Who invented ice cream?

There are a number of different accounts of the one who invented ice cream cups. It is possible that all three are true. Adding the syrup to the ice cream could be spontaneously in several places. In addition, someone could think of food than data on different Sundae inventions, and it just didn't catch. Historians of ice cream look at three possible stories like the genesis of ice cream cups. Wisconsin Ed Berners of Two Rivers allegedly added syrup used for soda as icing for ice cream and charged a nickel for this result that pleased so many customers. Meanwhile, in Manitowoc in Wisconsin George Giffy, he also enjoyed the results of the new Berners confectionery, but he thought the nickel was too cheap. Giffs decided to serve ice cream cups only on Sunday. Later the name of Desser was intentionally misinterpreted to offend religious people who considered Sunday a special day.

Another date in HiIce cream is 1890, when Evanston, Illinois passed a law prohibiting soda water water on Sunday. Obviously, soda fountains could not produce ice cream people on Sundays or serve regular soda, but they could still serve syrup soda and ice cream. Few can agree on the first store or SODA to add syrup to ice cream in Illinois, but several Soda shops began to serve this delicious delicacy because of the ban.

Another account is later held in the history of ice cream, in 1893. Chester Platt, owned by Platta and Colta pharmacies in Ithace, New York, wanted to produce a special ice cream for one of its patrons, Reverend John Scott. He added cherry syrup to vanilla ice cream and culminated the results with the icing. The name, as you go, derived from the fact that this happened on Sunday.

Many food historians believe that the most trusted accounts are those that occur in two rivers and ithace. Yet the story of Evanston makes sense. In the beginningThe 20th century were ice cream cups in many parts of the US in fashion and ice cream salon, owners of soda and drug stores were increasingly invented with added types of watering. Hot Fudge was already a natural complement before the arrival of ice cream cups. The division of bananas, perhaps one of the most popular ice cream variants, has another disputed history, but was probably created in 1904 by David Evans Strickler in Tassel Pharmacy in Latrobe in Pennsylvania.

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