Raspberry ripple is a popular flavour of ice cream particularly in Great Britain and also elsewhere [where?]. It consists of raspberry syrup injected into vanilla ice cream. "Raspberry ripple" was also the name given to other raspberry-flavoured food products in the 1920s.[1][2]

Raspberry Ripple
Homemade raspberry ripple ice cream
TypeIce cream
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Serving temperatureCold
Main ingredientsRaspberry syrup, vanilla ice cream

The term "ripple" in ice cream manufacture and consumption may have originated in the United States where from the 1930s, it was used to denote any type of ice cream ribboned through with coloured and flavoured syrup.[3][4] Around this time, machinery had been developed which would allow ice cream to incorporate fruit paste separately in a marbled effect.[5] Raspberry ripple has been a popular variant ever since.[6][7]

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Raspberry ripple is Cockney rhyming slang for nipple and cripple.[8][9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Announcing the opening of a new A&P store". Daily Kennebec Journal. Heritage Microfilm, Inc.#NewspaperArchive. 12 April 1926. Rasperry Ripple fancy cookies 33c LB
  2. ^ Whitney, Parke (10 June 1927). "A Lot of Applesauce". Gastonia Daily Gazette. Heritage Microfilm, Inc.#NewspaperArchive. Evidently the old fellow had gormandistic tendencies for such quaint things as "Taffaty tarts", "Raspberry Ripple", "Mint Julep", and "Rosemary Snow".
  3. ^ "Fudge ripple ice cream". Ice Cream Trade Journal. New York: ICTJ Pub. Co. 19 November 1939. ISSN 0096-2031.
  4. ^ "Green Meadows Ice Cream". Racine Journal Times. Heritage Microfilm, Inc.#NewspaperArchive. 25 November 1939. Ripple Ice Cream – You'll like it!
  5. ^ Report of the Thirty-third Annual Date Growers' Institute. Vol. 33. Coachelle, California: Date Growers' Institute. 1924. the development of a date ice cream made by the ripple-process is being conducted with the cooperation of the Carnation Company. In this process a heavy date syrup-paste mixture is folded into a vanilla base ice cream to give a marbled effect.
  6. ^ "Walgreen Ice Cream Raspberry Ripple". The Milwaukee Journal. 8 July 1948. p. 12. Retrieved 8 June 2011.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "Wall's Dairy Raspberry Ripple". The Times. London. 19 September 1959. p. 1.
  8. ^ "Raspberry Ripple is Cockney Rhyming Slang for Nipple!". Cockneyrhymingslang.co.uk. Archived from the original on 29 December 2017. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  9. ^ "BBC – Ouch! (disability) – Play – Top Ten – Ten examples of disability Cockney rhyming slang". BBC. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
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