What Is the History of Ice Cream
Ice cream has been a popular treat that many see today as having developed relatively recently, as ice cream usually requires a form of refrigeration. While the modern form of ice cream is relatively more recent, the idea of ice cream has been present for millennia. Ice treats, which eventually gave us ice cream, were refreshing snacks usually reserved for elites or those who can obtain ice in times of warm or hot weather. The modern prevalence and look of ice cream can be traced to key developments in the industrial age, although its idea is much more ancient.
Early Developments
It is not clear when the idea of ice cream exactly developed. However, already by the 2nd millennium BC, around 1800 BC, records from the ancient Near East state of Mari indicate ice was being collected for refreshment during the hot months. An ice house was built in the city of Terqa, suggesting the ice would be stored there during the winter months, when it may have been brought down from the mountains, and then successfully stored during the warm season. In China, at about the same time or even earlier, flavored ice resembles modern sherbet, where fruit would be frozen and flavored with honey or other sweet tastes.
By the Achaemenid Persian period, around 500 BC, the Persians are depicted as using a type of grape concentrate, which they would then mix with ice to create a cold, grape-flavored treat. They would also use honey to give it a sweet taste. This seems to have been introduced to the Greeks after the invasion of Alexander, where records indicate the Greeks were doing similar things soon after Alexander's arrived in the region.[1]
Similar ice flavored treats continued in the Roman period. In Italy's mountains, ice harvesters would be sent to get ice during the colder months, and the ice would then be brought to Rome or other cities. Icehouses, which sometimes had underground chambers to keep cool and were large in places, were used to preserve the ice. The ice, when it was consumed, was flavored with fruits and juices to create something akin to what we would call a slushy (i.e., mostly flavored ice) or sherbet or sorbet, similar to what was evident in ancient China.[2]
Only in the 16th century, the texture of what we call ice cream began to appear. By this time, or perhaps in the 16th century, flavored ice was mixed with milk and cream. The presence of ice cream likely came via the Silk Road, or it has been mentioned from the period of Marco Polo (Figure 1). Eventually, when sugar came from the New World, it was also mixed with the flavored ice, milk, and cream combination to create the taste and look of ice cream we are more familiar with.
The use of cream mixed with ice helped create the name "ice cream" or "iced cream" as it was initially known. This innovation probably came via Italy and France, where it spread to the rest of Europe. However, having ice required having ice houses, which were not common. Thus it was mostly a type of treatment for royalty or consumed by upper elites of society and not widely available.[3]
Key Changes
In France, by the 17th century, cafe culture began to spread, where these shops offered coffee and tea. However, ice cream began to appear on menus in some of the wells to do cafes that could afford to keep ice. Recipes for ice cream also appeared, which spread interest in making ice cream and encouraged experimentation. Thickening agents were now introduced to ice cream in the 16th century, such as using seaweed. Eating ice cream with strawberries and milk was considered a treat, leading to strawberries being a popular flavor associated with ice cream. [4]
The 18th century saw the expansion of ice cream, where many shops and ice cream makers now operated. During the colonial period, ice cream was introduced to the United States, perhaps via Quakers who brought their recipe books with them as they came to the colonies. Ice cream soon caught on in popularity, as many of the founding fathers in the United States widely consumed ice cream. In the summer of 1790, George Washington spent $200 on ice cream. Thomas Jefferson had a well-known 18-step recipe for creating ice cream. In the inauguration of James Madison, ice cream was served to guests.[5]
Around 1800, ice house insulation improved dramatically, which allowed them to be even colder. The improved technology expanded the number of ice houses. The wider presence of ice houses allowed ice cream to spread across the United States, Europe, and the Middle East in the early part of the 19th century(Figure 2). In the rest of the century, several technologies began to facilitate the production of ice cream. These included steam power, mechanical refrigeration, homogenizer, electric power and motors, packing machines, and improvements in the freezing process.
The hand-cranked churn was an important innovation in the 1840s that gave the ice cream a smoother look. Jacob Fussell, a Quaker from Baltimore, created an ice cream business by selling ice cream at a larger scale, introducing wider commercial processing and selling of ice cream. He was able to streamline the procurement of milk from dairy farmers, and he often had a surplus of cream that he would then begin to use for ice cream. The popularity of his brand caught on and spread as he was able to distribute his product widely. [6]
It was during the 1870s that the sundae developed. At that time, ice cream had now become prevalent. Experimentation on new ice creams was common, and one of this added soda with ice cream and fruits and other sweet toppings. However, there was a backlash on eating such foods on a Sunday, a religious day, so the innovators took out the soda water, and the mixture of ice creams and toppings was eventually called the sundae, although it was spelled Sunday initially (changed to avoid criticism from religiously minded people).
The use of soda water with ice cream, however, did catch on. The ice cream cone was popularized in 1888 by Agnes Marshall in her recipe book, where she called these cones cornets. Likely, ice cream cones were already known, but her book did make the idea of ice cream cones more known, mostly because of her influence at the time in things related to cooking and food.[7]
Modern Ice Cream
The key change to ice cream was an improvement in electrified refrigeration, or specifically freezing, that spread after World War II globally. The need for having to obtain ice became unneeded after the 1870s. This was because of the development of the electrified freezing process. However, the technology was not perfected until the 1920s, which became the continuous-process freezer, that enabled ice cream to become more easily made and become globally prevalent. Electrification in many regions became only widespread after World War II, which meant that ice cream only became common for many regions after the war.
Throughout the 20th century, new developments in various flavors and types, such as the banana split (introduced in 1904), emerged. Another important innovation was the use of more air in the cream and ice mixture, which created a "softer" looking ice cream or what we call soft ice cream today. The ice cream company Dairy Queen seems to have brought this innovation. Seaweed and other agents are still used for thickening; agar is now more commonly used as an emulsifier to help give the ice cream a greater consistency.[8]
Conclusion
It is impossible to imagine ice cream without freezers or refrigeration of some sort; however, the origin of ice cream is much more ancient, going back thousands of years to the ancient Near East and China. Because ice was not easily obtained or made, ice cream was considered food for royalty or upper elites who can obtain ice, particularly in warm seasons. Improvement in ice houses, and general technology development in the 19th century, led to the development of ice cream being more spread. However, with refrigeration, ice cream could now be created without ice on hand, leading to the widespread presence of ice cream. Key developments of emulsifiers, thickeners, and mixing technologies have also led to the texture we are accustomed to.
References
- ↑ For more on early ice cream consumption in the ancient world, see: Weiss, L. B. (2011). Ice Cream: A Global History. London: Reaktion Books, pg. 19.
- ↑ For more on Roman ice houses and ice cream, see: Vear, B., & Cooper, M. (2013). Ice Cream and Other Frozen Delights. Bath: Absolute Press, pg. 12.
- ↑ For more on Europe's history of ice cream, see: Quinzio, J. (2009). Of Sugar and Snow: A History of Ice Cream Making. University of California Press.
- ↑ For more on ice cream's spread to more common classes, see: Arnold, S. J. (2004). Everybody Loves Ice Cream: The Whole Scoop on America’s Favorite Treat. Cincinnati, Ohio: Emmis Books, pg. 14.
- ↑ For more on the early history of ice cream in the United States, see: DeWitt, D. (2010). The Founding Foodies: How Washington, Jefferson, and Franklin Revolutionized American Cuisine. Naperville, Ill: Sourcebooks.
- ↑ For more on 19th-century ice cream developments, see: Clarke, C. (2012). The Science of Ice Cream (2nd ed). Cambridge: RSC Publ.
- ↑ For more on how flavors and types of ice creams developed, see: Funderburg, A. C. (1995). Chocolate, Strawberry, and Vanilla: A History of American Ice Cream. Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green State University Popular Press.
- ↑ For more on 20th-century developments, see: Goldstein, D. (Ed.). (, 2015). The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets. Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press, pg. 348.
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