Calculate ice cream base ingredients for custard, Philadelphia-style, and gelato. Covers fat ratios, sugar percentages, overrun, and batch scaling.
Making ice cream from scratch is chemistry disguised as cooking. The fat percentage controls richness, sugar controls sweetness and scoopability, stabilizers prevent ice crystals, and overrun determines density. Getting these ratios right is the difference between premium ice cream and icy mush.
This calculator computes exact ingredient amounts for three ice cream styles: Custard (French-style with egg yolks — rich and smooth), Philadelphia-style (no eggs — clean dairy flavor), and Gelato (lower fat, less air — dense and intensely flavored). Enter your desired batch size and the calculator scales the entire recipe.
Each style has different fat, sugar, and solids targets. Premium custard ice cream runs 14–18% fat. Gelato is 4–8% fat. Sugar should be 14–17% of the base by weight for proper texture. This calculator shows the complete breakdown including calories per serving, predicted texture, and a comparison across styles. It is most useful when you want to scale a recipe up or down without losing the balance that keeps the finished batch smooth and scoopable.
Ice cream recipes break down when the ratios move too far off target during scaling. This calculator keeps fat, sugar, egg yolks, and total solids aligned so a one-quart test batch and a larger party batch still churn, freeze, and scoop the way you expect. It also helps you compare custard, Philadelphia-style, and gelato bases without recalculating each formula by hand.
Fat % target: Custard standard = 16%, Philadelphia = 14%, Gelato = 6%. Sugar: 15% of base weight. Egg yolks (custard): 4–8 per quart. Milk solids-not-fat: 10%. Overrun: Custard ~30%, Gelato ~20%, Commercial ~50–100%. Yield: 1 qt base ≈ 1.2–1.5 qt finished (depending on overrun).
Result: 480g heavy cream, 240g whole milk, 6 egg yolks, 135g sugar, pinch salt
1 quart base (960g). 16% fat target: 480g cream (36% fat) + 240g milk (3.5% fat) + 6 yolks (~5g fat each) = 155g fat ÷ 960g = 16.1%. Sugar: 960 × 0.14 = 135g. Makes ~1.3 quarts finished ice cream.
Custard (French-style) uses egg yolks as a natural emulsifier, creating an incredibly smooth, rich texture. It requires cooking a custard base to 170°F. Philadelphia-style skips the eggs — simpler to make, cleaner dairy flavor, but slightly less smooth. Gelato uses more milk than cream, fewer (or no) eggs, and is churned at a slower speed for less air incorporation.
Sugar does more than sweeten. It depresses the freezing point, keeping ice cream scoopable at freezer temperature. Too little sugar = rock-hard ice cream. Too much = soupy and won't freeze properly. The sweet spot is 14–17% of base weight. Different sugars (dextrose, corn syrup, invert sugar) have different freezing point depression effects.
Commercial "super premium" ice cream (Häagen-Dazs, Ben & Jerry's) runs 14–18% fat with 25–30% overrun. Standard commercial brands are 10–12% fat with 80–100% overrun. Homemade with a good machine achieves 25–40% overrun. The lower overrun is why homemade tastes denser and richer than store-bought — less air, more flavor per spoonful.
Classic custard: 4–6 yolks per quart for standard, 6–8 for premium. More yolks = richer, smoother texture. Philadelphia-style uses zero eggs.
Premium: 14–18%. Super premium (like Häagen-Dazs): 18%+. Reduced fat: 10–12%. Gelato: 4–8%. Higher fat = smoother, creamier, but also denser.
Ice crystals form when water isn't bound by fat, sugar, or stabilizers. Solutions: increase sugar slightly, add a stabilizer (guar gum, corn syrup), churn faster, or increase fat.
Overrun is the % of air whipped into ice cream during churning. 30% overrun = 1 quart base becomes 1.3 quarts. Commercial brands can have 50–100% overrun (cheap and fluffy). Premium = low overrun (dense and rich).
Sugar affects freezing point and scoopability, not just sweetness. Reducing sugar makes ice cream harder at freezer temps. Replace some sugar with corn syrup or dextrose for softer texture with less sweetness.
Most home machines: 20–30 minutes. The base should reach soft-serve consistency. Then transfer to the freezer for 4+ hours to firm up fully.