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It has often been said that the Chinese
invented ice cream and that marco polo brought the idea to Europe
in the thirteenth century. This is more myth than historical
fact backed by evidence but it can be sated with some confidence
that ice cream was invented in China in the first milenium.
The process of freezing liquids by immersing them in a mixture
of ice and salt, which react together to lower the temperature
of the mixture below freezing point, was also invented in the
distant past - it was first documented in the thirteenth century.
This is how ice cream had to be made until the invention of
the freezer in the twentieth century. A vessel containing ice
and salt surrounds a container containing the ice cream mixture.
The temperature in the ice and salt mix drops, freezing the
container's contents. To ensure it freezes evenly, it is generally
stirred or rotated.
Since the method of producing ice cream depended on a supply
of ice, it was of limited use without that precious commodity.
Ice could be gathered from ponds and lakes, in winter, and the
storage of ice in ice wells and ice houses goes back several
centuries. By packing ice into an insulated underground chamber
with adequate drainage ice could be stored for months, sometimes
years. Ice remained a luxury and dependant on nature to produce
it, and cumbersome methods to harvest it.
Ice cream made with a milk mixture was first recorded in Europe
in Italy.. In England, the first recorded serving of this rare
luxury was in 1672, to King Charles II, whose table at a banquet
was served a delight denied to those sitting at more humble
tables. The first English cookery book to give a recipe was
Mrs Mary Eales Receipts of 1718. The recipe did not include
a process for making the ice smooth and it must hve been coarse
with ice crystals. Ice being rare, ice cream was a luxury for
the well off in all countries and had to be made and served
immediately, there being no way to store it for any great time.

The second half of the nineteenth century was the period in
which ice cream became a treat for ordinary people. Italy continued
to lead Europe in ice cremery and immigrants to the UK from
thee broughtwith them a tradition and expertise which led to
the popular name "Hokey Pokey" which is thought to derive from
a corruption of the Italian for "try a little". In other countries
too, especially the United States, ice cream gained popularity.
The commercial harvesting of ice in cold climates and its transport
to population centres was a growth area from the earl nineteenth
century. This ice trade made large volumes of ice available
at a realistic price and it became possible for ice cream sellers
to offer a taste of ice cream to the ordinary person. Ice was
sold on glasses which were wiped clean and re-used. These glass
"licks" remained in use in London until they were made illegal
in 1926 for reasons of public health. Ice cream edible cones
were first documented by Mrs Agnes Marshall in her book Fancy
Ices of 1894.
The first ice cream bicycles in London were used by Walls in
London in about 1923. Cecil Rodd of Walls came up with the slogan
"Stop Me and Buy One" after his experiments with doorstep selling
in London. In 1924 they expanded the business, setting up new
manufacturing facilities and ordering 50 new tricycles. Sales
in 1924 were £13,719, in 1927 £444,000. During the war years
(1939-45) manufacture of ice cream was severely curtailed, and
the tricycles requisitioned for use at military installations.
In October 1947 Walls sold 3,300 tricycles and invested in freezers
for shops.
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