Icy-pole: Ice cream or popsicle. Jumper: Sweater—but can be both knit or jersey.
Ice cream consumption in Australia stands at 18.0 liters per capita annually. The Australian ice cream market is dominated by brands such as Streets, Cadbury, Peters, and Connoisseur.
Different parts of Australia use either ice block or icy pole (which is a brand name), and New Zealand uses ice block. In the Philippines the term ice drop is used with coconut flavor ice pops being called ice bukos.
Instead, you had to ask for a Trumpet. (The Trumpet had previously been seen on the east coast as the Toppa Trumpet – another Drumstick look-alike.) When Nestlé bought the Western Australian Peters Ice Cream operation in 2009, the Drumstick returned.
a flavoured frozen water ice: in Australia and New Zealand, sometimes on a stick.
Bubble O' Bill is a brand of packaged frozen dessert sold in Australia and New Zealand, manufactured under Unilever's Streets brand, and formerly available in the United States and United Kingdom under sister brands Good Humor and Wall's respectively.
In Australia, the labels “single” and “double” cream are mostly irrelevant. You need to read the fat content on the label to see which is which. Single cream (often labelled “pouring cream”) contains 33-35% fat, double cream has 60-66% fat, and thickened cream is single cream with a thickening agent added.
Eskimo ice cream, called Akutaq (ah-goo-duck), is an Alaskan delicacy! Unlike regular ice cream, this one is made up of animal fats, oils, and berries.
Queenslanders like their 'by jingos' - a brand name for the sweet, frozen treats, which has stuck - Victorians have icy poles, and in NSW they enjoy an ice block.
While the answers to shopping trolley, bread rolls and chips weren't particularly controversial, Americans just couldn't wrap their heads around the fact that Aussies refer to icy poles as Zooper Doopers.
Why do Australians call sweets “lollies”, even when they have no sticks? According to British English from A to Zed by Norman Schur (Harper, 1991) “lolly” derives onomatopoetically for the mouth sounds associated with sucking or licking.
The 'Stubby' name
Folklore has it the Australians got creative and gave the humble holder the name 'Stubby' for the 'fatter and shorter' 375 mL beer bottle, or 'Stubby', for the bottle the neoprene sleeve is commonly wrapped around. Queenslanders still affectionately call it a 'cooler'.
Dairy – “In North America a dairy is where someone milks the cows but down under it is called a cowshed. A dairy here is the local corner shop where you can get your food, etc.” Paddocks – “We call the fields, where cows graze, Paddocks whereas in North American they are called pastures.”
Australia and New Zealand
2 – Defines cream as a milk product comparatively rich in fat, in the form of an emulsion of fat-in-skim milk, which can be obtained by separation from milk. Cream sold without further specification must contain no less than 350 g/kg (35%) milk fat.
Paletas are a Mexican frozen treat made from fresh natural fruits such as strawberry and mango or made from rich creamy ingredients such as Chocolate and Sicilian pistachio.
Here, in Australia, it's not something that you can find in shops so we've got some tips on how to make your own. Half-and-half is a mixture of equal parts full-cream milk and thickened cream. It has a higher fat content than milk but lower than cream and because it is thinner than cream, it can't be whipped.
Moondarra Cream Cheese/Neufchatel is 100% Australian, utilising milk & cream derived from the lush, clean, green pastures of Victoria, Australia. Moondarra Cream Cheese/Neufchatel is made in a modern production facility achieving exemplary standards of quality control and consistency.
Light cream is cream which contains not less than 18 percent but less than 30 percent milkfat. It's also great in coffee, especially if you're looking for an especially rich cup, but it still doesn't have enough fat to be whipped successfully.
Our online lolly shop delivers bubble gum products Australia-wide! - Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth. Check out our bubble gum products below!
It continued to grow and today Streets ice cream is sold throughout Australia and New Zealand with well known brands such as Magnum, Viennetta, Paddle Pop, Cornetto, Gaytime, Calippo and Blue Ribbon. Visit our Streets website to find our full range of products including water ice, ice cream sticks, and so much more.
No. They contain gelatine, which is from animal origin.