Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
An ice cream bar is a frozen dessert featuring ice cream on a stick. The confection was patented in the US in the 1920s, with one invalidated in 1928 ...
Harry B. Burt (1875 – 1926) was an American confectioner who developed the ice-cream novelty known as the Good Humor bar. [1] Burt is widely credited with revolutionalizing manufacturing, marketing, and distribution techniques for ice-cream products. [2]
A choc ice (British English) or ice cream bar (American English) is a frozen dessert generally consisting of a rectangular block of ice cream—typically vanilla flavour—which is thinly coated with chocolate. Related products may also include other fillings with the ice cream and be styled similar to candy bars.
We tapped food historians to find out who really invented ice cream. The post The History of Ice Cream, One of the World’s Oldest Desserts appeared first on Reader's Digest.
Klondike began making ice cream treats more than 100 years ago, starting with their iconic vanilla ice cream bar. Today, they make several ice cream truck favorites, including the delicious Choco ...
Good Humor is a Good Humor-Breyers brand of ice cream started by Harry Burt in Youngstown, Ohio, United States, in the early 1920s with the Good Humor bar, a chocolate-coated ice cream bar on a stick sold from ice cream trucks and retail outlets. It was a fixture in American popular culture in the 1950s when the company operated up to 2,000 ...
Vanilla ice cream served on an ice cream cone Dame blanche (dessert). Vanilla is frequently used to flavor ice cream, especially in North America, Asia, and Europe. [1] Vanilla ice cream, like other flavors of ice cream, was originally created by cooling a mixture made of cream, sugar, and vanilla above a container of ice and salt. [2]
After experimenting with different ways to adhere melted chocolate to bricks of ice cream, Nelson began selling his invention, under the name I-Scream Bars. In 1921, he filed for a patent, and secured an agreement with local chocolate producer Russell C. Stover to mass-produce them under the new trademarked name "Eskimo Pie" (a name suggested ...