Ehhh... boopada bapada beepadoo.
While some might say "gelato," this is inaccurate. Ice cream in Italy is still ice cream, easily distinguished from gelato which is like ice cream and has similar ingredients. (It would be like comparing sauerkraut to kimchee--both are fermented cabbage, but are really not the same).
Gelato is the Italian equivalent of 'ice cream'. It's formed from the past participle of the infinitive 'gelare', which means 'to freeze'. It's a masculine gender noun that takes as its definite article 'il' ['the'], and as its indefinite article 'uno' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'jeh-LAH-toh'.
Well maybe but maybe not. Ice cream is mostly dairy but Italian ice is just ice with a liquid poured over it. You decide.
Gelato.
Gelato choc di chip
"Ice cream" in English is gelato in Italian.
· Ice Cream · Ice Cream Cake · Italian Ice
Gelato is what Italians have in Italy for ice cream.
· Ice Cream · Ice Cream Cake · Italian Ice
Italian ice cream and is a bit different from American ice cream
It is just Italian Ice Cream
* icing * ice cream bar * Idaho Potatoes * ice cream sandwich * ice cream sundae * Icelandic Cod * instant oatmeal * instant pudding * Italian sausage * Italian Bread * iced oatmeal cookies
Italian ice-cream
· ice cream · ice cream cone · ice tea · iceberg lettuce · Idaho potatoes · Italian sausage
Italian ice cream also known as gelato is Italy's regional variant of ice cream. Gelato have the same ingredients with the traditional ice cream, it includes milk, sugar, cream, fruits and nuts flavoring. The only difference of Italian ice cream from other ice cream is the butterfat and sugar content. It contains less sugar and fat than the ordinary ice cream yet they are still very yummy delicious.
Voglio un gelato! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I want ice cream!" The pronunciation of the declarative clause -- which translates literally as "I want an ice cream" or "I want one ice cream" -- will be "VO-lyo oon djey-LA-to" in Italian.
tortoni