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Margaret Thatcher Helped Invent Soft-Serve Ice Cream

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Soft Serve

Margaret Thatcher, Britain's first female prime minister, died Monday morning at the age of 87. 

Though the Iron Lady is recognized for her vast political and economic impacts, her culinary contribution to the world is less known. 

As a chemist for food manufacturer J. Lyons and Co. in the 1940s, Thatcher was part of the British research team that made soft-serve ice possible, according to The Washington Post's Caitlin Dewey, citing a 1983 New Scientist article

Thatcher, and colleagues, invented a way to add more air into the ice cream so that it was less dense and used less ingredients, which also made it more cost-effective.

The new formula also made it possible to push ice cream through a machine, producing the signature soft-serve swirl that we're familiar with today.  

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The 9 Best Places To Eat Ice Cream In The US

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Lobster Ice CreamSummer is the best excuse to eat ice cream in shameless volumes.

This year, you can mark the season with bicycle-churned scoops in L.A., cones filled with Thomas Jefferson's recipe at Mount Rushmore, and a blindfolded tasting gamble in Vegas.

Here are nine great places worthy of screaming for more ice cream this summer.

Mount Rushmore National Memorial, South Dakota

Why GoMount Rushmore National Memorial is giving you a taste of history this summer, dishing up a special batch of ice cream made with Thomas Jefferson's original recipe.

The Scoop: You know that Thomas Jefferson authored the Declaration of Independence, but what you didn't read in history books is that he also wrote the first known ice cream recipe in the country. Yes, Jefferson's official handwritten recipe for the vanilla treat he served guests at Monticello during his presidency is actually kept in the Library of Congress. To make the ice cream, Pride Dairy carefully researched the ingredients, even using vanilla beans from Madagascar just as Jefferson did. The only difference between 2013's scoops and those eaten in the 1800s is that today's eggs are pasteurized.

Don't Miss: Your chance to pose, ice cream in hand, with a poster that features Jefferson's portrait and his handwritten recipe. Find "TJ's Ice Cream" at the Memorial Team Ice Cream stand just inside the main entrance to the park's dining room.



Velvet Ice Cream's Ye Olde Mill, Utica, Ohio

Why Go: This Ohio ice cream maker is celebrating National Ice Cream Month with cheap treats and events on the farm.

The Scoop: A perennial favorite on America's ice cream-factory circuit, Velvet Ice Cream is throwing a month-long party in honor of National Ice Cream Month and the company's 99th birthday. Get 99-cent cones on July 6 and buy-one-get-one-free sundaes on July 15. Check out the events calendarfor the full lineup, which includes clowns, magicians, dog shows, and live music. Free public tours run on weekdays from May through October and let you sample ice cream as it comes off the line.

Don't Miss: All the fun on this 20-acre property, which includes an authentic 1800s mill. After a treat in the old-fashioned ice cream parlor, visit the Milling Museum or the Ice Cream Museum. Kids love playing on the playground and feeding ducks in the pond.



University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

Why Go: On your way to the Wisconsin Dells or the North Woods, you can relish college life and campus-made ice cream on the Memorial Union's sunny terrace overlooking Lake Mendota.

The Scoop: Produced on campus with milk from UW-Madison's dairy herd, Babcock Dairy Ice Cream(named after Stephen Moulton Babcock, a pivotal UW-Madison researcher in the department of Agricultural Chemistry) is sold in the student union and the Babcock Hall Dairy Store at student-budget prices. Indulging in it is a longtime tradition among visiting alumni. Tour the dairy plant and learn how the program turns out the treat that's frequently voted the best ice cream in Madison byMadison Magazine.

Don't Miss: Two other university creameries for tasty ice cream and visits with dairy cows. Watch ice cream being made through the UConn Dairy Bar's observation window. Choose from 100-plus flavors
 at Penn State's Berkey Creamery or register for the renowned seven-day cow-to-cone Ice Cream Short Course, taken by the who's who of ice cream makers in America.



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It's National Ice Cream Day! We Ranked The 6 Best Ice Cream Flavors Of All Time

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Today is National Ice Cream Day, when we pay tribute to the best summer treat around.

We decided to celebrate by answering the age-old question: What is the absolute best ice cream flavor?

After polling the Business Insider newsroom (and getting responses from blue moon ice cream to the Choco Taco, which technically, is not a flavor), we finally had our answer.

Herewith are the top six, and to help you out on your next grocery run, we included our editors' picks for best brands, too.

6. Cookie Dough

Chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream with orange spoon

Editor's Pick:"Häagen-Dazs Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough. Because cookie dough." William Wei, Video Producer

5. Cake Batter

cake batter ice cream with sprinkles

Editors' Picks:"There's a small place back home in Jersey called Colonia Dairy Maid (aka 40 Flavors) that makes the absolute best with rainbow splashes throughout." Kirsten Acuna, Entertainment Reporter

"Cold Stone Creamery Cake Batter." Sam Ro, Markets Senior Editor

4. Cookies and Cream

Cookies and cream ice cream in a bowl

Editor's Pick:"Cookies & Cream by HomeMade." Steven Tweedie, Tech Intern

3. Chocolate

chocolate ice cream on a plate

Editors' Picks:"ALL BRANDS." Tony Manfred, Sports Reporter

"Straight chocolate from Häagen-Dazs." Megan Dickey, Tech Reporter

2. Coffee

coffee ice cream in a bowl

Editors' Picks:"Coffee Coffee BuzzBuzzBuzz! from Ben & Jerry's." Julie Zeveloff, Deputy Editor

"EDY's Espresso Chip. It is coffee flavored with chocolate chips in it." Mandi Woodruff, Your Money Editor

1. Mint Chocolate Chip

mint chocolate chip ice cream scoop

Editors' Picks:"Mint Moose Tracks> Every other response you will get." Paul Szoldra, Front Page Editor

"I grew up eating EDY's slow-churned — it has the perfect mint to chip ratio!" Melissa Stanger, Lists & Rankings Associate Editor

"Breyer's Mint Chocolate Chip. I like it because it doesn't have any bogus extras like barf-green food coloring. It's just pure joy." Steve Kovach, Tech Senior Editor

Do you disagree? Add your favorite flavors in the comments!

SEE ALSO: The 9 Best Places To Eat Ice Cream In The US

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How Ice Cream Is Made

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ice cream

The ultimate summer treat is, arguably, ice cream. Some 1.5 billion gallons of ice cream and other related frozen desserts are made every year in the United States, with production peaking (as one might expect) in the sultry summer months, according to the International Dairy Foods Association.

What are the tricks behind creating ice cream? From a chemistry perspective, this delectable substance is actually quite an unnatural thing. Technically, the creamy treat is a colloid, meaning it consists of fine particles dispersed in a continuous medium.

"Ice cream is basically made up of little ice crystals and air bubbles and fat droplets, all sort of glued together by a viscous sugar solution," said Chris Clarke, author of "The Science of Ice Cream" (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2005). [The Mysterious Physics of 7 Everyday Things]

On their own, these ingredients would not stay isolated and oriented in a smooth, continuous structure. So, to pull this arrangement off, ice cream essentially must be frozen and whipped at the same time, then kept cold lest its separate ingredients start glomming together, ruining the texture.

With ice cream, "you're working against thermodynamics," Clarke said, meaning the science of heat and energy in systems. "You have lots of little things that can save energy by becoming one big one and want to come together," Clarke said.

Air and ice

The key to producing ice cream, Clarke said, is to make the bubbles and ice crystals small, and the smaller they are in the first place the better the ice cream will be.

Ice cream today is made much the way it was when Philadelphian Nancy Johnson invented a hand-cranked ice cream freezer back in the 1840s.

The ice cream ingredients of milk, cream, sugar and flavoring get whipped around (and thus aerated) by a blade in a tube that is chilled from the outside. In Johnson's day, ice and salt (which lowers the freezing point of water) did the trick, and nowadays liquid ammonia is more often used outside the tube, Clarke explained.

Whenever the ice cream mixture touches the wall of the tube, it freezes. To prevent the crystals from getting too big, the blade inside the tube also scrapes the crystals off right after they form. "That clears the walls and more ice crystals form," Clarke told LiveScience. "The colder and better the scraping, the smaller the ice crystals."

From their freezer to yours

The ice cream is extruded from the ice-cream-making machine, and chips, chunks of candy, fruit and so on get added in; the freshly created ice cream goes into containers.

From there, the ice cream is then quickly super-frozen to lock in its structure in a process known as hardening. "You have to put it in a really cold environment," said Clarke, usually below zero degrees Fahrenheit.

The ice cream is kept below freezing all the way through delivery and storage at supermarkets and ice cream vendors. "The moment it's out of the freezer it starts to lose that structure."

Once that structure is lost, "you can never get it back," Clarke said, as anyone can attest who has had their ice cream purchase melt on the way home from the store or left it on the countertop too long.

Clarke has been lucky enough to taste ice cream right out of the factory freezer. "Right at the source," he said, "it's the best ice cream you ever met."

Follow us @livescience, Facebook& Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

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COPS: Brooklyn Man Sold Cocaine And Pain Pills Out Of His Ice Cream Truck

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empty ice cream

A 20-year-old Brooklyn man has been arrested for allegedly selling cocaine and oxycodone from his ice cream truck in family friendly Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.

Brooklyn prosecutors say that Mina Gatas was caught on surveillance video selling the drugs to an undercover cop along with an ice cream cone at Owls Head Park, according to the New York Daily News.

He's been charged with criminal sale of a controlled substance and drug possession.

The Brooklyn District Attorney's name for the sting was "Operation Snow Cone," the New York Post reports. Gatas partially owns the ice cream truck that the drugs were allegedly sold out of.

Gatas is also accused of selling narcotics to an undercover cop outside of the deli where he works.

The Daily News uncovered a Facebook post allegedly written by Gatas in July that says: "If ur selling drugs to make money and ur proud of it seek help smh [SHAKE MY HEAD]."

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Why Seaweed Is Sometimes Used To Make Ice Cream

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seaweed

Seaweed didn’t exactly come into play during those “make your own ice cream” science experiments you probably did in elementary school, but it is sometimes used in the making of commercial ice cream. No, it isn’t just in seaweed-flavoured ice cream, either. Seaweed is actually used as a type of thickening agent for ice cream.

Technically, the substance usually used to thicken the ice cream is called “agar” or “agar-agar.” The name comes from the Japanese word for “red algae.” It was discovered in 1658 by Minora Tarazaemon, a Japanese innkeeper who supposedly left extra seaweed soup outside overnight. It was winter, and the substance froze. Tarazaemon noticed in the morning that it had turned into a sort of gel when it thawed again.

Whether that’s exactly how Tarazaemon discovered it or not, it was later found that after first boiling seaweed, repeated thawing and freezing makes a pure, gelatinous substance perfect to use as a thickening agent. It’s likely that the process was picked up by the Dutch in the 17th century and later spread to other East Indies ports.

Today, agar is used in a variety of processed foods as an emulsifier or binding agent. Not every country or company uses it; some use carrageenans instead, which is made from certain red seaweeds. The use of different substances is based purely on preference and availability of resources. For instance, during World War II the availability of agar was low, so many companies switched to using carrageenans instead and stuck with it even after agar became more widely available again. (A similar thing happened with Twinkies, where during WWII bananas were in short supply, so Hostess switched to using a vanilla cream filling, rather than banana cream.  The vanilla cream filling turned out to be much more popular, so they never switched back to banana cream filling, though kept the banana-like look to the Twinkie anyways.)

But you make homemade ice cream with just milk, sugar, and a bag full of ice and salt—so why is a binding agent needed in the production of commercial ice cream?

The basic components of ice cream are fat (usually from milk), sweeteners, air, ice crystals, and “other solids” which includes non-fat milk solids and various flavours (like bits of cookie). When the ice cream liquid is prepared, often an emulsifier and stabilizer must be added to keep all the ingredients together and improve the texture. That’s where the seaweed comes into play.

Most commercial stabilizers these days are vegetable gums—that means agar, carrageenan, or something like Xanthan gum (derived from bacteria found in cabbage). These stabilizers keep ice crystal growth small by immobilizing the liquid in the ice cream—sort of by acting like a sponge. Larger ice crystals, caused by too much liquid in the ice cream, will make the ice cream feel grainy if a stabilizer is not used. The stabilizers also help keep the ice cream from melting too quickly so that you can enjoy your ice cream for a longer amount of time on a hot day.

That said, more stabilizers do not equal higher quality ice cream. Quality ice cream typically contains more fat and less air, while lower quality ice cream substitutes a higher quantity of stabilizers for fat, and often contains more air molecules.

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SEE ALSO: Business Insider: Science

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Jersey Shore Boardwalk Evacuated After Fire Engulfs Beloved Ice Cream Shop

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Jersey Shore boardwalk ice cream fire

A frozen custard stand on a Jersey Shore boardwalk caught fire on Thursday and soon became completely engulfed in giant flames.

The pier is being evacuated, and explosions have been reported in the building, according to CBS in Philadelaphia.

Strong winds blew the fire from Kohr's Ice Cream in Seaside Park to adjacent buildings, according to The Newark Star-Ledger, and the blaze is also reportedly spreading to the boardwalk.

This shot shows how large the fire has grown:

Hurricane Sandy destroyed most of the boardwalk just last year, The Star-Ledger reported. It was just rebuilt earlier this year.

The cause of the fire is so far unclear. Several people are being treated for smoke inhalation.

The county sheriff is warning visitors to avoid the area, NBC New York reported.

Jersey Shore Hurricane News has a video of the fire:

Here are some photos from the scene:

 

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Ben & Jerry's Released An 'Anchorman'-themed Ice Cream Flavor Called 'Scotchy Scotch Scotch'

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Ben & Jerry's

Will Ferrell's been showing up in Durango car commercials to promote his "Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues," and now his Ron Burgundy character has an ice cream flavor.

Ben & Jerry's released a limited edition butterscotch ice cream with butterscotch swirl, appropriately named "Scotchy Scotch Scotch"— an ode to one of Burgundy's famous quotes

As the Ben & Jerry's website says, "We don't know how to put this but this flavor is kind of a big deal."

Ben & Jerry's regularly toasts pop culture icons with their flavors, including Tina Fey's Liz Lemon, Stephen Colbert's AmeriCone Dream, Jimmy Fallon's Late Night Snack.

"Scotchy Scotch Scotch" is now available in select Ben & Jerry's stores, and will hit grocery store freezers in a few weeks.

SEE ALSO: Ron Burgundy's news team assembles in two new trailers

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This Ice Cream Glows When You Lick It

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Glow in the dark ice creamBritish ice cream wizard Charlie Francis has created a glow-in-the-dark ice cream using synthesized jellyfish proteins — the same ones that allow these marine animals to produce light inside their bodies.

The only snag is, the glowing confection costs around $220 a scoop. So don't expect to find it on supermarket shelves anytime soon, if ever.

On the upside, Francis says the product "tastes pretty good" and it doesn't appear to be dangerous. "I don’t seem to be glowing anywhere," he added.

(Proteins get broken down by our digestive system before entering the bloodstream, so there's no reason to think he would end up glowing).

Francis is the owner of Lick Me I'm Delicious, which specializes in exotic ice cream flavors. They've experimented with more than two-hundred flavors, including roast beef, salted whiskey caramels, rhubarb chocolate macaroons, raspberry mojito, and cheddar cheese, Francis said in an email.

The so-called "edible inventor" began thinking about a glow-in-the-dark ice cream around six months ago while looking for a small red berry — known as miracle fruit — that when eaten, causes sour foods, like a lemon, to taste sweet like candy.

During this time, he came across a research paper on jellyfish and a property that allows them to emit light, called bioluminescence.

"I immediately started geeking up on the subject and eventually found a lab in China, where they are synthesizing the protein and I spoke to the scientists there who agreed to ship me over a sample," Francis said.

How does it work?

"The protein we're using in the ice cream reacts with your tongue at neutral PH," explains Francis, "so as your mouth warms up the protein, it will raise the PH level and start to glow."

The protein is still in the early days of production so just 2 grams of the stuff costs around $320, according to Francis.

Francis decided to unleash the green fluorescent ice cream on Halloween. He's also developed a gin and tonic sorbet that glows in the dark because of the quinine in the tonic, which glows under UV light.

What next?

"I really want to develop an invisible ice cream," Francis said. "It's inherently impossible because of the refraction caused by the ice crystals which make up the ice cream, but I reckon we'll find a way of doing it."

SEE ALSO: This Edible Packaging Eliminates The Need For Plastic

SEE ALSO: 12 Indulgent Foods That Are Actually Vegan

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Lactose Intolerant People Should Drink Milk

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milk advertisement

You read it right! Folks with lactose intolerance should be drinking milk. But let's not stop there — cheese and yogurt should be on the menu, too.

Recent research found that folks with lactose intolerance can tolerate up to 1 cup of milk in one sitting. But let's start from the beginning.

What is Lactose Intolerance?

Lactose intolerance is a gastrointestinal disturbance that happens after consuming more lactose than your body can handle. Milk and dairy products contain a natural milk sugar called lactose, made from two sugar components, glucose and galactose.

The body needs to separate lactose into its two sugar components so that it can be absorbed into your bloodstream. If these two sugars stay connected, uncomfortable symptoms like bloating, gas, loose stools and stomach pain can result.

Lactose intolerance is different from a milk allergy. A cow's milk allergy is triggered by the immune system, not the digestive system like in lactose intolerance. Someone with a milk allergy must avoid all milk and dairy products. Those with a cow's milk allergy should get retested regularly, as the allergy will often disappear after a period of time and cow's milk can be reintroduced into the diet.

[Read: Think You're Lactose Intolerant? Maybe Not.]

Prevalence

Twelve percent of the U.S. population experiences lactose intolerance. Data from a 2009 study revealed that about 8 percent of European Americans have lactose intolerance, about 10 percent of Hispanic Americans and about 19.5 percent of African Americans have lactose intolerance. But many folks who claim to have lactose intolerance have never been tested. These folks tend to unnecessarily avoid dairy products, which can lead to calcium and vitamin D deficiencies.

Plus, they miss out on the fabulous flavor of dairy foods. If you think you have lactose intolerance, it's important to get tested. Tests like the hydrogen breath test and lactose tolerance test can be administered by a physician and provide a proper diagnosis.

[Read: 5 Non-Dairy Foods With Calcium.]

The Recommendations

Both the National Medical Association and a National Institutes of Health expert panel recommend folks with lactose intolerance try to keep dairy foods in their diet. Studies show that many folks with lactose intolerance can tolerate up to 1 cup of milk — that's 12 grams of lactose. However, the amount of lactose tolerated varies from person to person. It's also easier to digest lactose if combined with another food, like a dollop of Greek yogurt over butternut squash soup or shaved Parmesan cheese over a salad. When lactose-filled foods are eaten along with other foods, it slows the digestion of lactose, helping to alleviate any uncomfortable symptoms that may occur.

Including lower lactose dairy foods is a delicious and nutritious option. Below are the amounts of lactose in common dairy foods:

  • 1 cup low fat or nonfat milk: 12 grams
  • 6 ounces low fat plain yogurt: 13 grams
  • 6 ounces low fat or nonfat Greek yogurt: 4 grams
  • 1/2 cup low fat cottage cheese: 3 grams
  • 1 ounce sharp cheddar cheese or Swiss cheese: less than 1 gram

Although yogurt has 13 grams of lactose, the live and active cultures help break down some of it, making it easier to digest. Greek yogurt is a fantastic choice for folks with lactose intolerance too. During the straining process, much of the lactose is removed. And cheese lovers are in luck! Hard cheeses like cheddar and Swiss are extremely lactose-intolerant friendly with less than 1 gram of lactose per ounce.

Lactose-free milk and dairy products are another option. You can now find lactose-free milk, cottage cheese and ice cream. Alternative milks like almond, hemp, soy and rice can also be used, though they don't provide nearly as many nutrients as found in milk and dairy foods.

[Read: Unusual Uses for Greek Yogurt.]

On the Menu

You'd probably be surprised to hear all the wonderful dishes individuals with lactose intolerance can enjoy. In a recent culinary demonstration at the Food and Nutrition Conference, Chef Chris Shepherd (from Houston's Underbelly restaurant) and I demonstrated several lactose-intolerant friendly dishes, including a 3-pound shoulder braised in lactose-free milk, Paneer cheese made from lactose-free milk and guacamole made by combining pureed cottage cheese and avocado. This May, my first cookbook, "The Greek Yogurt Kitchen: More Than 130 Delicious, Healthy Recipes for Every Meal of the Day" (Grand Central Publishing), is being released — and recipes are lactose friendly. You'll find options like Lemon-Blueberry Stuffed French Toast, Penne Bolognese and White Margarita Pizza.

Sadly, many folks are misinformed about what they can and cannot eat when they have lactose intolerance. They avoid milk and dairy products and miss out on all their benefits, culinary and nutritional. If you're affected with lactose intolerance, please raise your milk glass with me — and say cheers!

[Read: The Science Behind Raw Milk.]

SEE ALSO: This Ice Cream Glows When You Lick It

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Ben & Jerry's Just Solved The Most Annoying Thing About Eating Ice Cream

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Ben & Jerry's new ice cream packaging ensures that you get a perfect scoop every time. 

The brand's new Core flavors feature toppings in the center of the pint so eaters won't have to dig around for fudge, caramel, or fruit flavors, reports The Huffington Post

Some pints also feature two flavors of ice cream.  For example, "Hazed and Confused" features vanilla and hazelnut ice creams with a Nutella-style filling. 

ben and jerry's hazelnut core flavor

"Raspberry Jam" is a chocolate and raspberry concoction. 

ben and jerry's raspberry jam ice cream

"Salted Caramel" also looks delicious. 

ben and jerry's caramel core flavor ice cream  

It's not the first time the brand has tried the "core" model of ice cream packaging: It released a flavor called Karamel Sutra, with chocolate and vanilla ice cream surrounding a caramel core, in 2012. The new line is based on the success of that flavor, according to the company.

All of Ben & Jerry's new core flavors will hit stores this month.

SEE ALSO: Why McDonald's Doesn't Serve Breakfast All Day

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There Is Now A Viagra Ice Cream

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viagra ice cream

The long list of unnatural food combinations just grew a little bigger: Viagra and Champagne ice cream.

The treat — which has the familiar blue hue of the popular erectile dysfunction (ED) drug — is the brainchild of Welsh food inventor Charlie Harry Francis, who created the product for one of his "A-list celebrity clients."

Each scoop of the dessert contains 25 mg of Viagra, according to the website of Francis' company, Lick Me I'm Delicious. But you'll have to wait to buy it; the Viagra/Champagne ice cream isn't likely to appear on store shelves anytime soon — if ever. [7 Surprising Reasons for Erectile Dysfunction]

Sex, drugs and FDA scrutiny

Since the drug (known as sildenafil citrate) was approved in 1998, Viagra has aroused the scrutiny of health care professionals and Food and Drug Administration officials. In 2004, drug manufacturer Pfizer was ordered to shut down its alluring ad campaign that featured Viagra users as devilish, lusty lotharios.

"The TV ads claim that Viagra will provide a return to a previous level of sexual desire and activity," FDA regulatory officer Christine Hemler Smith wrote in a warning letter to Robert B. Clark, a Pfizer vice president. "FDA is not aware of substantial evidence or substantial clinical experience demonstrating this benefit for patients who take Viagra."

Pfizer has frequently denied that it's promoting the recreational use of Viagra. "We've consistently opposed that," company spokesman Geoff Cook told WebMD. However, urologist Myron Murdock, director of the Impotence Institute of America, added that it's fine for men to use the drug to "optimize" their sexual performance.

And many men without erectile dysfunction have taken that advice to heart. According to a 2010 report in the Journal of Sexual Medicine, more than 21 percent of healthy men ages 18 to 30 used ED medication as a recreational drug, "mostly associated with alcohol or other drugs without medical control."

The majority of these drugs users obtained the medication from a friend or an Internet source. "This could have led to misuse and a public health problem," the study authors wrote, referring to the recreational use of ED medication. "Further studies are needed to evaluate … long-term safety, misuse and abuse related to it."

How safe is Viagra?

A number of other reports have called the safety of Viagra and other ED drugs into question. A 2010 study from the Archives of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery found an association between ED drugs and long-term hearing loss.

And this month, the Journal of the American Medical Association published a study that found men who take Viagra are about 84 percent more likely to be diagnosed with melanoma (a deadly form of skin cancer), compared with men who do not use the drug.

None of these warnings, however, are likely to cool men's ardor for Viagra and other ED drugs. After consuming their Viagra-laced ice cream, Francis' clients were "very happy with the end result," according to Francis' website.

Original article on Live Science.

Copyright 2014 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

SEE ALSO: Doctors Are Talking About Creating A New Attention Disorder For 'Daydreamy' Kids

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Bagatelle Just Added A $1,000 Sundae To The Menu

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Bagatelle sundae

New York hotspot Bagatelle best known for its over-the-top brunch parties — will start serving a sundae that costs a whopping $1,000 next month. 

The Mauboussin Mega Sundae by Chef Sebastien Chamaret contains homemade vanilla ice cream with macaroonschocolate trufflesDom Perignon Rose sorbet with gold leaveschocolate vodka saucegilded brownies and fresh whipped cream served in an over-sized martini glass.

It also comes with a memento: a black steel and white gold ring from jeweler Mauboussin.

Sounds like the perfect complement to Bagatelle's $22 cheeseburger and $1,000 magnums of rosé.

 

SEE ALSO: At $2,000 A Head, The World's New Most Expensive Restaurant Is A Sensory Overload

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President Of Carvel Predicts That Frozen Yogurt Chains Will Be The Next To Fall

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carvel ice creamCupcake chain Crumbs shut down last week, and an insider believes frozen yogurt could be next. 

Scott Colwell, president of ice cream company Carvel, told The Wall Street Journal that he said no to investing in frozen yogurt.

"I absolutely believe we'll see a frozen yogurt bubble," he told WSJ,  adding that "only the strongest brands will survive long-term." 

Carvel dipped into the fro-yo world in the late 1980s with TCBYcarvel president

But Colwell said the company couldn't keep up with the booming fro-yo industry today.

“We don’t have the capability to offer that variety,” Colwell told WSJ.

Carvel recently changed the look of its 400 franchised stores. The brand also released a new line of Nutella ice cream. 

“We’re being the best at what we do well,” Colwell said. “We’re not trying to be everything to everyone.”

CNBC host Marcus Lemonis announced a plan to buy Crumbs last week.

SEE ALSO: The Rise And Fall Of The Crumbs Cupcake Empire

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The Best Ice Cream Shops In America

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Is there any sweet treat more deliciously satisfying than ice cream? No matter what age, Americans love their scoops, whether in a cone or a cup, plain or loaded with toppings. Fortunately, the country is filled with top-tier ice cream shops, where inventive flavors dominate the menus. From an all-organic scoop parlor in San Francisco to a dairy-farm-based operation in the fields of rural Michigan, these shops serve up delicious treats made with only the finest seasonal ingredients. Here are our picks for America’s best ice cream shops.

Bi-Rite Creamery

bi rite creamery san franciscoWhere: San Francisco, CA

For ice cream with a conscience, look no further than Bi-Rite Creamery. The San Francisco scoop shop serves up unique flavors made with local, handmade ingredients, and was the first ice cream shop in the city to source its milk from an organic dairy. Visitors can devour sweet scoops of brown sugar with ginger caramel swirl, or try the honey lavender with Sonoma honey and organic dried lavender. Flavors are seasonal and depend on what's in stock, so look out for orange cardamom during the winter citrus harvests and balsamic strawberry during the summer strawberry crop.

Pumphouse Creamery

pumphouse creamery minneapolisWhere: Minneapolis, MN

When Barb Zapzalka opened Pumphouse Creamery in 2003, she envisioned a place that churned out ice cream with integrity. Now, the Minneapolis shop offers honest-to-goodness ice cream and cones made from natural and organic ingredients. A local milling company provides the grains and seeds for the store's waffle cones; brownies, graham crackers, and seven-layer bars in some of the shop's signature flavors are handmade by a local baker. In addition to 20 rotating flavors of ice cream, the shop also features seasonal fruit sorbets and non-dairy ice creams with a coconut milk base. For those who are craving a full-dairy sundae, shake, or scoop, the shop offers flavors like Door County cherry and sea salt caramel pecan.

Hot Licks Homemade Ice Cream

hot licks homemade ice cream fairbanksWhere: Fairbanks, AK

Alaska isn't usually associated with ice cream stores, but Fairbanks' Hot Licks Homemade Ice Cream defies expectation. The northerly shop makes all its flavors in individual batches, ensuring the ice cream remains fresh, homemade, and full of the best ingredients. Visitors can choose from more than 25 varieties, including Alaska blueberry and Kahlua. For those who want to up the sweetness factor, look for made-to-order ice cream sundaes and banana splits, or "Lime Rickeys" with tart lime juice and ice cream.

Ample Hills Creamery

ample hills creamery brooklynWhere: Brooklyn, NY

Few ice creameries boast 100%, made-from-scratch products, but Ample Hills Creameryoffers just that. The old-fashioned Brooklyn ice cream parlor started as the brainchild of Brian Smith, a former sci-fi screenwriter who checked out of the entertainment industry to churn out ice cream. Flavors are just as eclectic as Smith's resume, and include Salted Crack Caramel made with "crack cookies"—Saltine crackers, sugar, butter, and chocolate—and Nonna D's Oatmeal Lace with pieces of oatmeal cookies. Visitors can choose from more than 20 unique varieties, or visit Smith's antique "dipping cabinet" to scope out more untraditional flavors. For the ultimate treat, try the Crossing Brooklyn Ferry Sundae with a warm, homemade fudge brownie.

Dolcezza

dolcezza washingtonWhere: Washington, D.C.

Husband-and-wife team Robb Duncan and Violeta Edelman serve up authentic Argentinean gelato with a global twist atDolcezza. The D.C. gelato shop grew out of an idea Duncan had while living in Buenos Aires, as he fell in love with the product and local gelatarias. The couple use specially imported gelato-making machines to churn out small batches and craft exotic flavor combinations based on seasonal produce. Customers can sample gold rush apples and quince varieties in the fall, or indulge in citrus or crooked-necked pumpkin flavors in the winter. Visitors can also take free tours of the shop's production facility, and sample freshly spun gelato and sorbetto.

Moomers Homemade Ice Cream

moomers homemade ice cream traverse cityWhere: Traverse City, MI

Located on a dairy farm in rural Michigan,Moomers draws long lines for its fresh, premium ice cream. The scoop shop processes its own milk at a small, on-site creamery, and makes more than 120 flavors. Visitors can devour scoops of black cherry ice cream with pieces of real Northern Michigan black sweet cherries, or dig into the "choc-o-holic," chocolate ice cream with chocolate swirl, brownies, and chocolate flakes. Try a specialty sundae like the Tinroof, with chocolate syrup and Spanish peanuts, or opt for a traditional banana split with pineapple, whipped cream, and cherry. For the ultimate ice cream indulgence, try the Wholey Cow—10 scoops of ice cream with every topping, plus an entire can of whipped cream.

Creole Creamery

creole creamery new orleansWhere: New Orleans, LA

Stepping into New Orleans' Creole Creameryfeels a little like walking into a time machine. The 1950s-style ice cream parlor is paved with black-and-white tiles, and families sit at a soda counter with old-fashioned malts and sundaes. In addition to the flavor staples—vanilla, chocolate, strawberry and mint chip are always in supply—visitors can also sample varieties such as blueberry Danish, chocolate chai, and tangerine dreamsicle. For those who can't decide, the ice cream sampler is the best bet. The shop offers a sampler platter with four to six mini scoops of a customer's favorite flavors. But for the brave at heart, nothing beats the Tchoupitoulas Challenge. The specialty sundae is made with eight scoops of cream and your choice of eight toppings, and is served with whipped and cherries.

Click here to see the rest of the list on Fodor's >

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The 10 Best Ice Cream Shops In The US, According To Pinterest Users

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beaches and cream

No summer is complete without a good ice cream splurge.

Last fall, Pinterest launched a feature called "Place Pins," which allows users to map out businesses or locations they want to visit in the future. In the eight months since the feature was launched, more than 1 billion travel locations have been pinned.

And according to Place Pins data, more than 4,000 ice cream shops have been added to Pinterest users' wish lists.  

We've rounded up the 10 most popular ones here. From a century-old gelato shop to a creamery using high-tech freezing methods, these aren't your typical ice cream shops. 

10. Portland, Oregon's Salt & Straw ice cream chain was founded by cousins Kim and Tyler Malek. Rich, local ingredients go into creating interesting flavors like Strawberry with Cilantro Lime Cheesecake and Chocolate with Gooey Brownies.

3345 SE Division Street

2035 NE Alberta Street 

838 NW 23rd Avenue



9. Ben and Jerry's operates thousands of locations across the globe, but you can try all of the brand's flavors and tour the factory at its headquarters in Waterbury, Vermont.

1281 Waterbury-Stowe Road, Route 100, Waterbury, Vermont

 



8. At San Francisco's Smitten Ice Cream, Brrristas use liquid nitrogen and patented technology to take a new approach to ice cream.

432 Octavia St. #1A, San Francisco



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Rick Perry Celebrates Indictment Booking And Mug Shot With Ice Cream

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Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) isn't stressed out after turning himself in for his official mug shot on felony charges.

In fact, after he exited the court house and addressed the media, the potential 2016 presidential candidate went and got ice cream at Sandy's Hamburgers, according to his official Twitter account:

Perry has repeatedly maintained his innocence and vowed before his booking to fight the allegations "with every fiber of my being."

He is accused of misusing his office to try and coerce the resignation of the Travis County district attorney, who was arrested for drunk driving and was subsequently caught in a highly embarrassing video. Perry and his attorneys argue he had every right to threaten to cut her funding in response to the incident. 

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An Aerospace Engineer Has Completely Reinvented The Ice Cream Scoop

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The midnight scoop kickstarter project ice cream gif

One of Michael Chou’s biggest pet peeves was not being able to scoop frozen ice cream.

“I couldn’t help but feel there was a better way,” Chou, a mechanical and aerospace engineer for the University of California San Diego, explained to The Daily Mail. “I like my ice cream frozen and hard – melting it with a hot spoon or letting it sit out for half an hour ruins it.”

So the 35-year-old Michigan father spent two years to invent the The Midnight Scoop, a “better ice cream scoop” that has the ergonomic design that allows you to scoop even the hardest ice cream.  

The midnight scoop kickstarter project ice creamWhat makes The Midnight Scoop different is that the curved end forces you to push the ice cream with your palm, thereby using the muscles in your arm and chest instead of with the weaker muscles in your wrist.

The key is in the handle which is curved to fit your palm and keep your wrist straight. The scoop is also specially designed with a thin and pointed end that can easily slice through ice cream.

Made from a coated and forged aluminium alloy, it will cost $50 with a lifetime warranty. The Kickstarter project has already exceeded it’s $17,500 goal by over $20,000 with still eight days left in the campaign.

The midnight scoop kickstarter project ice creamYou can donate to The Midnight scoop on Kickstarter here.

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Why Ben & Jerry's Debuts New Flavors In The Winter

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ben and jerry's

Ice-cream launch season has arrived. 

Ben & Jerry's just released three new flavors with cookie cores to add to the brand's "core" collection, according to Bloomberg Businessweek. 

The new flavors are Boom Chocolatta! Cookie Core, Peanut Buttah Cookie Core, and Spectacular Speculoos Cookie Core. Each flavor has a cookielike center.

This is the time of year Ben & Jerry's usually releases new products. Last February, the ice-cream company introduced new core flavors, which solved the problem of having to dig throughout the pint for delicious toppings. 

Ben & Jerry's Senior Brand Manager John Henry Siedlecki told Businessweek that most new flavors are launched between January and April. The company generally releases most of the new flavors in February, but it's getting an early start this year.  

Ice-cream sales generally plummet in the winter, so this raises an obvious question: Why would brands rush to release new flavors this time of year?

Euromonitor International analyst Matthew Hudak told Businessweek that introducing new flavors entices consumers to purchase ice cream when they would otherwise opt for warmer treats. 

"It does sound counterintuitive because you assume, come winter, no one really wants ice cream. [...] But it's a time for flavor competition simply because it's one of the few things that can drive sales at the time," he said.

 

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The inspiring story behind the brownies in Ben & Jerry's most popular flavors

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greyston

You now have one less reason to feel guilty about digging into a pint of Ben and Jerry's this upcoming Valentines Day.  

Anyone who has ever purchased the brand's chunk-filled pints of Half Baked or Chocolate Fudge Brownie has helped New York's Greyston Bakery — which bakes the brownies that are buried in some of Ben and Jerry's most popular flavors — employ the most unemployable people in America.

Greyston, which is located in Yonkers, New York, has made it their mission to hire ex-convicts, the homeless, recovering addicts, and anyone else with a rough past who has had trouble finding work.

Greyston offers subsidized housing, childcare, and nutrition education classes to its workers. 

All of the bakery's profits go to its nonprofit parent organization, the Greyston Foundation, which uses the money to give back to the community by maintaining local gardens and health clinics, and offering free job training programs to the community’s needy, Yahoo's Rachel Tepper reported last month.

About 85 employees currently work at the bakery, where the motto is "brownies plus cookies equals jobs." Starting as a social experiment in 1982, the bakery has since helped thousands of individuals get back on their feet, account manager Sunitha Malieckal told Yahoo.

The bakery holds open hiring days every other week, where individuals are hired largely on a first-come, first-serve basis. There are no background checks, and no pre-hiring screenings. The employees start out as apprentices and are hired by the bakery full-time if they prove they can handle the heat — literally.

The temperature on the "brownie line" can reach 90 degrees, CBS reported, and with more than 30,000 pounds pounds of brownies being made for Ben and Jerry's every day, the work can get repetitive. 

Ben and Jerry Factory

Still, employees are grateful to Greyston for helping them turn their lives around, and many stick around. In 2012, Greyston offered 181 people full-time employment under the Open Hire program, according to a report the organization released detailing its social impact. The report estimates that by keeping these individuals out of jail, the bakery's hiring policies saved the county government an estimated $1.1 million.

"We don't hire people to bake brownies, we bake brownies to hire people," the bakery's website declares proudly. And with the demand for Half Baked not expected to dwindle anytime soon, it's safe to say the company will only continue to expand. 

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