The Air (Overrun) Difference
Industrial ice cream is whipped quickly at high speeds to increase its volume, pushing up to 50% to 100% air into the mixture. This is called overrun, which dilutes the actual ingredients.
Giro Gelato is churned slowly, incorporating only 20% to 30% air. This lower overrun creates a dense, velvety consistency that coats your palate, allowing you to taste the intense raw ingredients rather than frozen air pockets.
Slower, Healthier Fats
Ice cream relies heavily on butterfat, typically holding 10% to 25% fat derived mostly from heavy cream. While fat adds mouthfeel, it actually coats the tongue and numbs your taste buds to flavor.
Giro Gelato is made primarily with milk instead of cream, containing only 4% to 9% fat. With less fat blocking your palate, flavors explode instantly on your tongue. It's a lighter, healthier indulgence with a far cleaner finish.
Perfect Temperature Delivery
Because ice cream has more fat and air, it needs to be served freezing cold—usually between -12°C and -15°C—otherwise, it melts into an oily puddle. This extreme cold partially numbs your tongue.
Giro Gelato is served at a warmer temperature, around -8°C to -10°C. This ensures that the scoop remains soft and creamy, releasing intense aromatics and flavors immediately upon contact without freezing your mouth.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Feature | Giro Gelato | Premium Ice Cream |
|---|---|---|
| Main Ingredient | Fresh Milk (Higher milk-to-cream ratio) | Heavy Cream (Higher cream-to-milk ratio) |
| Butterfat Level | Low (4% – 9% fat) | High (10% – 25% fat) |
| Air Content (Overrun) | Dense (20% – 30% air) | Light/Aery (50% – 100% air) |
| Serving Temp | Warmer (-8°C to -10°C) | Colder (-12°C to -15°C) |
| Churning Style | Slow-churned (Mantegazione) | Fast-whipped (Industrial continuous freezer) |
| Flavor Impact | Intense, immediate flavor release | Delayed flavor release, coats tongue |