Showing posts with label Popsicles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Popsicles. Show all posts

March 11 - Goodbye to Twin Popsicles

  Posted on March 11, 2022 

This is an update of my post published on March 11, 2011:






Did you know that Popsicles were invented by accident?

Did you know that they were invented by a kid?

In 1905, in San Francisco, an 11-year-old boy named Frank Epperson was mixing powdered flavoring for soda and water on his porch. He left the drink there with the stirring stick still in the glass. That night was really cold, and Frank's drink froze around his stick. That's how Frank got the idea for a fruit-flavored ice pop.

In 1923, the adult Frank Epperson introduced his frozen treat-on-a-stick at Neptune Beach, California. He called it the Epsicle Ice Pop (using his own last name in combination with the word "icicle"). Later Epperson's kids suggested he change the name to Popsicle.

The flat wooden sticks with rounded ends were considered a bonus to eating the frozen dessert, and kids would save the sticks and use them in many different ways, especially as a craft material.

 
During the Great Depression (the 1930s), twin Popsicles (a double-stick Popsicle) were introduced—and this double treat was sold for more than 40 years. The two sections could be divided and shared—but breaking Popsicles apart wasn't always a smooth operation, as I well remember. Sometimes too much of the Popsicle would end up stuck to one stick, and the smaller portion would often fall off its stick altogether.

So perhaps it was no surprise when, on this day in 1986, Popsicle announced that it was discontinuing two-stick popsicles in favor of the one-stick variety.

Celebrate by eating Popsicles—or by making your own frozen-juice treat.

Pour juice (or juice plus fruit) into tiny paper cups or large ice-cube trays. The trick is to allow the juice to partially freeze before inserting the wooden sticks—that way, the sticks can stand up straight. Then continue to freeze solid.





(Friday of the first full week of March)




Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest boards for:

And here are my Pinterest boards for: 



June 27 - National Bomb Pop Day

(Last Thursday of June)

Posted on June 27, 2019



I am not sure I've ever had a Bomb Pop - but apparently these red-white-and-blue popsicles have been really popular ever since they were invented in 1955, when I was just a baby.

Is it the size?
The rocket shape?
The multiple flavors?
The patriotic colors?
The fact that your tongue might not just get colored by eating the popsicle, but it might get multi-color colored?



The fact that you might, on a hot summer day, get multi-color drips down your arm?

Bomb Pops are SO popular, two other companies make pretty much identical looking popsicles - red-white-and-blue rocket-shaped popsicles - and are selling them under different names (Rocket Pop and Firecracker). 


And I bet they all sell really well in early July, in time for the "rocket's red glare" and fireworks shows associated with the United States' Independence Day.

By the way, I mentioned multiple flavors, but I neglected to mention WHAT flavors. The original Bomb Pops were cherry, lime, and blue raspberry. And that original flavor popsicle is still available, but the manufacturer, Blue Bunny, also offers:



Fruit Bomb
Watermelon Bomb Pops
Hawaiian Punch Bomb Pops
Banana Fudge Bomb Pops
Tongue Splashers Bomb Pops
Jolly Ranchers Bomb Pops
Sour Power Bomb Pops
Extra Sour Tear Jerkers Bomb Pops
and WARHEADS Bomb Pops.

Oh, and Original Flavor / Sugar Free!

Notice that some of these flavors have different color schemes as well as different flavors.






March 11, 2011


Goodbye to Twin Popsicles – 1986


Did you know that Popsicles were invented by accident?

Did you know that they were invented by a kid?

In 1905, in San Francisco, an 11-year-old boy named Frank Epperson was mixing powdered flavoring for soda and water on his porch. He left the drink there with the stirring stick still in the glass. That night was really cold, and Frank's drink froze around his stick. That's how Frank got the idea for a fruit-flavored ice pop.

In 1923, the adult Frank Epperson introduced his frozen treat-on-a-stick at Neptune Beach, California. He called it the Epsicle Ice Pop (using his own last name in combination with the word "icicle"). Later Epperson's kids suggested he change the name to Popsicle.

The flat wooden sticks with rounded ends were considered a bonus to eating the frozen dessert, and kids would save the sticks and use them in many different ways, especially as a craft material.

During the Great Depression (the 1930s), twin Popsicles (a double-stick Popsicle) were introduced—and this double treat was sold for more than 40 years. The two sections could be divided and shared—but breaking Popsicles apart wasn't always a smooth operation, as I well remember. Sometimes too much of the Popsicle would end up stuck to one stick, and the smaller portion would often fall off its stick altogether.

So perhaps it was no surprise when, on this day in 1986, Popsicle announced that it was discontinuing two-stick popsicles in favor of the one-stick variety.

Celebrate by eating Popsicles—or by making your own frozen-juice treat.

Pour juice into tiny paper cups or large ice-cube trays. The trick is to allow the juice to partially freeze before inserting the wooden sticks—that way, the sticks can stand up straight. Then continue to freeze solid.