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| Eating ice cream in downtown San Augustine, Texas in 1939 |
In writing my first food history book Hog and Hominy, I interviewed my father Fred Opie
Jr. Out of that conversation came a story about an ice cream related job he had
as a boy growing up in the Hudson Valley’s Village of North Tarrytown in New
York. My father’s description of the job he had helping the town’s ice man make deliveries reminds me of an ice cream production and preservation system unknown to his
two grandchildren.
Fred Opie Jr:
There were not too many black [owned] businesses [back when
I was a boy growing up in North Tarrytown], I can almost count them on my hand.
. . . most of the black businesses were moving businesses, moving companies. .
. One company was operated by [Mr.] Grant [who also] had an ice business and sold
coal by the bag. I actually worked for him when I was a boy . . . in the 40’s
because back then everybody had ice boxes you know. And . . . there was a place
where you would go and buy large chunks of ice [and he would haul it in his
flatbed truck]. He had a real knack for cutting the ice . . . it was a real art
to cutting whole pieces of ice . . . a
real science. [We delivered ice to the Glovers, a family that operated a candy
shop on Courtland Street that] sold . . . ice cream.
Making Ice Cream From Scratch
Series With Recipes: http://www.foodasalens.com/search?q=Making+Ice+Cream+From+Scratch+
Ice Cream Tips: [4 min 4
sec] Listen http://www.npr.org/2012/06/30/156034895/the-season-of-ice-cream-tips-from-the-top
Eating Ice Cream and Eating Jim
Crow: http://www.foodasalens.com/2010/07/black-zagat-guide-and-eating-jim-crow.html


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