First Ice Cream recipe was written down by Thomas Jefferson

Date:

Share post:

Before TV dramas or social media, early America buzzed over one influential tastemaker renowned for his continental flair. Long before Michelin stars or the Food Network made chefs famous, Thomas Jefferson won widespread fame for his epicurean adventures. Though not truly ice cream’s importer as myth claims, the forward-thinking Founding Father still helped the exotic frozen dessert enchant the early Republic.

A Pioneering American Foodie is Born

Thomas Jefferson’s renown as an ardent food enthusiast emerged early in his lifetime. Born into Virginia planter aristocracy in 1743, his elite upbringing cultivated an appetite for fine cuisine and drink. During political posts in America and abroad, Jefferson gained access to global gastronomy. He relished new dishes and wrote detailed commentary on vintages that stocked his esteemed wine cellar.

From French Cuisine to American Classic

But few experiences influenced Jefferson’s epicurean expertise as profoundly as serving as U.S. Minister to France between 1784-1789. Immersion in Parisian dining as revolution simmered let Jefferson refine his culinary prowess. He acquired an enduring taste for continental trends like ice cream, which began appearing in French cookbooks starting in the late 1600s.

So when Jefferson later imported a freezer and molds to his Virginia estate, ice creamcraft became standard entertainment at lavish parties hosted by the Francophile Founding Father. He enjoyed creating decadent riffs combining frozen custard and flaky warm pastry. Even during his demanding presidency, White House guests delighted in Jefferson’s hospitality as much as his ice cream.

Taking Ice Cream Mainstream

While not truly introducing the novelty dessert to America as myth claims, Jefferson almost certainly expanded ice cream’s early prominence through his fame and entertaining. As America’s premier political food influencer, his appetites sparked public intrigue. Local newspapers even shared reports of the exotic frozen delicacies gracing the President’s sophisticated table.

Within decades, ice cream recipe permeated cookbooks and everyday fare outside upper echelons, seeding a national infatuation. Technological improvements expanded access further, until the treat we now celebrate as an all-American classic took hold coast-to-coast.

Today heirloom homesteads like Jefferson’s Monticello charm visitors with restored ice cream preparation methods linking us to gourmand days of yore. But it was forward-looking tastemakers like the Presidential Francophile who first opened America’s eyes to ice cream’s enduring magic. Thanks in part to Jefferson the bon vivant, the rest is culinary history.

Actual image of Jefferson’s recipe for vanilla ice cream. From Library of Congress.

You can try Thomas Jefferson’s Ice Cream recipe yourself below:

Thomas Jefferson’s Ice Cream Recipe (source)

Ingredients

  • 2 bottles of good cream
  • 6 yolks of eggs
  • 1/2 lb. sugar

Recipe

  • mix the yolks & sugar
  • put the cream on a fire in a casserole, first putting in a stick of Vanilla.
  • when near boiling take it off & pour it gently into the mixture of eggs & sugar.
  • stir it well.
  • put it on the fire again stirring it thoroughly with a spoon to prevent it’s sticking to the casserole.
  • when near boiling take it off and strain it thro’ a towel.
  • put it in the Sabottiere
  • then set it in ice an hour before it is to be served. put into the ice a handful of salt.
  • put salt on the coverlid of the Sabotiere & cover the whole with ice.
  • leave it still half a quarter of an hour.
  • then turn the Sabottiere in the ice 10 minutes
  • open it to loosen with a spatula the ice from the inner sides of the Sabotiere.
  • shut it & replace it in the ice
  • open it from time to time to detach the ice from the sides
  • when well taken (prise) stir it well with the Spatula.
  • put it in moulds, justling it well down on the knee.
  • then put the mould into the same bucket of ice.
  • leave it there to the moment of serving it.
  • to withdraw it, immerse the mould in warm water, turning it well till it will come out & turn it into a plate.


📈😲Additional Fun Facts


54,914

Largest ice cream sundae ever made was 54K+ pounds

16

There were 16 states in the US when Jefferson became president in 1801

6,500

Jefferson sold 6,500 books to the Library of Congress after it was pillaged in 1814

20.8

Liters of ice cream eaten annually every year per capita in the U.S.


spot_img

Related articles

How the Eiffel Tower Was Built: The Marvel of 1889

In the winter of 1887, Parisian journalists gathered at a curious construction site on the Champ de Mars. There, amid wooden scaffolding and the rhythmic clang of hammers, they witnessed what one reporter would describe as men "reaping lightning bolts in the clouds."

Alan Smithee: The Worst Director in Hollywood

For over 30 years, one name appeared again and again as the director of some of the worst movies ever made - Alan Smithee. But Alan Smithee wasn't a real person. He was a pseudonym used by Hollywood directors who wanted to disavow their finished films.

Emmanuel Nwude: The Man Behind the $242 Million Nigerian Airport Scam

In the late 1990s, a brazen fraudster named Emmanuel Nwude pulled off one of history's most outrageous cons - selling a fictional airport to a gullible Brazilian bank director for a whopping $242 million.

The Oldest Customer Complaint: A 4,000-Year-Old Complaint to Ea-Nasir

The next time you find yourself composing an angry email to customer service, take comfort in knowing you're participating in a tradition nearly four millennia old. Long before Yelp reviews and Twitter rants, an irate customer named Nanni etched his frustrations into clay, creating what would become the world's oldest documented customer complaint. His target? A copper merchant named Ea-Nasir...
0