food.wikisort.org - DishA knickerbocker glory is a layered ice cream sundae that is served in a large tall conical glass, and to be eaten with a distinctive long spoon, particularly in Great Britain and Ireland.
Type of ice cream
Knickerbocker glory Knickerbocker glory sundae |
Type | Ice cream |
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Main ingredients | Ice cream, cream |
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The knickerbocker glory, first described in the 1920s,[1] may contain ice cream, cream, fruit, and meringue. Layers of these different sweet tastes are alternated in a tall glass and topped with different kinds of syrup, nuts, whipped cream and often a cherry.[2] The existence of these layers, which create red and white stripes, distinguishes the dish from a tall sundae and lends the Knickerbocker glory its name.[3] In the United States this dish is more commonly known as a parfait, though knickerbocker glory is occasionally used.[3]
History and etymology
An early form of the knickerbocker glory is believed to have originated in New York in the early 1900s.[4] The name knickerbocker (as it pertains to the dish) is thought to be named after The Knickerbocker Hotel in Manhattan, New York. During the early 1900s the hotel was pink-and-cream colored and well known to the denizens of New York.[5] After it closed in 1920, a tall pink-and-cream colored dish was created in honor of the hotel and the word glory was appended to the name of the dish.[5] At some point in the 1920s the dish was introduced into the United Kingdom, where it attained great acclaim.[1]
See also
References
External links
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Flavors | |
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Forms | |
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Dishes | |
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Events |
- Ice Cream for Breakfast Day
- Ice cream social
- National Ice Cream Month
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Lists | |
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Related |
- Carlo Gatti
- Gelato University
- Geography of ice cream
- Ice cream cart
- Ice cream maker
- Ice cream parlor
- Ice cream van
- Penny lick
- Squround
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Similar desserts | |
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English cuisine |
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Roman times | |
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Middle Ages to 15th century | Exemplars |
- Utilis Coquinario (c. 1300)
- The Forme of Cury (c. 1390)
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Dishes | |
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16th century | Exemplars |
- Richard Pynson (The Boke of Cokery, 1500)
- Thomas Dawson (The Good Huswifes Jewell, 1585)
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Dishes | |
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17th century | |
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18th century | Exemplars |
- Mary Kettilby (A Collection of above Three Hundred Receipts in Cookery, Physick and Surgery 1714)
- Mary Eales (Mrs Mary Eales's Receipts 1718)
- John Nott (The Cooks and Confectioners Dictionary, 1723)
- Eliza Smith (The Compleat Housewife 1727)
- Hannah Glasse (The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy 1747)
- Martha Bradley (The British Housewife 1758)
- Elizabeth Raffald (The Experienced English Housekeeper 1769)
- Richard Briggs (The English Art of Cookery 1788)
- William Augustus Henderson (The Housekeeper's Instructor 1791)
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Dishes | |
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19th century | Exemplars |
- Maria Rundell (A New System of Domestic Cookery 1806)
- Eliza Acton (Modern Cookery for Private Families 1845)
- Charles Elmé Francatelli (The Modern Cook 1846)
- Isabella Beeton (Mrs. Beeton's Book of Household Management 1861)
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Dishes | |
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20th century | |
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21st century | |
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Related |
- Food in England (1954)
- List of English dishes
- List of English cheeses
- List of savoury puddings
- List of sweet puddings
- Rationing in the United Kingdom
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