Ice Cream Calculator
Estimate batch yield, tubs, and scoop counts for homemade ice cream and gelato.
| Container | Capacity | Use | Headspace |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pint | 473 ml | Small | 10% |
| Quart | 946 ml | Family | 12% |
| Half-gallon | 1893 ml | Party | 15% |
| Custom | Varies | Fit tub | Size to lid |
| Freezer pan | 750 ml | Sheet | 8% |
| Gelato tub | 900 ml | Dense | 10% |
| Parfait cup | 180 ml | Single | 5% |
| Family box | 1200 ml | Shared | 12% |
| Scoop tool | Volume | Portion | Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| #16 | 74 ml | Large | Big cones |
| #20 | 59 ml | Std | Classic |
| 1/3 cup | 79 ml | Heaped | Rich bowls |
| 1/2 cup | 118 ml | Big | Split share |
| Small scoop | 45 ml | Kids | Mini cups |
| Flat scoop | 50 ml | Neat | Rounded top |
| Gelato scoop | 55 ml | Dense | Italian style |
| Chef scoop | 65 ml | Full | Party bowl |
| Style | Overrun | Texture | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gelato | 20-30% | Dense | Low air |
| Premium | 25-50% | Creamy | Balanced |
| Soft serve | 50-80% | Light | Airy |
| Sherbet | 20-30% | Fruity | Bright |
| No churn | 10-20% | Rich | Freezer set |
| Custard | 15-25% | Silky | Egg base |
| Frozen yogurt | 25-40% | Tangy | Light body |
| Ice milk | 30-45% | Lean | Old style |
| Format | Size | Serves | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cone | 2 scoops | 1 | Classic |
| Cup | 1 scoop | 1 | Easy |
| Banana split | 3 scoops | 1-2 | Shareable |
| Parfait | 2 scoops | 1 | Layered |
| Family bowl | 4 scoops | 2 | Generous |
| Sampler | 3 mini | 1 | Mix flavors |
| Kids cup | 1 small | 1 | Smaller |
| Party bowl | 5 scoops | 2-3 | Big share |
Best for quick dessert and small families.
Good for most freezers and casual servings.
Great when you need more scoops per event.
Lower overrun means richer, firmer scoops.
Ice cream is cold sweet, usually prepared from milk or cream, that you flavor with sweetener as sugar or something else, and with aromas as vanilla or cocoa, or with fruits as strawberries or peaches. Occasionally you add coloring except stabilizers It seems simple, but genuinely is much more than most folks reckon.
Philadelphia-style ice cream requires only five ingredients: cream, milk, sugar, vanilla and salt. It is simple ice cream without eggs. Rather, French vanilla-style recipes use egg yolks for richness.
Simple Homemade Ice Cream Recipe and Tips
Basic recipe requires one cup of milk, one cup of thick cream, three egg yolks and half cup of sugar. You mix the sugar with the yolks in a bowl, while you warm the milk and cream until boling.
Other commonly used recipe uses one and half cup of thick cream, one and half cup of whole milk, half cup of sugar, quarter spoon of sea salt, three big egg yolks and one spoon of vanilla essence. In medium saucepan you put together the cream, milk, sugar and salt. The egg yolks genuinely do the main difference, together with the natural cream.
The sugar amount affects the ice cream. The more sugar, the more long it freezes and form crystals. If you use syrup together with a bit of guar gum, you receive even smooth ice cream that does not become a brick in the freezer.
Honey works instead of corn syrup. Own ice cream machine allow you to prepare fresh creative sweets home, which is wonderful. Also the KitchenAid stand mixer with attachment operates for ice cream.
Homemade ice cream commonly costs less and is simpler than you think. The tastes can be as creative as you want. Ice cream from rice pudding is a creative notion.
Buttercream ice cream is another bold concept, although frosting can freeze and become hard to work. Coffee ice cream pleases coffee lovers.
Good ice cream uses fresh, natural, delicious ingredients and no skimp in thickness. It has rich, creamy make-up, is pure in the mouth, melt here and is not icy. The air amount must be low, so pint feels denser than poor competitions.
Vanilla ice cream occasionally has a bad name because of its simple taste, but classical is not bland.
Soft serve mostly is made up of air and do not deserve the name ice cream because of absence of real cream. Gelato satisfy more in little portions; two until three spoons already feel as sufficient treat without feeling stuffed.