Ice templating, also often referred to as freeze casting or freezestructuring, is a very straightforward, simple, low-cost, and versatile process for the fabrication of highly porous scaffolds with an anisotropic pore structure. Due to the wide range of applications of scaffolds produced by ice templating, a large number of research articles and reviews exist, [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10] highlighting the increasing importance of this emerging process in recent years. Scaffolds with aligned porosity are highly interesting for various fields, from supercapacitors, [11][12][13][14] electrodes in batteries, [15,16] or thermal insulators [17,18] to biomaterials for tissue engineering, [19][20][21][22] 3D cell culture, [23] or as cell-containing solid-state scaffolds. [24] There are different ways of ice templating. [7] In the conventional unidirectional freezing method, a single temperature gradient is superimposed on the sample during freezing, whereby ice crystallization begins in a disordered manner on the cooled surface, resulting in a scaffold with an anisotropic structure in vertical direction and with several domains of different orientations in the horizontal plane. [25,26] A further possibility is bidirectional freezing, [26,27] where dual temperature gradients cause the ice to propagate both horizontally and vertically, resulting in a large-scale uniform scaffold structure. In addition, there are other approaches to influence the horizontal domain orientation, [7] such as radial, [28] magnetic, [29] electrical, [30] or ultrasonic freeze casting, [31] all of which lead to various morphologies of the resulting scaffolds and require different complex technical equipment. [7] This demonstrates the wide range of possibilities for the resulting scaffold morphology through the choice of an appropriate freezing process.A major advantage of unidirectional freezing is that this easyto-use process does not require complex and costly laboratory equipment. In general, a solution, suspension, or slurry is frozen in the presence of an external temperature gradient. Solutes are forced between the growing ice lamellae. After removal of the ice crystals by freeze drying, the scaffold represents a negative of the original ice morphology. [32] Consequently, a highly anisotropic porous sample is obtained. The morphological properties, such as vertical pore orientation or pore size of the scaffolds, play a decisive role depending on the application in which the scaffold is intended to be used. In terms of pore size, pores can be generated at different size scales, with pore diameters well above 100 μm being feasible. [33,34] Scaffolds, which are to be used as bone substitute materials in tissue engineering applications, may serve as an example. Values of at least 100 μm up to several hundred micrometers (> 300 μm) are considered optimal pore sizes for cell ingrowth, nutrient and