Sunday, April 3, 2011

Google Doodle Celebrates 119th Anniversary of First Ice Cream Sundae


Google Doodle Celebrates 119th Anniversary of First Ice Cream Sundae:  Doodles Google homepage are a bit 'casual, but delicious. Picture of the Day honors 119th birthday, the first documented ice cream cup.

The pastel color image replaces the two zeros in the Google logo with a cherry on top ice cream ice cream.

The history of ice cream sundae actually created the whole feud between two U.S. cities that claims to be his birthplace - Ithaca, NY, and Two Rivers, Wisconsin - and Google seems to be left for Ithaca.

3. April 1892, the Rev. John M. Scott Platt & Colt Pharmacy is gone - and its owner Chester Platt - Ithaca Unitarian Church after the service. Platt served in two bowls with vanilla ice cream, but decided to jazz with cherry syrup and candied cherry According to What's Cooking America. The duo were so pleased with the creation of Scott suggested that it takes its name from the date of creation, and "Cherry Sunday" was upon us.

On April 5 became the pharmacy advertising its 10 cents Cherry Sunday at Ithaca Daily Journal, reports icecreamsundae.com.

The history of Wisconsin, meanwhile, is the creation of ice cream in 1881. Someone in the Hall of Ed Berners ordered an ice cream soda, but because it was the Sabbath day and soft drinks have fallen into disuse, Berners not put chocolate syrup on ice cream. It's a great story, but according to what's Cooking America, the birth of Wisconsin suggest that Berners who have only been 17 in 1881 and, therefore, is unlikely to have owned an ice cream parlor, Ithaca and the story is probable.

These are not the only city claiming to have created a sundae, though. Icreamsundae.com known as shops in Buffalo, Norfolk, and Plainfield, Illinois, among others, have also complained.

Google has made headlines for his latest doodles, including an interactive underwater design theme in honor of the 183rd anniversary of Jules Verne and 17 rental-doodles themes that were visible for two days in December.

Recently, it became clear that Google receives a patent for the doodles tenement, which covers "systems and methods for allowing a user to access a Web site."

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