Ice Cream

How to make Semifreddo

Semifreddo means half-cold in Italian. It is a frozen mousse rather than churned ice cream, giving a soft sliceable texture straight from the freezer.

What it is

Semifreddo in the kitchen

Semifreddo means half-cold in Italian. It is a frozen mousse rather than churned ice cream, giving a soft sliceable texture straight from the freezer.

Why make it

Make semifreddo when you want a reliable component that improves meals, desserts, snacks or menu builders with a clear flavour profile and repeatable method.

Best with

dinner parties, berries, chocolate sauce

Method

Step-by-step

  1. Step 1

    Prepare the base for Semifreddo: chill the dairy or fruit mixture, dissolve the sugar fully and blend or strain if you want an extra smooth texture.

    Look for: The base is cold, smooth and slightly sweeter than you want the frozen result to taste. Tip: Chill the base for at least 4 hours for better body and faster freezing. Avoid: Freezing dulls sweetness, so a base that tastes barely sweet will become flat.
  2. Step 2

    Churn the Semifreddo until thick and softly frozen, or use the specific no-churn, kulfi, semifreddo or sorbet method where relevant. Fold in any chunks, ripples or nuts at the end.

    Look for: It holds soft folds like whipped cream or soft serve. Tip: A shallow container freezes faster and gives a smoother texture. Avoid: Adding chunky mix-ins too early can break them down or sink them.
  3. Step 3

    Transfer the Semifreddo to a freezer container, cover the surface and freeze until scoopable. Rest at room temperature for 5–10 minutes before serving if it is very firm.

    Look for: A scoop passes through cleanly without shattering into ice. Tip: Press parchment on the surface to reduce freezer burn. Avoid: Repeated thawing and refreezing creates icy texture.
Storage

Make ahead and storage

Storage

Store covered in the freezer at -18°C. Press parchment on the surface to reduce freezer burn and use within 1 month for best texture.

Make ahead

Make the base ahead and chill thoroughly before churning. Frozen desserts are best made the day before serving so they have time to set.

Freezing

Designed for freezing. Avoid repeated thawing and refreezing because it creates icy crystals and dulls flavour.