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Was Margaret Thatcher really part of team that invented Mr Whippy? | Was Margaret Thatcher really part of team that invented Mr Whippy? |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Very little connected to Margaret Thatcher's legacy comes without an argument. | Very little connected to Margaret Thatcher's legacy comes without an argument. |
The claim by the bishop of London in his funeral address that the former scientist was "part of the team that invented Mr Whippy ice-cream" is no exception. | |
The New Scientist reported in July 1983, as Thatcher was elected a fellow of the Royal Society body of scientists, that she had worked "developing emulsifiers for ice-creams for Joe Lyons from 1949-51". | |
The Washington Post, in the wake of her death last week, claimed she "helped invent ice-cream as we know it", adding that her efforts as part of the Lyons team to create a cheap, airy ice-cream were "one aspect of Margaret Thatcher's legacy we can all feel unequivocally good about". | |
It is, though, as the New Yorker has it, a "frozen-dessert origin myth". | It is, though, as the New Yorker has it, a "frozen-dessert origin myth". |
Mr-Whippy-style soft-serve ice-cream originated in the US about a decade before Thatcher worked at J Lyons, it reports. When soft-serve arrived in the UK, J Lyons was indeed at the forefront – but it had teamed up with the US ice-cream behemoth Mister Softee and operated franchises under that name. | |
Thatcher was a food research scientist at J Lyons but, as a Royal Society article noted in May 2011, the details of her work there are sketchy. She reportedly worked on the quality of cake and pie fillings as well as ice-cream, and researched saponification (soap-making). | |
The article reports: "An oft-told anecdote in British left circles associates Thatcher with the invention of soft ice-cream, which added air, lowered quality and raised profits. Lyons certainly worked on this new product, but there is no firm evidence that Thatcher directly assisted in its invention." | |
Incidentally, Thatcher didn't invent the Cadbury Flake either. | Incidentally, Thatcher didn't invent the Cadbury Flake either. |