‘I Scream, You Scream, We All Scream for Ice Cream!’ Ice Cream Recipes in Gale’s Eighteenth Century Collections Online

│By Dr Lucy Dow, Gale Content Researcher│

With the weather we’ve seen recently, it is unsurprising that July is national ice cream month! Just search for #nationalicecreammonth on Instagram and you will be inundated with all kinds of delicious (and not-so-delicious) looking icy confections. Whilst you may now be able to get tomato soup, grilled cheese or sushi flavour ice cream, the authors of eighteenth-century English language cookery books tended to stick to more familiar flavours such as strawberry or apricot, although they were not always averse to trying something more unusual. In 1789 Frederick Nutt wrote a recipe (pp. 125-126) for parmesan ice cream! Interestingly, whilst the more exotic chocolate, coffee and even pineapple had made it into ice cream by the late eighteenth century, the now ubiquitous vanilla was still far too exotic and expensive. By exploring eighteenth-century ice cream recipes using Gale’s Eighteenth Century Collections Online we can not only see how ice cream was made, but discover other things these recipes reveal about eighteenth-century life.

Frederick Nutt, The complete confectioner (London, [1789]), Printed for the author; and sold by J. Mathews, No. 18, Strand, MDCCLXXXIX. [1789]. pp. 125-126 Eighteenth Century Collections Online
Frederick Nutt, The complete confectioner (London, [1789]), Printed for the author; and sold by J. Mathews, No. 18, Strand, MDCCLXXXIX. [1789]. pp. 125-126 Eighteenth Century Collections Online, https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CW0108959691/GDCS?u=webdemo&sid=GDCS&xid=8afba0c4

Just as now, making ice cream required some special equipment, however, it was fuelled not by electricity but “elbow grease”! The late eighteenth-century recipe below by Robert Abbot refers to a “freezing pot” (p.79), seemingly a specialist ice-cream making machine. The pot was to be placed in ice and salt, and a churning action applied by the user.

Abbot, Robert, cook. The housekeeper's valuable present: or, lady's closet companion. Being a new and complete art of preparing confects, according to modern practice. … By Robert Abbot, Late Apprentice to Messrs. Negri & Gunter, Confectioners, in Berkeley Square. [London], [1790?]. (p.79) Eighteenth Century Collections Online.
Abbot, Robert, cook. The housekeeper’s valuable present: or, lady’s closet companion. Being a new and complete art of preparing confects, according to modern practice. By Robert Abbot, Late Apprentice to Messrs. Negri & Gunter, Confectioners, in Berkeley Square. [London], [1790?]. (p.79) Eighteenth Century Collections Online. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CW0108842009/GDCS?u=webdemo&sid=GDCS&xid=2ebd9e8b

We can trace the development of this nifty sounding bit of kit through older recipes for ice cream. Mary Eales’ 1718 recipe for ice cream contains very detailed instructions (pp. 92-93) about how to ice the cream mixture:

Eales, Mary. Mrs. Mary Eales’s receipts. Confectioner to her late Majesty Queen Anne. London, MDCCXVIII. [1718]. (pp. 92-93) Eighteenth Century Collections Online. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CW0108291917/GDCS?u=webdemo&sid=GDCS&xid=ac93a8fc

This would not be ice cream as you or I know it. Without any churning to incorporate air into the mixture, it would essentially have been a solid block of frozen cream, albeit flavoured. By the 1730s Vincent La Chapelle, one of the great court cooks of the century, was adding in whipped up egg white to lighten the mixture (pp. 229-230), but this still would have been a fairly solid concoction by modern standards.

La Chapelle, Vincent. The modern cook: containing instructions for preparing and ordering publick entertainments … By Mr Vincent La Chapelle…now Chief Cook to his Highness the Prince of Orange… London, MDCCXXXVI. [1736]. (pp. 229-230),Eighteenth Century Collections Online, https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CW0108656658/GDCS?u=webdemo&sid=GDCS&xid=7438e302

By the 1760s, Hannah Glasse, in her second, less-successful work, The compleat confectioner, was recommending at least one churning of the frozen mixture (pp. 161-162). However, it is in Elizabeth Raffald’s 1769 work that a regular churning technique is first suggested (p. 228), which would have made the ice cream much more aerated than any of the previous recipes.

Raffald, Elizabeth. The experienced English house-keeper, for the use and ease of ladies, house-keepers, cooks, &c. By Elizabeth Raffald. Manchester, 1769. (p. 228) Eighteenth Century Collections Online. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CW0107051996/GDCS?u=webdemo&sid=GDCS&xid=67bae70f

Mr Borella in 1770 takes care to give detailed instruction about the churning process. He explains that the delicacy of the ice depends on the scraping and mixing of the liquid as it freezes. His many ice cream recipes make reference to a specialist piece of equipment called a sabotier (p. 76). The use of this kind of specialist equipment has echo in the version of Glasse’s recipe found in the 1775 work of Elizabeth Clifton. Whereas Glasse requires her reader to have two pewter basins, one smaller than the other and the small one with a close cover, Clifton talks of two pewter basins “which are made for that purpose by pewterers”. This is, presumably, what comes to be known as a “freezing pot” by the time Abbot was writing in 1790.

Borella, Mr The court and country confectioner …, M.DCC.LXX. [1770]. (p.76) Eighteenth Century Collections Online, https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CW0108037995/GDCS?u=webdemo&sid=GDCS&xid=789a73e3

The development of this specialist equipment over the course of the eighteenth century aligns with the wider changes in material culture that were experienced over the period. All kinds of new household goods were emerging, of increasing specification, for elite and middling households. The development of the freezing pot, and associated items such as ice moulds and ice cream pails, exemplifies this change.

Ice cream pail (one of a pair); German (Meissen) with Italian (Rome) mounts; porcelain c. 1730, mounts c. 1780–90. From the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York). https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ice_cream_pail_(one_of_a_pair)_MET_DP-1725-004.jpg

Blog Post Cover image citation: Image obtained from Unsplash online depository, link to image: https://unsplash.com/photos/pcvE-o4zCwM, Terms and conditions: https://unsplash.com/terms

About the Author

Lucy is a content researcher for the primary sources team at Gale, which allows her to indulge her passion for historical primary sources of all kinds. She previously studied eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British cookery books. She is based in the UK and loves to cook, occasionally trying out historical recipes.