The snack that's cold, hot, and overly complicated (2024)

A history of baked and fried ice cream, from Thomas Jefferson to the World’s Fair to Chi-Chi’s

Hello, Snackers. Let’s talk about a food fight that’s been going on since the 1860s or maybe earlier: What’s the origin of baked and fried ice cream? It gets weird and complicated—exactly how we like our history here at Snack Stack.

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The first time I had fried ice cream was at a Chi-Chi’s Mexican restaurant just off Interstate 94 in St. Paul, Minnesota, around 1990. I remember almost nothing about the meal other than the barest outlines: I ate a taco or two (hard shell, ground beef) and then we (Who? I don’t remember) shared a dessert of fried ice cream. The lightly crunchy exterior was covered with a squiggly lattice of chocolate sauce and honey; the whole thing was topped with a frilly crown of whipped cream and a maraschino cherry.

It was too sweet and honestly not really my thing, but it was beguiling nonetheless, thanks to its sheer intrigue of something so cold inside something so hot. The combination seemed impossible.

Over the last thirty or so years, I’ve encountered other variations on the same theme, in the form of baked Alaska and tempura ice cream. But I had never thought to stop and consider the origin story. Who was the first mad scientist to try cooking ice cream inside something else?

When I finally did the research, it turned out to be even more complicated and contentious than I ever imagined.

* * *

First things first: fried ice cream is not Mexican. As far as I can tell, Chi-Chi’s just thought it sounded vaguely exotic and added it to their menu when the chain started in 1975, at a time when Tex-Mex was taking off as a food trend. Tex-Mex is its own glorious and authentic thing (read this from Texas Monthly if you have doubts) and involves all kinds of adaptations and riffs on its south-of-the-border roots. But even by these standards, Chi-Chi’s was a whole different thing: a chain restaurant with a menu forged in the chain-restaurant factory, with cheesecake and Mexican pizza and, well, fried ice cream. (After peaking with more than 200 restaurants, mostly in the Midwest, Chi-Chi’s folded in the USA in the early 2000s but it endures in Bruges and Vienna. I had like 5,000 more words on this specific topic but deleted them for purposes of staying focused on ice cream.)

Anyway! Fried ice cream at Mexican and Tex-Mex restaurants is probably a legacy of Chi-Chi’s in the 1970s, so we can take that off our list of origin stories.

The other possibilities you’ll usually find in the internet’s various histories of fried ice cream (like this one) are:

  • A confectioner in Philadelphia in 1894

  • The 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago

* * *

Let’s start with the Philly version.

The archival evidence is quite clear that there was, indeed, someone—though we don’t know an exact name—in that city who claimed to have invented fried ice cream in the spring of 1894. There were stories about it all over the USA (similar in tone to modern articles on, say, the Cronut), including this one from The Roanoke Times, reprinted from The New York Times:

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All of the ensuing coverage of fried ice cream focused on the same thing that had impressed me as a kid: the novelty of it all. In their attempts to find new angles on the craze, reporters sometimes got weird. A writer in the Mount Caramel Register, in Illinois, put an oddly misogynistic spin on it in April 1894:

Our poor young men are to be made poorer. The ice cream girl has heretofore been content with plain ice cream, but now there is fried ice cream and baked ice cream, and she will have them. The misery wrought in this world by untimely inventions cannot be measured.

Four years later, an essay in The Boston Cooking School, titled “Cooking as a Fine Art,” placed fried ice cream in a grand historic context:

Cooking a peaco*ck with its feathers on may be a lost art, but it certainly was a fine art, if fine feathers count. The fried ice-cream of our day may be as a great a novelty, but it is not so gorgeous.

It’s clear there was a genuine food trend going on here, one that lasted for decades. I found ads for offering fried ice cream businesses as a get-rich-quick enterprise throughout the early decades of the twentieth century, all the way through 1939, when a classified ads ran in Popular Mechanics (“You prepare it, people fight for it. 98% profit”).

All the reporting and all the hype—the whole trend of fried ice cream—seems to have started with the shop in Philadelphia in 1884. As for the claim that fried ice cream originated a year earlier, at the World’s Fair in Chicago, there appear to be no mentions of the food in the ample coverage of that mega-event, and the first time anyone proposed this possible origin was a piece in The Ice Cream Trade Journal in 1909. So we’ll give this one to Philadelphia.

But there’s more to the story.

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* * *

Before there was fried ice cream, there was baked ice cream—the former is a clear adaptation of the latter.

We know, for instance, that Thomas Jefferson ate a form of baked ice cream when he was president, as a dinner guest documented at the time:

Washington, February 10, 1802. ‘On Tuesday I wrote that I was going to dine with the President [Jefferson]. The party was easy and sociable, as all these parties are. Among other things ice-creams were produced in the form of balls of the frozen material inclosed in covers of warm pastry, exhibiting a curious contrast, as if the ice had just been taken from the oven.

(I’m not sure who the chef was on this particular occasion, although James Hemings—Jefferson’s personal chef for many years—died in 1801, so it wasn’t him; it’s possible the recipe built on his cooking and French training.)

We also know that Baked Alaska came along in 1867. The Food Timeline, citing the Oxford English Dictionary, credits a New York chef named Charles Ranhofer with creating the first version of the dish, and giving it that name, in honor of the USA’s purchase of what would become the forty-ninth state.

But this turns out to be an interesting time for baked ice cream, because across the Atlantic, chefs had already started experimenting with similar foods. The iconic culinary encyclopedia Larousse Gastronomique, published in 1938, cites an 1866 newspaper column from Paris about a variation on this dish that was starting to catch on:

it was the master-cook of the Chinese Mission, visiting Paris at the time who, if not invented, at least popularised this paradoxical omelette, which combines the cold and hot…’During the stay of the Chinese Mission in Paris, the master-cooks of the Celestial Empire have exchanged civilities and information with the chefs of the Grand Hotel.

So Chinese chefs introduced baked ice cream dishes to Parisian diners in 1866. A year later, Ranhofer started making Baked Alaska. And back in Paris, a new slew of stories emerged, crediting Japanese chefs at the Grand Hotel and Japanese embassy with pioneering a new hot-meets-cold dessert:

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The parallels between the accounts are striking. Do we really think that both Chinese and Japanese chefs at the Grand Hotel and embassies in Paris created this dish independently and within a year of each other? Or do we have yet another example of white journalists being kinda racist and ignorant and getting Japanese and Chinese people mixed up? I’m guessing the latter!

A few newspaper stories I found from 1867 say that the baked ice cream developed at the Grand Hotel made its way to the World’s Fair in Paris that year. This might explain the origins of the claim that fried ice cream came from the Chicago World’s Fair, decades later—it seems entirely plausible that someone somewhere got mixed up in their understanding of quirky desserts and World’s Fairs. It also may also provide a clue as to how Charles Ranhofer got his idea for Baked Alaska: this is pure speculation, but it seems plausible that he heard about the new treat in Paris and tweaked it to create his own version, which he then marketed aggressively.

* * *

Last thing. I’m not sure how much credence to give this, because when I try to fact-check it, I find nothing conclusive. But, with that caveat, there was at least one person going “WELL, ACTUALLY” to the newspaper stories in 1867. From the Detroit Free Press:

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Arguing about food in the comments section, it turns out, is a pastime humans have loved for centuries.

Thanks to photographer extraordinaire Kirsten Alana for suggesting this topic! If you have an idea for a future Snack Stack post, please get in touch with me at hello@snackstack.net or drop me a line on Twitter @douglasmack.

Doug Mack, Snack Fan

Happy snacking and thanks for reading! If you liked this, you’ll probably also like this post on the origins of seven-layer dip or this one on the roots of Chinese chicken fingers. Check out the Snack Stack Table of Contents right over here to see what other foods we’ve covered … and please subscribe to get more posts in your inbox!

The snack that's cold, hot, and overly complicated (2024)

FAQs

What happens if you eat hot and cold food together? ›

Cold and hot food can increase your body temperature.

That's because of its high fat and protein content, which heat the body up while you digest the food. Also, your body puts in much more energy to digest the fat, an effort that increases your temperature and makes you feel hotter.

What is hot food and cold food? ›

Foods are classified into cold, cool, warm and hot according to their effect on the body: those can raise the body's inner heat, improve the circulation and nourish the energy of body are warm or hot foods; while those can calm the blood, clear toxins and reduce heat, conversely, cold or cool foods [4].

Is the saying keep hot foods hot and cold foods cold true? ›

To put it simply, hot foods must stay hot (above 140°F) and cold foods must stay cold (below 40°F). When foods are held between 40 and 140°F, bacteria can grow rapidly to levels that can cause you or your guests to get sick.

What is the 2 hour rule for food? ›

Remember the 2-Hour Rule: Discard any perishables left out at room temperature for more than 2 hours, unless you're keeping it hot or cold. If the buffet is held in a place where the temperature is above 90 °F, the safe holding time is reduced to 1 hour. Watch the clock with leftovers, too!

Is eating hot and cold food together bad teeth? ›

When hot and cold foods touch these exposed parts of teeth, it will cause pain. Cavity: The same process that wears away tooth enamel also creates cavities. Bacteria tend to sink into valleys and hard-to-reach places on teeth. The acids they produce collect here and form small holes in teeth.

What happens if you mix hot and cold? ›

When the waters are mixed the temperature ends up somewhere between the two initial temperatures. You might ask: "Has anything stayed the same during the mixing?" Because the masses of water are different the temperature changes should not be equal.

What is hot and cold holding of food? ›

Hot-holding equipment must be able to keep foods at 135°F or higher. Cold-holding equipment must be able to keep foods at 41°F or colder. way to avoid discarding too much food is to prepare and cook only as much as you will use in a short time.

What is the Chinese hot cold theory? ›

In Chinese Medicine, the key to optimum health is to eat foods that balance the energy in your body. Decrease excess heat with cooling foods, and reduce dampness with drying foods. Achieving balance is the best way to prevent disease and mental disharmony.

What are hot cold and neutral foods? ›

For example, ginger is regarded as a hot food, and watermelon is regarded as a cold food. Wheat is thought to be neutral. The balance of hot and cold components in the diet is considered vital to good health because an excess of either is believed to result in body imbalance recognized as diseases [2].

What keeps food warm all day? ›

Maintain food temperature with these appliances
  • Warming oven. This type of oven does exactly what you might guess: keeps cooked food warm until it's ready to serve. ...
  • Warming drawers. These drawers serve the same purpose as a warming oven, but they take up less space. ...
  • Slow cooker. ...
  • Rice cooker. ...
  • Chafing dishes. ...
  • Heat lamps.
Feb 1, 2024

Why should you never put really hot foods in the refrigerator? ›

Dangerous bacterial growth occurs between 41 and 135 degrees F (5 and 57 degrees C). This spectrum is known as the danger zone for foods. Potentially harmful bacteria grow most rapidly at these temperatures. Placing large batches of hot foods in the fridge can push the temperature of the fridge into this danger zone.

What is the danger zone for food? ›

Bacteria grow most rapidly in the range of temperatures between 40 ° and 140 °F, doubling in number in as little as 20 minutes. This range of temperatures is often called the "Danger Zone." That's why the Meat and Poultry Hotline advises consumers to never leave food out of refrigeration over 2 hours.

What is the 2 2 2 rule for food? ›

Non-profit organisation Love Food, Hate Waste recommends the 2:2:2 rule. Two hours to get them in the fridge. Two days to eat them once they're in there. Or freeze them for up to two months.

What is the 30 second rule for food? ›

According to Hilton, moist foods that are left on the floor for more than 30 seconds are contaminated with 10 times more bacteria than food that has been left on the floor for 3 seconds.

Is it bad to heat and cool food? ›

Properly heating, cooling, and refreezing food is all about avoiding the Temperature Danger Zone (between 40 ° and 140 °F) or the window where bacteria grow most rapidly. Within this range, they have the ability to double in number in as little as 20 minutes. Here's how to avoid that with each temperature transfer.

Why are we advised to not eat cold food after hot food? ›

Bacteria grow most rapidly in the range of temperatures between 40 °F and 140 °F and the bacteria can double in 20 minutes from the cold end going up.

What happens if you drink hot and cold at the same time? ›

Is drinking a hot and cold beverage at the same time dangerous? - Quora. In theory, switching between hot & cold drinks VERY fast will put more thermal stresses on your teeth, making it not such a great idea. There's a TINY possibility this can dislodge fillings or crack a tooth.

What happens to your teeth when you eat hot food and drink something cold? ›

The enamel covering your teeth responds to extreme temperature changes by expanding and contracting. When you drink something cold, the enamel contracts rapidly. Repeated cycles of expansion and contraction from hot and cold beverages can lead to microscopic cracks in the enamel.

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