A scoop of Messina's ice cream
Photograph: Katie Wlton
Photograph: Katie Wlton

The best gelato and ice cream in Sydney

Here's the scoop on the best icy cold treats in town

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Whether it’s a five-buck-number from your local servo or a smooth and silky scoop from an artisanal store, there’s no doubt about it, ice cream is happiness in one cool refreshing bite (or lick, because, well, sensitive teeth).

On a balmy afternoon or evening, a scoop of gelato or ice cream brings pure simple joy to those that hold it, and Time Out Sydney’s critics have rounded up the best in town.

As Sydney prepares for a belter of a summer, cool down with a two-scoop cone and lap up this delicious, sweet treat. You deserve it.

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The best gelato and ice cream in Sydney

  • Redfern
Ciccone and Sons Gelateria
Ciccone and Sons Gelateria

Redfern's Ciccone and Sons is a humble affair: just a long, thin room with bunting on the walls, a couple of little church pews to sit on, rock ’n’ roll on the stereo and a chest freezer with ice cream up the back. They don't go in for your five-flavour behemoths here – sometimes it's a double bill like in their popular buttermilk and passionfruit, or watermelon and rose – for the most part individual flavours are given room to shine, like cinnamon, almond, or coconut.

  • Ice cream and gelato
  • Darlinghurst

Messina is the fancy-dress party of gelato shops in Sydney. Sure, their salted caramel has been a mainstay for years, and we're pretty keen on the pandan coconut for a tropical refresher, but where the excitement comes in is Messina's hyper zeitgeisty flavours. Sometimes the list of flavours in a single scoop runs off the board, and their creative flair means choosing is never easy on any visit. You'll find Messina's HQ in Marrickville, and stores in Darlinghurst, Newtown, and far and wide.

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  • Freshwater

You might think it’s all cakes here but at the back of the store there is a range of fresh gelatos, made on the premises. The flavours change with the seasons but our pick is the cookies and cream, made from vanilla gelato tossed with their own crushed triple-choc cookies. Throw out your Connoisseur version immediately and just eat this. Why a beach suburb like Freshwater has taken this long to get a gelataria, we’ll never know.

  • Enmore

The queues here are well known, and they're all in line for one gelato in particular: the mandorla affogato. It won this gelateria World’s Best Gelato at 2014’s Gelato World Tour in Rimini, Italy, and it's stayed top of the order list ever since. But if coffee, toffee and almond aren't your speed, they do an amazing line in seasonal sorbets like nectarine, mandarin and watermelon, and they aren't afraid to get creative – how does gingerbread, lemon cheesecake or lychee and coconut sound?

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  • Avalon Beach
Chill Bar
Chill Bar

It feels like every beach should have a kickass gelateria, but not every one does. Avalon, however, knows the score. Let’s just get one thing straight, right off the bat: ‘Chill Bar’ is not an inspiring name (we’ve missed you, the 90s) but the gelato, thankfully, is anything but. It’s made onsite, and our picks are the white chocolate and raspberry, which contains freeze-dried fruit that adds texture and sour respite from the sweet cream; and the strawberry sorbet, which is smooth and light.

  • Darlinghurst

RivaReno does gelato the Sicilian way, even making sure to store the gelato in ‘pozzetti’ (covered, stainless steel containers). Because the pozzetti are lidded, it means you don't get that sense of the spectacular as you walk in (as per Messina) but they believe it keeps the gelato at exactly the right temperature, to ensure the flavour is at its freshest and the texture is silky. In addition to the original Darlinghurst shop, you'll also find RivaReno in Barangaroo and Parramatta.

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  • Ice cream and gelato
  • Newtown
  • price 1 of 4

Behind the sunny, yellow facade of this Italian gelateria, things are decidedly green. Of course, there’s nothing more sustainable than a cone, the packaging that is also a tasty snack, but if you like your ice cream in a cup, you’ll be glad to know the shop uses compostable containers. Your tasters come on wooden sticks or compostable spoons, and even your takeaway tubs will soon be available in recyclable containers. Plus, half of the 14 flavours are dairy-free.

  • Marrickville

All the gelatos in this Marrickville gelateria made with an old fashioned allegiance to fresh produce – so much so that they juice the mandarins from their own trees for a seasonal sorbetto. Real nuts are ground up to make their pistacchio gelato, and for a real scoop of La Dolce Vita order the  zabaglione, ice cream spiked with marsala, with a fine layer of Marsala-soaked sponge strewn over the top.

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  • Ice cream and gelato
  • Georges Hall
  • price 1 of 4

Tuscan co-owner Ferdinando (“Nando”) is more qualified than your everyday churner: he’s been making gelato for 17 years. Macadamia's the crowd favourite at his hidden gem of a suburban shop, but the ricotta and cinnamon is a must-try, as is the range of mostly vegan sorbet. Actually, scratch that – just try it all. No baroque, OTT flavour combos here, just proper Italian gelato that plays by the rules using high-quality ingredients and made with a whole lotta love.

  • Five Dock

It may look like a quiet suburban café during the day, but on Saturday nights the queues go round the block. If they’re not here for the thick, pudding-like hot chocolate, they’re certainly here for the gelato. Try the gelato burger. It’s two scoops of house-made gelato (we like the zabaglione flavour, which is rich and eggy), a dollop of whipped cream and a slick of Nutella sandwiched between a buttery brioche bun. It's like a sundae and a sandwich in one.

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  • Bondi Beach

Maybe it’s the sun, maybe it’s the sand, but grabbing a cone at Pompei’s before wandering down to the beach feels like a Sydney tradition that should never be lost. The pistachio is that classic combination of acidic green colour and sweet, robust flavour, and the chocolate sorbet (made with Tuscan Amedei chocolate no less) is equal parts refreshing and rich.

  • Chatswood
Gelateria Gondola
Gelateria Gondola

It may look ordinary from the outside, but this Chatswood gelateria is wholly wonderful. All the gelatos are made fresh in house and they aren't afraid to mix rich, creamy flavours with seasonal fruit. Try a pear and chocolate, passionfruit and marscapone, or boysenberry lavender crumble. Here for the classics? They're using 70 per cent Belgian chocolate and hazelnuts from Langhe in Italy.

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  • Newtown
Hakiki Turkish Ice Cream
Hakiki Turkish Ice Cream

Nev Bagriyanik and his wife Zeyneb opened their ice cream parlour to bring the traditional sweets of their hometown of Maras to the Inner West. Expect sour cherry, Turkish delight, date, pistachio and the simple combination of milk and sugar to flavour your iced confections. The difference here is that they use salep, a flour made from orchid root that gives Turkish ice cream its super tacky consistency.

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