Before modern refrigeration, ice cream and frozen desserts were a treat only for the wealthy, as ice was a true luxury item. Not until the late-nineteenth century did ice cream become a widely consumed confection in the United States, when more modern technologies made it possible to keep foods frozen at cheaper prices. Before this, ice creams were often served as elegant and exciting desserts at presidential dinners and high-society soirees in specialty glasses or carved and/or piped into fanciful shapes.
Since then, ice cream has transformed into the treat we know and love today, served in scoops alongside birthday cakes, atop giant cones, or in parfait glasses with chocolate and bananas. Culinary visionaries have transformed basic vanilla scoops into ganache- covered bombes and meringue-topped Baked Alaska, while clever moms have filled drinking cups with juice and created frozen pops. No matter the history, no matter the level of sophistication, one thing is for sure: Frozen desserts are here to stay
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