Ice Cream

Discussion in 'Good Eats' started by Bengal B, Apr 29, 2004.

  1. Bengal B

    Bengal B Founding Member

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    Ice Cream History and Folklore


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    Most of the following material has been extracted from "The History of Ice Cream", written by the International Association of Ice Cream Manufacturers (IAICM), Washington DC, 1978. As you will note below, however, much of the early history of ice cream remains unproven folklore.

    Once upon a time, hundreds of years ago, Charles I of England hosted a sumptous state banquet for many of his friends and family. The meal, consisting of many delicacies of the day, had been simply superb but the "coup de grace" was yet to come. After much preparation, the King's french chef had concocted an apparently new dish. It was cold and resembled fresh- fallen snow but was much creamier and sweeter than any other after- dinner dessert. The guests were delighted, as was Charles, who summoned the cook and asked him not to divulge the recipe for his frozen cream. The King wanted the delicacy to be served only at the Royal table and offered the cook 500 pounds a year to keep it that way. Sometime later, however, poor Charles fell into disfavour with his people and was beheaded in 1649. But by that time, the secret of the frozen cream remained a secret no more. The cook, named DeMirco, had not kept his promise.

    This story is just one of many of the fascinating tales which surround the evolution of our country's most popular dessert, ice cream. It is likely that ice cream was not invented, but rather came to be over years of similar efforts. Indeed, the Roman Emperor Nero Claudius Caesar is said to have sent slaves to the mountains to bring snow and ice to cool and freeze the fruit drinks he was so fond of. Centuries later, the Italian Marco Polo returned from his famous journey to the Far East with a recipe for making water ices resembling modern day sherbets.

    A newly published book, by Caroline Liddell and Robin Weir, Ices: The Definitive Guide, publ. by Hodder and Stoughton, 1993, ISBN 0-340-58335-5, suggests that the historical basis of these tales is skeptical.

    What follows is from the opening of the first chapter of their book:

    Most books are full of myths about the history of ice cream. According to popular accounts, Marco Polo (1254-1324) saw ice creams being made during his trip to China, and on his return, introduced them to Italy. The myth continues with the Italian chefs of the you Catherine de'Medici taking this magical dish to France when she went there in 1533 to marry the Duc d'Orleans, with Charles I rewarding his own ice-cream maker with a lifetime pension on condition that he did not divulge his secret recipe to anyone, thereby keeping ice cream as a royal perogative.

    Unfortunately, there is no historical evidence to support any of these stories. They would appear to be purely the creation of imaginative nineteenth-century ice-cream makers and vendors. Indeed, we have found no mention of any of these stories before the nineteenth century.

    They go on to refute the claims about Marco Polo, Catherine de'Medici, and Charles I (in particular, while the IAICM reference credits DeMirco as the Charles I chef, apparently while other various sources credit 10 different men, there are no records of such a pension being paid to any of Charles I's cooks).

    They do go on in their book to discuss history for which there is a record, with (I think) the earliest written record being something made in China.

    In 1774, a caterer named Phillip Lenzi announced in a New York newspaper that he had just arrived from London and would be offering for sale various confections, including ice cream. Dolley Madison, wife of U.S. President James Madison, served ice cream at her husband's Inaugural Ball in 1813.*

    The first improvement in the manufacture of ice cream (from the handmade way in a large bowl) was given to us by a New Jersey woman, Nancy johnson, who in 1846 invented the hand-cranked freezer. This device is still familiar to many. By turning the freezer handle, they agitated a container of ice cream mix in a bed of salt and ice until the mix was frozen. Because Nancy Johnson lacked the foresight to have her invention patented, her name does not appear on the patent records. A similar type of freezer was, however, patented on May 30, 1848, by a Mr. Young who at least had the courtesy to call it the "Johnson Patent Ice Cream Freezer".

    Commercial production was begun in North America in Baltimore, Maryland, 1851, by Mr. Jacob Fussell, now known as the father of the American ice cream industry.

    *For a biography of Dolley Madison at the Montpelier, VA site, see http://www.montpelier.org/ma-dolley.htm , or at the White House site, see http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/firstladies/dm4.html. An unsubstantiated (by me) story passed on to me regarding Dolley's discovery of ice cream goes like this: "Betty Jackson, a black woman from Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, established a tea room on French Street in Wilmington, Delaware, where she sold cakes, fruit, and desserts to wealthy people for their parties. Her son, Jeremiah Shadd, was a butcher, well-known for his ability to cure meat. His wife, known as Aunt Sallie Shadd, achieved legendary status among Wilmington's free black population as the inventor of ice cream. The story was that the butcher Jeremiah purchased Sallie's freedom. Like other members of her family, she went into the catering business and created a new dessert sensation made from frozen cream, sugar, and fruit. Dolly Madison, the wife of President James Madison, heard about the new dessert, came to Wilmington to try it, and afterward made ice cream a feature of dinners at the White House."

    About 1926 the first commercially-successful continuous process freezer was perfected. The continuous freezer, developed by Clarence Vogt, and later ones produced by other manufacturers, has allowed the ice cream industry to become a mass producer of its product. The first Canadian to start selling ice cream was Thomas Webb of Toronto, a confectioner, around 1850. William Neilson produced his first commercial batch of ice cream on Gladstone Ave. in Toronto in 1893, and his company produced ice cream at that location for close to 100 years.
     
  2. lsucurlyq

    lsucurlyq Founding Member

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    I've read that before....Ice cream is my weakness.
    What's everyone's favorite ice cream and by which brand?
     
  3. snorton938

    snorton938 Founding Member

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    publix keylime pie ice cream (it has pieces of keylime pie crust in it). :D
    close second place is godiva's dark chocolate ice cream.
     
  4. LSUTiga

    LSUTiga TF Pubic Relations

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    Homemade! The electric machines are great.......I can remember my grandmother putting a towel on the top for my sister and I to take turns sitting while the other turned, and turned, and turned. :(
     
  5. Deceks7

    Deceks7 Founding Member

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    The old hand crank is what made home made what it is. Electric...might as well just buy some. When I was little I remember it was a test of strength to keep on going when it got tough. Dad adding more ice in that old aquamarine fiberglass tub, sneaking out a piece of salted ice to refresh myself. The hard work is as much of the allure as the ice cream itself.
     
  6. PhilosophyAskew

    PhilosophyAskew Founding Member

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    My stepmom used to make a killer vanilla ice-cream. Man that stuff was good.:D
     
  7. captainpodnuh

    captainpodnuh Baseball at da Box

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    LSU Dairy Science used to make some pretty damn good ice cream.
     
  8. bhelmLSU

    bhelmLSU Founding Member Staff Member

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    Still does, the MBA school recieved some complementary ice cream the other day. :thumb:
     
  9. SabanFan

    SabanFan The voice of reason

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    What did it complement? Apple pie? :wink:
     
  10. PhilosophyAskew

    PhilosophyAskew Founding Member

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    I used to not eat chocolate ice cream until I tried some from the dairy store. That stuff will make you slap your mama it's so good.:hihi:
     
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