High School went by fairly quickly for me except for a few moments which have stuck in my memory like pit stains on a comfortable tee shirt. Like embarrassing moment #1, this one takes place in 1987 but stateside and in a Friendly’s restaurant. Friendly’s, for those unfamiliar with the regional chain, is a restaurant whose main attraction is a large assortment of frozen treats.
I had worked there for what seemed like years teenage-time (which translates into two summers real person time) and I had worked there long enough to look the part. I had my standard issue polyester pants, neatly tucked in matching polyester shirt, a developing Popeye forearm on my ‘scooping arm’ and a little badge proudly displaying my rank in the organization by the number of tiny ice cream cones beneath my name. If I recall correctly, and I highly doubt that I do, I was a two cone crew member. Considering you get one cone for successfully watching a video, I clearly wasn’t very high on the frozen food chain.
I had been working fountain, which means I worked the desserts. This ranged from the Crowd Pleaser (a short lived promotional 8 scoop experiment in gluttony) to single scoop ice cream cones. Somewhere on that continuum lies the shakes category. While ice cream parlors all over the world were satisfied with simply tweaking the original recipe of ice cream + milk + syrup, Friendly’s was busy innovating. After what I’m sure was grueling months in the lab and extensive market research, they invented THE FRIBBLE (Which is the same thing as a milk shake but make with’ ice milk’ instead of ‘ice cream’, flavored only by the syrup).
Truth be told, a milk shake and a Fribble were, at their core, similarly delicious with Fribbles being a little sweeter. The real difference, however, came with consistency. I don’t pretend to understand ice milk at the molecular level, but as far as thick shakes were concerned, ice milk contained some serious thickness mojo.
I’m a big fan of thick shakes and accordingly I had become a master at creating the extra thick Fribble. With ice milk already making a thicker than normal milk shake, that is like saying that I was a master at making extra hard cement. The Friendly’s Fribble recipe called for 3 scoops of ice milk, but as a Fribble artiste, I laughed at their 3-scoop suggestion. You could easily pack 7 scoops into that mixing frappe, saving just enough space to drizzle in the milk and syrup.
On this fateful day I had concocted what I had deemed at the time to be ‘Fribble perfection’ for my 15 minute break. It was the craziest makes-molasses-look-runny Fribble that I had ever created. The mixing machine almost ground to a halt straining against the compressed ice milk. It ended up being so thick that I didn’t even insult it by bringing a straw with me to the break area.
The ‘break area’ at this particular Friendly’s, interestingly enough, was an unused table out with the other customers. In retrospect, I’m not sure why anybody thought this was a good idea. Crew members would spread out various things on the table, carry on and generally be disgusting. This would be like me inviting guests to my home only to have my underwear hanging out to dry in a line across my living room. But I digress….
So I sat down in my break booth and let the clanking, slurping, chattering and bustling of patrons and wait staff alike melt away as, just for a moment, I marveled at my Fribble's beauty...
