Page 127 - #86 eng
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I



 Color, in particular,   A Scoop of Color

 is a quality that   Ice cream has been around for centuries, with roots
 can be used to   in ancient civilizations. Back then, it was a simple mixture
 of snow and fruit juices. By the middle of the seventeenth
 century, people had developed ways to freeze water using
 create both visual   salt and ice. This made it possible to serve sweet frozen
 and taste-based   foods, like water ices, at the banquet tables of European
 royals and nobles.
 In their book, Ice Cream, Goff & Hartel suggest that
 experiences that are   the English and French had different preferences for ice
 truly unique.  cream recipes in the early eighteenth century. The English
 preferred  recipes  that  were  based  on  cream  and  sugar,
 while the French preferred recipes for water ices or milk
 and egg whites. This difference was likely due to the fact
 that dairy-based “warm-eating” ice cream is more asso-
 ciated with colder climates, while “cold-eating” sorbets
 and water ices are more common in warmer Mediterra-
 nean climates.
 Water ices is an early day version of what  we now
 know as sherbet or sorbet. Fruits or fruit juices are com-
            ingredients. For example, yellow or egg shade color was   Purple corn, or maiz morado, is a type of sweet corn that
 bined with water and sugar and then frozen. The colors
            once  commonly  added  to  vanilla  ice  cream  to  give  it  a   has been cultivated in the Andes for thousands of years. It
 of water ice were usually light and delicate in contrast to
            golden hue. However, white vanilla ice creams have be-  is often used in Peruvian cuisine to make drinks and desserts.
 ice cream made with milk, eggs or cream which were quite
            come more popular in recent years. Fruit-based ice creams   In addition to being used in ice cream, purple corn is also
 rich and had hues that were reminiscent of custard.
            usually need to be colored, as the fruit itself may not be   used to make chicha morada, a type of non-alcoholic purple
 Today, some ice cream flavors may require the ad-
            enough to impart an adequate color. Chocolate ice cream,   corn  beverage  and  mazamorra  morada,  a  purple  pudding
 dition of color, others get their unique hue from natural
            on the other hand, seldom needs added color. Whether   that is often served on top of a warm rice pudding during
            it is natural food coloring or consumption-approved ar-  the winter.
            tificial dyes, there are a wide variety of ways to impart
            color to ice cream.                          Green
                There are certain colors that we are more familiar
            with  when  it  comes  to  ice  cream.  White,  yellow,  and   Green is another color that is not commonly seen
            brown are probably the most common colors that we see   in  ice  cream,  but  can  be  found  in  certain  parts  of  the
            in store-bought tubs or scoops at the local parlor. How-  world. In India, kulfi, a type of Indian ice cream, is often
            ever, there are a myriad of other colors that can be found   made with pistachios and dyed green. Kulfi is denser and
            in ice cream around the world. Let’s take a look at  some   creamier than Western-style ice cream and is often fla-
            of these lesser known, but equally delicious, shades of ice   vored with cardamom, saffron, or rose water. In Greece,
            cream and what they can reveal about a culture.  the island of Aegina is known for its pistachio ice cream
                                                         which is a naturally light green color. The pistachios used
            Purple                                       to make this ice cream are grown on the island and are
                                                         some of the best in the world.
                One of the most unique and lesser known ice cream   Mint chocolate chip is a popular flavor of ice cream in
            colors is purple.  This color is most commonly found in   the United States that is dyed green. This flavor was created
            the Philippines where it is made with ube, a type of sweet   in 1973 by a man named Howard Moss who was working at
            potato. Ube ice cream is often served as part of halo-ha-  the time for Jerry Greenfield’s ice cream shop in Vermont.
            lo, a popular Filipino dessert that is a mixture of shaved   Mint chocolate chip has since become one of the most pop-
            ice, milk, fruits, and other sweets. Ube ice cream is also   ular flavors of ice cream in the U.S. In India, paan ice cream
            popular in other parts of Southeast Asia, such as Malaysia,   is a popular flavor that is made with green betel leaves. Paan
            Indonesia, and Thailand. In Peru, purple corn is used to   is a type of Indian mouth freshener that is made with areca
            give their version of purple ice cream its distinctive color.    nuts, betel leaves, spices, and other ingredients.



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