Oyster ice cream

Oyster ice cream is a flavor of ice cream. Described as having a savory taste, the ice cream flavor has been offered at a number of oyster festivals.

History

Although it is commonly believed that oyster ice cream was invented in 1842, it was already in existence decades earlier. First Lady Dolley Madison served it in the White House around the 1810s.[1] In 1824, a recipe for it was given in Mary Randolph's cookbook, The Virginia Housewife.[2]

When oyster ice cream was first introduced, it was deemed a luxury food that only the "upper classes" could indulge in, because ice was scarce and difficult to find.[3] It was also thought that eating oysters and ice cream together would be bad for one's health; some investigators in the 1930s claimed that this belief was unfounded.[4]

Preparation and description

According to chef and restaurateur José Andrés, oyster ice cream is made by "gently heating oysters and cream", before freezing the product.[3] Food historian Robert Brantley describes the oyster ice cream of the 1800s as “[e]ssentially...frozen oyster chowder. They served it unsweetened, with the oysters strained out."[2] Oyster ice cream has a savory flavor as opposed to a sweet one.[3]

Reception

Lorraine Eaton of The Virginian-Pilot wrote that one of her colleagues at work "had nearly thrown up" after tasting Eaton's homemade oyster ice cream; others had favorable criticism for the ice cream flavor.[5]

Mention of oyster ice cream is made in Mark Twain's novel The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. The ice cream flavor was well-liked by the author.[3] One tale, though deemed a myth, has it that oyster ice cream was "George Washington's favorite."[5] Two varieties of oyster ice cream were featured at the Colchester Oyster Festival in Colchester, Essex, in September 2012.[6] "Oyster-and-ginger" ice cream was served at the 23rd Oyster Festival in Arcata Main Street in June 2013.[7][8]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.