The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

THESCOOPON­ICECREAM

July is National Ice Cream Month, so enjoy these facts about your favorite frozen treat. Try not to read them all at once, though: You wouldn’t want to get brain freeze.

- | THE SPOKESMAN-REVIEW By Charles Apple

Frozen origins

Frozen desserts have been around longer than reliable written records. So while we’ve compiled what we could find, please take this timeline history with a grain of, um, sprinkles.

200 B.C.

Early Chinese eat an ice cream-like food by mixing milk and rice and packing the result into snow to freeze it.

68-54 B.C.

Roman emperor Nero reportedly sends slaves into the mountains to bring back fresh snow that is then flavored with nectar, fruit pulp or honey.

800-900 A.D.

Arabs drink an icy refreshmen­t called sharabt, or sherbet, flavored with cherry, pomegranat­e or quince. During medieval times, these will catch on in Europe and, in particular, Italy.

618-907 A.D.

Something very similar to ice cream is first eaten in China when King T’ang of Shang employs 94 ice men who make a dish out of cow, goat or buffalo milk, flour and camphor — the latter of which is harvested from evergreen trees and added for flavor. The mixture is placed in a metal tube and lowered into an ice pool until it freezes.

1295

Explorer Marco Polo reportedly sees something like ice cream being made during his trip to China and then brings the idea back to Italy.

1649

King Charles I of England reportedly offers his chef £500 a year to keep his ice cream recipe a secret from the rest of England. When the chef breaks the agreement, Charles reportedly has the chef beheaded.

1642-92

Antonio Latini, who works for the Spanish Viceroy in Naples, creates a milk-based sorbet and — more important, perhaps — puts his recipe into writing.

1686

Sicilian chef Procopio Cutò opens the first café in Paris, Il Procope. His place becomes a famous meeting place — Victor Hugo, Benjamin Franklin and Napoleon are among his frequent customers. In that café, Cutò begins selling gelato — the Italian version of sorbet — in small porcelain bowls that look like egg cups. At about that same time, French chefs begin working with a dessert they call fromage: Ices flavored with fruit and stirred while freezing to force air into the mixture making it fluffier. No cheese is used in fromage, which makes it unclear why it was called that (“fromage” being the French word for “cheese.”)

1744

A group of dignitarie­s dines at the home of Maryland governor Thomas Bladen. One later raves about the ice cream Bladen’s staff served, along with strawberri­es and milk.

1790

The first ice cream parlor opens in New York. That year, it is reported that George Washington spent $200 on ice cream. Thomas Jefferson is such an ice cream fanatic that he keeps several ice houses at his Virginia home, Monticello — enough to hold the equivalent of 62 wagonloads of ice — in order to make ice cream.

1843

Nancy M. Johnson of Philadelph­ia patents her “artificial freezer” for making ice cream. This consists of a tub, a cylinder, a lid, a dasher and a crank. This design is still used today.

1851

Jacob Fussell, a dairy operator in Baltimore, finds himself with a surplus of cream from his operation. He is inspired to open the first commercial ice cream factory.

1880

Ice cream sundaes are invented in Evanston, Ill., when it becomes illegal for soda fountains to sell ice cream sodas there on Sundays. Soda jerks replace the soda with syrup and call the result a “sundae” — intentiona­lly misspellin­g “Sunday” to avoid upsetting the religious folks.

1904

The ice cream cone is invented when an ice cream vendor at the St. Louis World’s Fair runs out of clean dishes. A Syrian waffle dealer at the booth next door, Ernest E. Hamwi, helps out by rolling waffles so the ice cream vendor can scoop ice cream into them.

1920

A boy walks into a candy store in Onawa, Iowa, owned by Danish immigrant Christian Kent Nelson, and can’t make up his mind between ice cream or a chocolate bar. Nelson is inspired to create what will become known as the Eskimo Fudge Pie.

1939

Italian dictator Benito Mussolini bans ice cream from Italy because its popularity in America has made it an unofficial symbol of the U.S.

1943

The largest ice cream manufactur­er in the world is now the U.S. Armed Forces.

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