Ice cream was invented in China
Many of us might assume that ice cream originated in Italy, due to the reputable richness of proper Italian gelato. In fact, ice cream made specifically with milk, the concept that we know of today, was a Chinese concoction from around 200 CE. It was brought to Europe (via Italy) over 1,000 years later by explorer Marco Polo.
July is National Ice Cream Month
In 1984, in recognition of the American peopleâs penchant for the dessert, US president Ronald Reagan declared July National Ice Cream Month, with National Ice Cream Day to be celebrated on the third Sunday. Interestingly, Sunday is also the day of the week on which people consume the most ice cream, which by some extension, is believed to be the etymology of the word âsundaeâ.
Iran makes noodle ice cream
Faloodeh is a unique Iranian dessert with its origins way back in the Persian Empire, consisting of starch vermicelli noodles semi-frozen in a mixture of rose water and syrup. It sounds pretty Middle Eastern â the flavor combination not being too far off that of baklava and Turkish delight â and to top it off, this sorbet-like treat is garnished with lime juice, saffron, or naturally, chopped nuts.
It takes a weighty 12 pounds of milk to make one gallon of ice cream
(Or, if youâre imperial-illiterate, 5.4 kilograms to make 4.5 liters.) Not a particularly worldly fact, but just for fun, consider this⌠A single cow can produce 64 pounds of milk in one day. This means that, if you had just one cow, you could open up a small ice cream shop and sell up to 5.3 gallons of goodness each day.
A Norwegian company made the biggest ice cream cone ever
They love their ice cream in Norway, and in 2015, ice cream company Hennig-Olsen set a new record for the biggest ice cream cone. The 110-kilogram cone topped with 1,080 liters of ice cream was three meters and eight centimeters in height, and could have provided 10,800 two-scoop servings. What flavor was it? Vanilla with strawberry and chocolate toppings, which seems â letâs be honest â inconsistently ordinary.
Vanilla ice cream is, statistically, the most Instagrammable
Itâs unsurprising that classic vanilla is the most popular ice cream flavor around the world, and it probably will be forever. But last year, some indulgent research found that despite its plain appearance, it even goes so far as being the most Instagrammed flavor. Hashtags containing the words âvanilla ice creamâ totaled 439,108 at the time of the research. Bright green matcha (thatâs more like it) came in second with 315,714 hashtags, only just overtaking chocolate with 301,979.
Youâll find some of the weirdest ice cream flavors in Japan
While vanilla is universally inoffensive, the Namjatown indoor amusement park in Tokyo features a joint called Ice Cream City, where you can sample some bizarre and some downright stomach-churning flavors of ice cream. Donât be fooled by the adorable presentation â wrap your taste buds around basil, eggplant, oyster, eel, beef tongue, or even âcoalâ and âIndian curryâ ice cream. In all fairness, this is exactly the kind of thing youâd expect in Japan, the place of the possible.