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Frozen Desserts Around the World

Kakigōri & the Art of Japanese Shaved Ice Rituals

While gelato is a creamy Italian indulgence, halfway across the world, Japan has perfected its own frozen art: Kakigōri.

More than just shaved ice, kakigōri is a sensory experience. It's soft like fresh snow, flavored with syrups made from fruits, teas, or traditional ingredients like yuzu or matcha. It’s not meant to cool you quickly—it invites you to slow down.

A Ritual of Texture and Silence

Unlike Western slushies, kakigōri is delicately shaved by hand or by slow-turning machines, giving it a whisper-light texture. In traditional tea houses and summer stalls, it’s served with reverence—sometimes even with a bow.

Summer Festivals & Memory

Kakigōri often appears at Japanese summer festivals (matsuri). The sight of blue banners with the kanji for “ice” (氷) is a signal: summer is here. For many Japanese people, the sound of the ice-shaving machine is linked to childhood and the feeling of a summer afternoon.

A Global Contrast

Where gelato is dense, rich, and designed to be savored slowly, kakigōri is fleeting—a moment that melts away, as poetic as the season it belongs to.

At Il Monello, we celebrate frozen traditions from around the world. And while our hearts are with gelato, we bow with respect to the quiet elegance of kakigōri.

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