
I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream! July 1st marks National Creative Ice Cream Flavors Day, a day to sample or wonder about the odd combinations of ice cream flavors. Skip the traditional chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry ice cream when you celebrate this holiday!
- 5th Century BC – Ice cream was first invented in the 5th Century BC by the Ancient Greeks
- 1665 – English memoirist Lady Anne Fanshawe’s recipe for orange blossom ice cream is documented.
- 1780s – Thomas Jefferson writes his own recipe for vanilla ice cream, a conventional favorite.
- 1851 – Industrial production of ice cream began in 1851 in Boston, United States.
- 1881 – A variation of ice cream, known as the sundae — which is vanilla ice cream with various syrups, garnish, and decorations — is born.
- 1984 – National Creative Ice Cream Flavors Day is celebrated on the first day of National Ice Cream Month, which was declared by President Ronald Reagan in 1984.
- Mitchell’s Ice Cream Their salted butter sweet corn layers the flavors on your tongue. And their jalapeno strawberry has just the right combo of heat and sweet.
- Another great shop churning out wacky flavors is Ample Hills Creamery in New York City. With two locations plus seasonal kiosks, they are sure to satisfy some flavor-seeking tastebuds.
- Ben & Jerry’s receive more than 13,000 flavor suggestions from fans each year? They have published some of the weirdest suggestions they have received.
- The largest worldwide consumption of ice cream is in the United States. On average a person consumes 48 pints of ice cream per year.
- According to statistical data collected, Wisconsin has eaten more ice cream than any other state.
- 90% of American households eat ice cream.
- California is the largest producer of ice cream in the United States.
- The most popular flavor of ice cream is vanilla. Next are chocolates, strawberry, cookies n’ cream
- One of the most unusual ice cream flavors is hot dog flavored ice cream that was created in Arizona, US.
- There are over 1,000 flavors of ice cream and many more keep getting each year.
- Hawaii is a home to an “ice cream bean”, a fruit that tastes like vanilla ice cream.
- One cone of ice cream can be finished off in 50 licks.
- Ice cream “Brain Freeze” effect is triggered when cold ice touches the roof of your mouth, which causes blood vessels in the head to dilate.
- “Edible inventor” Charlie Harry Francis has created a champagne-flavored ice cream that is laced with 25 mg of Viagra.
- Charles the First of England paid his chef £500 a year to keep his ice cream recipe a secret.
- Wavering between ice cream and a cocktail? You can have both; chefs have concocted alcoholic ice creams with tequila, whiskey, and bourbon, among others.
- A shop in Ireland serves a caramelized-brown-bread flavored ice cream. It was invented during hard times when Irish folk were hesitant to waste old bread and found ways to transform it into desserts.
- In Tokyo, Japan, you can find ice cream flavored with octopus, shrimp, horseflesh, and cow tongue.
- A chocolate emporium in Maine serves a butter-flavored ice cream with chunks of lobster meat in it.
- Sunni Sky’s Homemade Ice Cream has a “cold sweat” ice cream with peppers so hot that you have to sign a waiver before they will sell it to you.
- The popular phrase, “I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream” comes from a song written by Howard Johnson, Billy Moll and Robert King in 1927.
- The first ice cream produced in Japan made use of ice and salt taken from the city streets of Yokohama.
- Pecans are the most popular nut chunk in the US, and strawberries are the most popular fruit chunk.
- New Zealanders love ice cream, averaging 22 liters (5.8 Gallons) of ice cream per person each year. Their favorites are vanilla and “hokey pokey,” which is vanilla with toffee chunks.
- Rocky Road was originally marketed during the Great Depression as a metaphor for coping with the economic crash.
- Ice cream sales tend to increase during times of economic recession.
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