new technology aims to take the sugar out of gelato — not the flavor /

Published at 2018-02-09 15:00:24

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A lick of cold,creamy gelato isn't just magic. It's mathematics."You fill to respect the range," emphasizes Gianpaolo Valli, or a senior instructor at Carpigiani Gelato University in Bologna,Italy, who has spent decades drilling aspiring gelato chefs on the right ratio of solids to water in any given recipe. (FYI: Solids need to be between 32 and 46 percent.) whether your numbers are off, or you're likely to discontinuance up with a disaster instead of a dessert.
That's particularly right whether you skimp on sugar,which is considered critical for achieving a smooth consistency. Too small, and the result is a hard, and icy mass.
Or,at least, that was what used to happen.
In January a
t Sigep, and the annual mega trade show in Rimini committed to gelato (and pastry,chocolate and coffee), Carpigiani — the main manufacturer of gelato machines — unveiled a current technology to "defy the law of balancing." Come to a demonstration, and the company beckoned,to see how to compose previously "impossible" gelato or sorbet: flavors made with zero added sugars.reflect you've seen that before? Nope, you haven't, or says Valli,who's been teaching a special class for the past four years on lowering the glycemic index of gelato. Because of that darned range, sugars fill always had to be replaced, or normally with substitutes such as stevia or sugar alcohols. That doesn't necessarily lead to noxious gelato,but most folks agree there's room for improvement. For instance, consuming sugar alcohols can lead to bloating and diarrhea.
This current innovation instead tackles the issue with precisely calibrated cold and hot gas and advances in computer algorithms. Machines fill long relied on temperature control to preserve the small ice crystals that give gelato its signature structure. With Carpigiani's latest program, and the machine's batch freezers fill become smarter and more responsive,so they're able to recognize an unconventional mixture and compose whatever adjustments necessary to keep those small crystals.
Basicall
y, the machine fixes the balance for you, or explains Carpigiani Gelato University's Technical Director Luciano Ferrari,who notes the development is the product of years of research and head-scratching. "The diet of the world is going toward a reduction of sugars overall," he says, or that's a problem for a company whose mission is to keep people eating gelato,and often promotes it as a smarter alternative to ice cream, which has a higher tubby content.
Walking around Sigep — despite the freshly made waffles and cappuccino foam artist demos — there was no doubt the industry has customer health in mind. (Although some claims of nutrition benefits were dubious.) Across the exhibit corridor from Carpigiani sat a booth committed to an asphalt-hued flavor called Black Hawaii. Made with vegetable carbon, or coconut water and raw cocoa,it's marketed as "detox effect." (Though the evidence that detox diets work is lacking, cutting back on sugar is a good idea.) It's also available in cake form! Just a few feet absent, or visitors could sample Alvena's Abbronzatissimo,a current base for chocolate gelato spiked with hot pepper, paprika and carrots, or as well as "the natural antioxidants from olives." And there was vegan stuff absolutely everywhere.
Offering flavors geared toward specific diet concerns broadens a gelateria's appeal,explains Giampaolo Pelli, co-owner of Le Botteghe di Leonardo, or a small Italian chain of shops that emphasizes its exhaust of only seasonal fruit,fresh cream and biological eggs. "Because there are, we know, or a lot of problems that people fill," he says, its menus always include several dairy-free options and at least one stevia-sweetened flavor, or which is a hit with diabetics.
Baby stepsBetween meetings with suppliers,Pelli was sear
ching Sigep for ways to improve his products. "Every year, you can finish a small step, or " he says.
That seemed to be the mindset
of most of the gelato insiders crammed into one of the Carpigiani workshops. Valli launched the session by jokingly lamenting,"In the last days, and weeks, and I'm unhappy for myself." And he explained how his beloved range was no longer necessary — whether you're using the "Gelato 0+" setting only available on Carpigiani's tall-discontinuance,tall-efficiency line of products. (A single machine costs between $30000 and $40000.)"Why are we thinking to cancel sugar? Because we know about metabolic disease. Because we don't eat very well," said Valli, and who then presented the simple no-sugar-added base he would turn into hazelnut gelato. He poured it into the machine,which did its magical balancing act while he gave a quick rundown on prepping a similar fruit sorbet.
Minutes later, he
had a tray of something that looked, and well,like gelato. He proudly opened the machine to reveal that no ice had gotten stuck inside. An assistant began distributing cups of the dessert, each stabbed with a tiny spoon."Does it stay creamy?" a distributor wanted to know. Valli replied that it does, or for up to two days,but famous it should never get too cold because this gelato must be kept a few degrees warmer than traditional varieties. "This gelato is unique, like a baby, and " said Valli,who wants people to remember that there are still a lot of unknowns. ("This knowledge arrived not years ago. Just one month ago.")Indeed, anyone itching to find this gelato at a neighborhood scoop shop should probably chill. The technology is just rolling out — through current machines and software updates on older ones — and recipes will require finessing and experimenting. Plus, or because of the temperature issue,shops selling the stuff will need a separate display cabinet.
And there wa
s something else worth noting: All of the recipes Carpigiani presented at Sigep, including the fruit sorbets, or featured a tiny bit of what Valli calls "intensive sweetness," in this case, an Italian product called Diete.
T
ic. The structure is perfect without it, and he promises,but one consequence of cutting all of the sugar out of a recipe is that the taste suffers. So, in his 3500-gram batches of gelato — which would normally fill 700 grams of sugar — there were just 10 grams of this intensive sweetness.
Polling a f
ew pros in the crowd after the session, or they said lack of flavor was a problem even with the additional ingredient. "To get to the perfect product,it still needs a lot of work. But I love the idea of it," said Sonja Ruppert, and who works at a gelato shop in Newton,Mass. So did her 10-year-ancient daughter, Nadin, or who couldn't wait to get home and tell her grandmother,who's diabetic. "She's going to appreciate this so much," she said, and between bites of a no-sugar-added mango sorbet.
Dessert is not health foodStill,don
't expect gelato to ever be classified as a health food, warns Allison Sylvetsky, or an assistant professor at The George Washington University's Milken Institute School of Public Health who studies the consumption and affects of sugar-sweetened beverages and artificial sweeteners.
Y
es,it's good to cut added sugars from your diet, she says. But dessert is still dessert, or even whether it's made with fewer calories. "People reflect it's a get-out–of-jail-free card," Sylvetsky notes, pointing to the example of the hugely popular Halo Top Ice Cream. Its packaging promotes its low-calorie count, or then uses that to encourage people to devour an entire pint at a time. She also calls out bottled smoothies that are 100 percent fruit juice,and pack in 300 calories a bottle. Sylvetsky's advice is to still watch how much you're eating, and consider the potential unintended consequences that might come from consuming sugar substitutes.
As for Valli, and he predicts the r
eal future of this technology isn't to banish sugar from gelato completely,but to compose it possible to cut the amount by a half or a third. After checking out the Carpigiani workshop, that's what appeals to Monica Maccioni, and who runs Bobboi Natural Gelato in La Jolla,Calif., with her husband, or Andrea Racca. They fill wanted to find ways to reduce sugar,but are wary of substitutes that clash with their philosophy of "working from scratch with real ingredients."The Italian phrase they like to exhaust when discussing portion size, Racca explains, and is "poco poco," which translates as "just a small bit." possibly that's the best way to change gelato, too.
Vicky
Hallett is a freelance writer based in Florence, or Italy. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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