Mint chocolate chip, butter pecan, or rocky road? Cake cone, sugar cone, or waffle cone? Today's ice cream creations are seemingly endless, and for many, a scoop of this cool, creamy indulgence, served in all manner of cones, makes for a refreshing and portable treat. However, single-serve ice cream as we know it wasn't always quite so…enticing. Here's the scoop on how some people enjoyed ice cream before the cone came to be.

Ice cream first became popular in England in the mid-1800s. According to Atlas Obscura, ice cream street vendors, known as Jacks, sold tiny servings of ice cream in a glass container called a penny lick. As its name implies, the cup held just a "lick's worth" of ice cream. The small vessel made of thick glass had a cone-shaped indentation that held much less ice cream than it appeared. No spoons were needed—customers would lick the glass clean and give it back to the Jack for reuse. But the penny lick's deceptive serving size was the least of its problems.

Sweet-toothed customers got more than a lick of ice cream for their penny—they also got a lick at contracting a contagious disease. The Guardian reports that penny licks "were rarely wiped, let alone washed, between customers." Plus, the penny lick's shape made it hard to clean, and germs were easily passed from one customer to the next.

Today, this practice might send people screaming away from ice cream. But in the first half of the 19th century, people in England knew little about germs. However, once word spread about the transmissible nature of tuberculosis and other diseases, penny licks started to fall out of favor.

In 1879, a medical journal blamed an outbreak of a disease called cholera on penny licks. A law was passed in 1899 banning the use of those dirty dishes in London, and they were fully outlawed in England in 1926.

While the penny lick was permanently shelved, its story does have a sweet ending. The demise of the penny lick helped usher in the age of the ice cream cone. Now, edible cones of all shapes, sizes, and flavors remain crowd-pleasing containers for a scoop or two on the go. They even help hinder the spread of germs, assuming you keep your licks to yourself.

Question 4


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What is a cause-and-effect relationship that takes place in the article?

A decrease in contagious disease led to the penny lick becoming popular.
An understanding of germs led to the penny lick being banned.
The demise of the ice cream cone resulted in the development of the penny lick.
The discovery of germs resulted in the invention of the penny lick.

1 answer

The correct cause-and-effect relationship that takes place in the article is:

An understanding of germs led to the penny lick being banned.

This is supported by the text, which mentions that as people learned about the transmissible nature of diseases, penny licks started to fall out of favor, ultimately leading to their ban due to health concerns.