

Ice Is the Main Character: Trays, Cubes, and Garnish Energy
Ice is the main character in modern drinks, from large cubes and well-designed trays to thoughtful garnish choices. This Glassette edit explains why ice matters, how different cube sizes affect flavour and dilution, and which tools are actually worth owning. Practical, design-led guidance for better drinks at home, whether you’re hosting dinner, making a quiet evening G&T, or upgrading your everyday rituals with minimal effort.


Ice is the main character now. Not an afterthought rattling around at the bottom of the glass, but a design decision, one that shapes how a drink looks, melts, tastes, and feels in the hand. In a moment where hosting has become quieter, more intentional, and more design-aware, ice is the main character in the ritual of modern drinks.
This isn’t about mixology theatrics or complicated bar setups. It’s about trays that freeze cleanly, cubes that hold their shape, and garnishes that feel considered rather than try-hard. When ice is good, everything else follows.
What makes ice feel “designed” (not fussy)
Designed ice is quiet. It’s clear or softly opaque, evenly sized, slow to melt. It doesn’t clatter or cloud the drink. It supports what’s in the glass rather than competing with it.
A few principles worth knowing:
Bigger cubes melt slower and dilute less.
Silicone trays release cleanly but need structure to freeze evenly.
Garnish should echo what’s already in the drink, citrus with citrus, herbs with botanicals.


The Glassette rules for good ice
1. Size matters more than shape
One large cube beats novelty shapes every time. It looks calmer and performs better.
2. Clear beats clever
Unless you’re freezing botanicals on purpose, cloudy ice reads accidental.
3. Garnish is not decoration
If it doesn’t add aroma or balance, skip it.
4. Fewer tools, better tools
One excellent tray you actually use beats five novelty moulds.
5. Ice lives with glassware
Keep trays, tongs, and scoops together. If it’s easy, you’ll do it well.
Trays, cubes, and formats - what to use when
Large cubes (negronis, old fashioneds, sipping drinks)
Slow melt, steady temperature, minimal dilution. Ideal for drinks you linger over.
Medium cubes (G&Ts, spritzes, highballs)
Enough surface area to chill quickly without watering everything down.
Crushed or cracked ice (palomas, juleps, summer sodas)
Texture matters here, softer, colder, more refreshing. Use sparingly.
Editorial pick: A structured silicone tray with a rigid frame freezes more evenly than floppy moulds. Look for straight edges and generous spacing.