• Pleb
    link
    fedilink
    224 months ago

    Is this a joke I’m too German to understand?

      • @merari42
        link
        17
        edit-2
        4 months ago

        While it was obviously invented by the Prussian nobleman Fürst Pückler, who also invented modern landscape gardening and got his wealth from a series of erotic travel journals about England?

        • @Cosmicomical
          link
          64 months ago

          Uh, acshually it was invented by the head chef of a prussian family IN HONOUR of Furst Puckler. Let’s put credit were it’s due, I hate when the work of professionals is misattributed to random rich people that just happened to be there at the right time.

          The same way, I’m sure Mr. Sandwich had nothing to do with the actual creation of the food that bears his name. He probably never even put foot in the kitchen.

        • @Wogi
          link
          44 months ago

          This is the most perfect comment on the Internet. A series of wildly unbelievable facts that sounds exactly like shit posting random bullshit, but is in fact, all true

      • Pleb
        link
        fedilink
        54 months ago

        I inferred as much. It’s just a snide joke about how we call it something completely different over here.

        • @johannesvanderwhales
          link
          24 months ago

          TBH I’m somewhat surprised to hear that it’s even a thing outside of north america.

          • Pleb
            link
            fedilink
            94 months ago

            Why though? The first recorded recipe for it was created by a Prussian.

            • @johannesvanderwhales
              link
              24 months ago

              Because the number of people/households who consume equal amounts of chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry ice cream seems limited. And I don’t think there’s much to be gained by eating all three at once. Therefore it seems like something that has very little utility, so I’m surprised it would spread. Plus I can’t say I have any knowledge of it being invented outside the US, since to me it feels very… 1950s America vibe.

              • @raspberriesareyummy
                link
                64 months ago

                And I don’t think there’s much to be gained by eating all three at once.

                Ah see, my friend, that is where you are mistaken.

              • Tarquinn2049
                link
                1
                edit-2
                4 months ago

                The entire point is eating all three at once. If you don’t do it that way, your parents raised you wrong. Hehe. Scoop across, not within. Though to be fair, I’ve never bought the separated blocks one. I’ve only ever had the ones that are already swirled together to make the intention not only clear, but nearly impossible to circumvent.

    • Tarquinn2049
      link
      14
      edit-2
      4 months ago

      People are bad at reading. Leads to a surprising number of english readers seeing Napoleon and Neapolitan as the same word. I went into more detail in a different reply in this thread if you want to know more.

      • Pleb
        link
        fedilink
        24 months ago

        I inferred as much. It’s just a snide joke about how we call it something completely different over here.

        • @Kethal
          link
          -34 months ago

          I don’t think it’s a snide joke about what people call it. I think OP has no idea that it’s called Neapolitan ice cream, not Napoleon ice cream, so there’s no joke at all. If it were called Napoleon ice cream, I suppose it’s a joke of sorts, but not one I consider very good.

          • Arthur Besse
            link
            fedilink
            English
            34 months ago

            I think OP has no idea that it’s called Neapolitan ice cream

            "Confused Nick Young" meme (image of a man with a perplexed facial expression and three question marks on each side of his head)

            (i think you’re mistaken, and also that OP’s meme is good)