Ice Cream
When Vered turned one, we offered her a taste of ice cream at Sparky’s in Columbia, Missouri. As the spoon left her tongue, she thought about the taste in her mouth, looked at us, and then head bobbed for the cone in Jenny’s hand. Since then, she has been very vocal about her love of ice cream (or dessert, in general). In the last five years, as I (and she as well) have been to many breweries and brewpubs across the country, she also has been to many ice cream places. In addition to Sparky’s, she’s visited Glacier’s in Boulder, Chocolate Shoppe in Madison, a place in Petaluma whose name I forget, the Homemade Ice Cream and Pie Kitchen in Louisville (not homemade, by the way), and even, the other day, the only ice cream place in Lexington, the Ohio based Graeter’s chain (not my preference). Her world consists of princesses and ice cream. She hardly cares where the ice cream comes from. Homemade. Chain. Jeni’s or Breyers or mine. Doesn’t matter. Just make sure it’s chocolate. That’s all she asks.



It’s hardly uncommon to like ice cream. While foodies declare that everything tastes better with bacon (everything does not taste better with bacon), most people believe ice cream tastes fine on its own. Dairy Queen. Ben and Jerry’s. When I was a kid, Sweden was the marker (or tag) of good ice cream. Häagen-Dazs was considered exotic. Frusen Glädjé came in a plastic tube. Neither was from Sweden. We were fooled by the tags.
I might think that Vered’s love is born with the bond of an ice cream machine given to us as a wedding present. She was, after all, born nine months after our wedding. Obviously, the presence of the machine in the house while Jenny was pregnant, and the taste of homemade ice cream while sitting in Jenny’s belly, made Vered a quick admirer of the dessert. For some reason, however, the same process of consumption osmosis did not affect her 19 month old brother, Judah, who failed the one year old ice cream experiment (wouldn’t touch it) and shows no interest in ice cream still. I guess it is uncommon after all, to not like ice cream. He’s the only one I know who doesn’t. And I know him pretty well. He often kicks me in the head in the middle of the night. That, in itself, is a sign of our close relationship. His favorite type of food is what he can throw on the floor.

The lure of ice cream, which I feel as well, is masked by its simplicity. David Lebovitz, in The Perfect Scoop, reduces ice cream making to easy to manipulate formulas whose results produce intense flavor. The simplicity is in ingredients: cup of milk, cup of heavy cream, five egg yolks, three quarter cup of sugar, and you are ready to roll. Ice cream is simple to make but complicated in its ice cream shop configuration where ice cream makers often are obligated by outdated law to buy pre-made mixes. States fear some sort of break down of society and law if ice cream makers actually mix cream and milk on their own. Thus, while I, the common professor making ice cream on a $30 Cuisinart machine, has unlimited choice of local milk and local fat rich cream and the combination of the two, the average ice cream shop doesn’t. It is bound by law. And law has no mercy regarding food.
But images show mercy. They appeal in ways the original moment didn’t. Any yelling, pleading, promising, bribing that might have preceded the ice cream moment vanishes. The image, such as those I present here, only presents the pleasure of eating. I imagined this post as a collection of such images of pleasure, images of Vered eating ice cream at various moments of her five year old existence. Of course, I, the digital person, do a terrible job tagging my photos and thus I complicate my ability to retrieve the images I want at will. I have to rely on memory and a set of folders on my computers labeled by date. What year did we visit X, I ask myself? Maybe in April 2009, I’ll find a picture of my daughter eating ice cream. In real life, I have excellent organizational skills. In digital photography, I don’t.
My Flickr account, for instance, tags photos of my daughter as “Vered.” So much for nuance, or a David Weinberger attempt at classifying the complexity of ideas. I’ve basically limited all photographs of my daughter to her name. The same account dumps all of my other photos as “beer.” I seem to see the world in generics and constants. You can basically search for three things in my Flickr collection: Beer, Vered, Judah. My interests are reduced to three simple categories. Three simple ingredients. Three simple images.

The ingredients reflect and reveal our vacation strategies: Cities. Food. Children activities. Beer. They also reveal spaces: Chicago, Louisville, California, Missouri. A pretty simple formula for discovering ice cream. We, in a way, tag our vacations as such. Other families tag their trips as “theme park” or “fast food” along a highway. I keep bringing up Sweden as a possible destination (though pickled fish is my objective, not ice cream). Most of us, in the end, are limited in our approaches to food, work, pleasure, home. We prefer one type of limitation, however, to another. Limitations do not eliminate pleasure. They merely ask us to take sides. Just as Vered typically tags her ice cream “chocolate,” she has her own limitations regarding ice cream gastronomy, a sense developed over the last four years. Ice cream, for her, is ice cream. One tag is needed. She does not care how many flavors Baskin Robbins boasts that its factories make. She only needs one flavor. She needs one tag.
Cuisinart sounds like a Swedish appliance. If I were to tag it as such, of course, I’d be wrong. It’s American. Tags show no mercy. They allure. They seduce. They make us feel we are naming one thing in place of the other. On the other hand, we’ve been told that taxonomies gone digital – folksonomies – can never be wrong. Ours is the age of naming and labeling! Ours is the age of word seduction. I like ice cream and making ice cream for such reasons: the flavor profiles are endless as long as I have my base ingredients. My daughter feels chocolate is enough, and no other ingredients are needed (she likely imagines ice cream as only chocolate; no cream, no egg, no milk). No one in our house has appreciated my paw paw ice cream. My flourless chocolate cake ice cream is what I would serve if I owned an ice cream shop where I could use my own mix. My wife loves peanut butter and chocolate ice cream when I make it. These are just tags, of course. Mixes of labels. Images of dessert. Pleasures five years old partake in. And 43 year olds as well.







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