically has more fruit and less water than French sorbet, making it softer and less icy. It’s also called “Italian ice.”

Sherbet: The best of both worlds, sherbet comes closer to offering the richness of ice cream because it contains some milk or cream and ~ occasionally ~ egg whites while maintaining the intense, concentrated flavor ~ usually fruit ~ of sorbet. And it’s still pretty low in the fat department ~ 1-2% (& 4-6% dairy).

Granita: Another French creation, granita is similar to sorbet but has a grainier consistency because the mixture is frozen in trays and then scraped and refrozen, a process that results in tiny bits.

Gelato: The manufacturing process for gelato, the Italian word for ice cream, doesn’t incorporate as much air as does the process for American ice cream, so the outcome is a denser, creamier mixture ~ even though it is made with milk, not cream. Gelato contains anywhere from 6 to 8% butterfat.

Frozen yogurt: Not much to explain, it is exactly that, yogurt that’s frozen.

And finally, what make ice cream…ice cream?: The USDA requires at least 10% butterfat and at least 20% dairy. Many ice creams hit 18% fat, and just as many contain up to 50% air. Who knew air could taste so yummy!

Need to take your love of frozen desserts to the next level? Enroll in Ice Cream University at www.icecreamuniversity.org! And if you’re at a loss about where to go for your next vacation, check out the University’s annual Gelato tour of Italy ~ for diehard fans of international travel and gelato only!