BlS—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 16,1983 BY KIMBERLY HERR NEW HOLLAND Be patriotic eat an ice cream cone. That’s right, folks, this week was national ice cream week. And what a wonderful reason to splurge on a large, triple-dip ice cream cone in your favorite flavor. 1 mean, af terail, if you need an excuse to blow your diet, just chalk it up to your duty as an American. And, while you’re splurging, you may as well go all the way and treat yourself to real, honest-to goodness homemade ice cream. Some of the best to be found is on a farm nestled in the New Holland area. This farm, complete with cool breezes from the many trees, is inviting enough on a hot sum mer’s day, add the temptation of freshly-made ice cream, and the scene becomes irresistible. The farm and ice cream works belong to Ben Z. Lapp and family. They have about 50 cows on their 60-acre farm. They get about 350 gallons of milk per day and make about 400 gallons of ice cream each week. The Lapps went into the ice cream business about eight years ago. Since that tune he switched from milking twice a day to milking three tunes a day because they needed the extra milk. Lapp, who is a member of the Amish church, explained he began making ice cream for members of his church, and his interest grew from there. So, apparently, did the demand. Lapp sells his ice cream at a small shop on his farm, at the Green Dragon Market and Auction and at a market in Reading. During the summer months, his employees hand dip about 4,000 cones per week. His customers have a choice of 19 flavors. All of the ingredients are fresh and natural. Ten days after milk is taken from the cow, the purchaser will have consumed the ice cream, according to Lapp. The whole process takes place on Lapp's farm. An observer can follow the milk all the way from the cow to the finished product without ever stepping outside. The process begins in the barn when the cows are milked. From Jonas and John, Lapp's four-year-old twins, enjoy the ice cream made on Daddy's farm. 1 & ” 1 •' " * '■'’* '' *.j _ there, it is taken upstairs m the barn. It is placed in a 200-gallon steel vat where the ice cream mix is made. The mix consists of milk, cream, sugar and dry milk. Both cane and com sugar are used, and the cream comes from a local cheese company. The mixture is then heated and moved onto the next step of the process where it is homogenized. It then moves on to the holding tank. From the holding tank, the mixture travels down into a first floor room which is connected to the bam. If you are fortunate enough to be there at the right time, you can grab a taste of your favorite flavor while it is still in soft form. In this room is Mary King, one af Lapp’s busy employees. She actually makes the mix into ice cream. Containers of won derful-looking ingredients line this room. From strawberries to blueberries to walnuts in a maple sauce, this room holds all the goodies that make the ice cream complete. Mary, who works about 20 hours per week, is kept busy making the ice cream and cleaning the equipment every tune she starts a new flavor. Hanging above her head are biblical verses of en couragement. • "I sometimes need that en couragement through the sum mer,” Mary laughed. After Mary makes the ice cream, she places it in containers and puts them into a freezer, which can hold Boo gallons of ice cream. A door on the other side of Mary’s room leads the visitor into the ice cream shop. Here are two more huge freezers. One stores ice cream to be dipped by hand and another stores the ice cream that is already packaged. The shop is open Monday through Thursday from noon until dark. Fridays and Saturdays, the shop opens at 8 a.m. and closes at 7 p.m. At least they try and close at 7 p.m., however, some nights people just keep arriving for more ice cream. The Lapps prefer to sell their ice cream by the cone, but do package some of it for the convenience ot those who want to take more than one cone along home with them. The packaged ice cream really comes in handy during strawberry season when everyone wants to buy gallons of vanilla ice cream, according to Lapp. Vanilla is the favorite flavor of those people buying packages, however, raspberry takes the lead for those buying cones. And it isn’t only the customers who like to nibble on Lapp’s ice cream. Esther Ghck, another one of Lapp’s employees, works in the processing room, where the milk, sugar, and cream are combined. Although she works around ice cream all the time, she never tires of it. In fact, she was on her way to treat herself to a cone when she was interrupted by a reporter. Before Esther, Mary and some of their other employees came in the picture, Lapp and his wife Lena did all the work themselves. They made the ice cream in their home at night after working around the farm all day. For the past several years, the ice cream has been made every Tuesday and Wednesday. The mix is made on Thursday and then allowed to sit for several days. According to Lapp, this makes for a better flavor. Although the mix is kept for several days, the original milk is not, and it is often put into the mix the same day it is taken from the cow. The milk that Lapp also sells is sometimes in the hands of the consumer just two hours after it comes from the cow. By the end of the week, the ice cream that is made on Tuesday and Wednesday has been sold. While Lapp has created a suc cessful operation, he is determined to keep the business a family one. John's favorite flavor is vanilla, even if it melts quicker than he can eat it. That way he remains in control of what goes into his ice cream and where it is sold. His ice cream currently contains about 16 percent butterfat, which makes it rich and creamy, and, you may be thinking, much more fattening. However, Lapp explained that the difference in calories from an ice cream that is low in butterfat to one that is high is not as great as people think. Therefore, it is perfectly proper for you to go ahead and order an ice cream cone and not even think of the calories. If it’s any consolation, while you are taking the very first lick of your'cone, millions of others are doing the exact same thing. Last year Americans ate more than three billion quarts of ice cream. That averages out to about 15 quarts per person. So, go ahead, if you didn’t have an ice cream cone during this past week, spoil yourself this weekend and cool the heat with ice cream.