It was Memorial Day weekend, 1934, when Tom Carvel’s ice cream truck got a flat tire in Hartsdale, New York. He pulled into a parking lot and started selling his melting ice cream to passing drivers. What could have been a loss turned into a breakthrough—customers liked the softer texture, and the concept of soft-serve was born.
That moment sparked the launch of the Carvel brand. By 1936, Carvel opened a permanent roadside stand on that same site and began developing his own equipment and franchise model. He pioneered innovations in frozen desserts and advertising—including early television commercials and animated mascots.
In the 1950s, Carvel introduced the now-iconic round ice cream cake—layered with vanilla and chocolate soft-serve, filled with chocolate crunchies, and topped with piped whipped frosting and sprinkles. It quickly became a fixture at birthdays, holidays, and family celebrations.
Photographed here as served—no props, no styling—just the cake, isolated on a black background. It’s part of my “From Bag to Background” series, and a fitting nod to an accidental origin that took place on Memorial Day nearly a century ago.
See more from the series:
https://www.secondfocus.com/index/G0000wQ3fbeEezF0/I0000nUG8tfk8Gdc
May 22, 2025 | Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: 1930s food, American desserts, Carvel, Carvel history, chocolate crunchies, classic cake, Dessert Photography, fast food photography, Food History, from bag to background, frozen desserts, ice cream cake, iconic food, Memorial Day, nostalgic desserts, roadside origin, secondfocus, soft serve, Tom Carvel, vanilla ice cream | 1 Comment
Twinkies, twenty of them for National Twinkie Day today!
April 6, 1930 — James Dewar invents the Twinkie in River Forest, Illinois. He names it after a roadside ad that read: “Twinkle Toe Shoes — the kids’ favorite”. Banana filling at first. Vanilla took over during WWII, and never left.
Since then, they’ve been everywhere: bunkers, lunchboxes, courtrooms, campaign speeches, urban legends. They were discontinued in 2012, mourned like pop stars, then brought back in 2013. This is nostalgia. And a little bit of history.
April 6, 2025 | Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: 1930s food, American Snacks, Americana, banana cream, black background, Cold War food, contemporary food art, Dessert Photography, discontinued snacks, fine art food, food art, Food Photography, food styling, food symbolism, hostess, James Dewar, junk food, National Twinkie Day, nostalgia, photography series, pop culture food, processed food, snack cakes, snack history, snack pile, Twinkie revival, Twinkies, Twinkle Toe Shoes, unstyled food, vanilla filling, vintage snacks | Leave a comment