1 00:00:04,120 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to Aaron Manke's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of 2 00:00:07,520 --> 00:00:14,480 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio and Grimm and Mild. Our world is full of 3 00:00:14,520 --> 00:00:18,440 Speaker 1: the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, all 4 00:00:18,520 --> 00:00:22,200 Speaker 1: of these amazing tales are right there on display, just 5 00:00:22,239 --> 00:00:28,880 Speaker 1: waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet of Curiosities. 6 00:00:36,720 --> 00:00:39,720 Speaker 1: When it comes to sweet treats, ice cream is a classic. 7 00:00:39,880 --> 00:00:43,120 Speaker 1: A hot fudge Sunday, a banana split, a double dip 8 00:00:43,200 --> 00:00:46,080 Speaker 1: waffle cone. You won't catch me turning any of these 9 00:00:46,080 --> 00:00:49,400 Speaker 1: delicacies down. But as much as I enjoy a pint 10 00:00:49,440 --> 00:00:52,199 Speaker 1: of Ben and Jerry's, there's one dairy connoisseur that I 11 00:00:52,240 --> 00:00:55,240 Speaker 1: will never be able to compete with. His name is 12 00:00:55,360 --> 00:00:58,480 Speaker 1: John Harrison, and he was born to eat ice cream 13 00:00:59,120 --> 00:01:02,920 Speaker 1: in eighteen eighty, decades before John even existed, his great 14 00:01:02,920 --> 00:01:06,000 Speaker 1: grandfather opened two ice cream parlors in New York City. 15 00:01:06,280 --> 00:01:09,560 Speaker 1: Later on, his grandfather created Tennessee's first dairy co op. 16 00:01:09,880 --> 00:01:13,000 Speaker 1: His uncle founded at ice cream factory in Memphis. His 17 00:01:13,120 --> 00:01:17,000 Speaker 1: father operated a dairy ingredient company in Atlanta, Georgia. So 18 00:01:17,160 --> 00:01:19,959 Speaker 1: when John was born in nineteen forty two, he basically 19 00:01:20,040 --> 00:01:23,080 Speaker 1: had dairy in his blood. As he grew up, John 20 00:01:23,200 --> 00:01:26,000 Speaker 1: loved the vanilla cone just as much as the next kid, 21 00:01:26,040 --> 00:01:29,960 Speaker 1: but his appreciation went beyond what you might call well normal. 22 00:01:30,360 --> 00:01:32,360 Speaker 1: You see, John helped his dad out at work by 23 00:01:32,400 --> 00:01:35,480 Speaker 1: tasting various milk products, and it soon became clear that 24 00:01:35,520 --> 00:01:38,600 Speaker 1: he had a particular talent. John had such a discerning 25 00:01:38,640 --> 00:01:41,759 Speaker 1: palate that he could taste the smallest differences in dairy. 26 00:01:42,080 --> 00:01:44,160 Speaker 1: For example, he could eat a spoon of ice cream 27 00:01:44,319 --> 00:01:47,520 Speaker 1: and determine exactly how much fat it contained in the milk, 28 00:01:47,840 --> 00:01:51,160 Speaker 1: down to a fraction of a percent. But despite this 29 00:01:51,440 --> 00:01:54,320 Speaker 1: bizarre ability, John wasn't sure that he wanted to join 30 00:01:54,360 --> 00:01:57,280 Speaker 1: the family business. As a young adult, He considered a 31 00:01:57,320 --> 00:02:00,240 Speaker 1: career as a lawyer or a doctor, but a ring 32 00:02:00,280 --> 00:02:02,520 Speaker 1: to him he felt that God was calling him back 33 00:02:02,560 --> 00:02:05,720 Speaker 1: to the dairy industry. In nineteen eighty, he submitted an 34 00:02:05,760 --> 00:02:09,160 Speaker 1: application to Dryers, which was the biggest ice cream company 35 00:02:09,160 --> 00:02:11,840 Speaker 1: in the United States. Three days later, they offered him 36 00:02:11,880 --> 00:02:15,560 Speaker 1: a position at their headquarters in Oakland, California. John's title 37 00:02:16,040 --> 00:02:19,280 Speaker 1: was the head ice cream taster. Now, before we move forward, 38 00:02:19,360 --> 00:02:21,880 Speaker 1: I know what you're thinking. Eating ice cream all day 39 00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:25,160 Speaker 1: sounds like the greatest gig ever, right, But it's not 40 00:02:25,240 --> 00:02:28,160 Speaker 1: as easy as it sounds. His job was to ensure 41 00:02:28,280 --> 00:02:32,800 Speaker 1: quality and consistency. The flavor, texture, and distribution of the 42 00:02:32,960 --> 00:02:36,239 Speaker 1: ingredients in every batch had to be perfect. If something 43 00:02:36,280 --> 00:02:39,120 Speaker 1: was even slightly off, it was John's job to say, 44 00:02:39,480 --> 00:02:42,120 Speaker 1: throw it all out. And when you're dealing with thousands 45 00:02:42,160 --> 00:02:44,720 Speaker 1: of gallons of ice cream, making that call is a 46 00:02:44,840 --> 00:02:49,480 Speaker 1: huge responsibility, one that John did not take lightly. Naturally, 47 00:02:49,520 --> 00:02:51,320 Speaker 1: he took a lot of measures to make sure that 48 00:02:51,360 --> 00:02:53,720 Speaker 1: his taste buds were top notch. First of all, he 49 00:02:53,760 --> 00:02:56,680 Speaker 1: always ate off a golden spoon. That's because wood and 50 00:02:56,760 --> 00:03:00,760 Speaker 1: plastic gave off a residual flavor, and silver would tarnish. 51 00:03:01,120 --> 00:03:03,799 Speaker 1: During the week, John kept to a strict diet. He 52 00:03:03,840 --> 00:03:08,320 Speaker 1: avoided onions, garlic, spicy food, caffeine, and anything else that 53 00:03:08,360 --> 00:03:11,680 Speaker 1: could alter his tasting abilities. He never smoked or drank 54 00:03:11,720 --> 00:03:14,959 Speaker 1: alcohol either. Every morning he had a cup of decaffeinated 55 00:03:15,000 --> 00:03:18,399 Speaker 1: herbal tea to cleanse his palate, and when John got 56 00:03:18,400 --> 00:03:20,520 Speaker 1: to work, he stood in front of a lineup of 57 00:03:20,560 --> 00:03:24,080 Speaker 1: about sixty different ice cream flavors. He dipped his golden 58 00:03:24,120 --> 00:03:27,240 Speaker 1: spoon into each one, placed the dessert on his tongue 59 00:03:27,280 --> 00:03:30,720 Speaker 1: and swirled it around in his mouth for exactly five seconds. 60 00:03:30,960 --> 00:03:33,519 Speaker 1: Once he determined whether or not the batch was suitable, 61 00:03:33,720 --> 00:03:36,800 Speaker 1: he spat it back out, took a sip of lukewarm water, 62 00:03:37,120 --> 00:03:40,400 Speaker 1: and moved on to the next one. So no, John 63 00:03:40,520 --> 00:03:43,720 Speaker 1: was not ingesting gallons of ice cream every day. He 64 00:03:43,760 --> 00:03:46,200 Speaker 1: could have if he wanted to, but he chose to 65 00:03:46,240 --> 00:03:50,360 Speaker 1: save his cholesterol levels instead. John retired in twenty ten. 66 00:03:50,640 --> 00:03:53,440 Speaker 1: Over the course of his thirty year career, he estimates 67 00:03:53,440 --> 00:03:56,600 Speaker 1: that he tasted and approved about two hundred million gallons 68 00:03:56,600 --> 00:03:59,400 Speaker 1: of ice cream, but he rejected quite a bit as well. 69 00:03:59,600 --> 00:04:02,720 Speaker 1: In night ninety alone, Dryers had to give away about 70 00:04:02,760 --> 00:04:05,920 Speaker 1: half a million gallons of subpar ice cream because they 71 00:04:05,920 --> 00:04:09,800 Speaker 1: didn't meet John's high standards. The following year, nineteen ninety one, 72 00:04:10,040 --> 00:04:13,240 Speaker 1: the company spokesperson told the La Times, and I quote, 73 00:04:13,600 --> 00:04:17,120 Speaker 1: John's tongue is so crucial to our business, which is 74 00:04:17,160 --> 00:04:20,280 Speaker 1: why Dryers actually took out an insurance policy on his 75 00:04:20,360 --> 00:04:23,640 Speaker 1: taste buds. During his time at the company. John's tongue 76 00:04:23,720 --> 00:04:27,320 Speaker 1: was insured for the incredible sum of one million dollars. 77 00:04:27,839 --> 00:04:45,440 Speaker 1: That's what I call having expensive taste. We all know 78 00:04:45,520 --> 00:04:49,000 Speaker 1: that famous and powerful people can be a little well eccentric. 79 00:04:49,240 --> 00:04:52,240 Speaker 1: Benjamin Franklin was a big fan of air baths, which 80 00:04:52,360 --> 00:04:54,200 Speaker 1: just meant that he liked to sit naked in front 81 00:04:54,200 --> 00:04:57,200 Speaker 1: of an open window on a breezy day. Queen Elizabeth 82 00:04:57,320 --> 00:05:00,760 Speaker 1: I almost exclusively ate sweets, to the point that her 83 00:05:00,800 --> 00:05:04,039 Speaker 1: teeth rotted out of her mouth. Vincent van Goh swallowed 84 00:05:04,080 --> 00:05:07,719 Speaker 1: yellow paint, Albert Einstein refused to wear socks, and Madame 85 00:05:07,760 --> 00:05:11,840 Speaker 1: Marie Curie kept radioactive test tubes in her pockets. But 86 00:05:11,880 --> 00:05:15,520 Speaker 1: there's one world leader with a particularly interesting quirk, one 87 00:05:15,520 --> 00:05:19,039 Speaker 1: that he believed could change his country forever. Fidel Castro 88 00:05:19,200 --> 00:05:23,159 Speaker 1: was obsessed with milk. His love for dairy knew no bounds, 89 00:05:23,320 --> 00:05:27,640 Speaker 1: regular milk, yogurt, cheese, it didn't matter. Castro wanted it all. 90 00:05:27,800 --> 00:05:30,240 Speaker 1: He often took down as many as eighteen scoops of 91 00:05:30,240 --> 00:05:33,520 Speaker 1: ice cream after dinner. Once the US government tried to 92 00:05:33,560 --> 00:05:37,920 Speaker 1: assassinate him by spiking his daily milkshake. He survived, of course, 93 00:05:37,960 --> 00:05:41,680 Speaker 1: but he started making others taste test his desserts. Beyond 94 00:05:41,760 --> 00:05:44,680 Speaker 1: just loving a good bowl of froyo, Castro believed that 95 00:05:44,720 --> 00:05:47,719 Speaker 1: milk could save the Cuban economy. You see, after he 96 00:05:47,800 --> 00:05:50,359 Speaker 1: rose to power in nineteen fifty nine. The country was 97 00:05:50,360 --> 00:05:52,600 Speaker 1: in a state of despair. More than half of their 98 00:05:52,640 --> 00:05:56,040 Speaker 1: food supply was imported, so when major world powers stopped 99 00:05:56,040 --> 00:06:00,359 Speaker 1: trading with them, malnutrition became a widespread problem. The Cuban 100 00:06:00,400 --> 00:06:03,480 Speaker 1: people were starving, but Castro had an idea for how 101 00:06:03,480 --> 00:06:06,159 Speaker 1: to fix that. He wanted to breed a special fleet 102 00:06:06,200 --> 00:06:09,200 Speaker 1: of livestock to feed the nation. In his mind, there 103 00:06:09,200 --> 00:06:12,160 Speaker 1: would be thousands of these so called supercows, and they 104 00:06:12,160 --> 00:06:15,040 Speaker 1: would make millions of gallons of milk. In the mid 105 00:06:15,080 --> 00:06:18,640 Speaker 1: nineteen sixties, Castro assigned government scientists to make it happen. 106 00:06:18,920 --> 00:06:22,479 Speaker 1: They interbred two different types of cows, the Cebu, which 107 00:06:22,600 --> 00:06:26,080 Speaker 1: was native to Cuba's tropical environment, and the Holstein, a 108 00:06:26,160 --> 00:06:29,640 Speaker 1: Canadian breed known for its high milk production. Sadly, though 109 00:06:29,680 --> 00:06:32,760 Speaker 1: there would be no convoy of supercows, the scientists only 110 00:06:32,800 --> 00:06:36,400 Speaker 1: managed to create a single one. But what an impressive animal. 111 00:06:36,520 --> 00:06:39,680 Speaker 1: She was born in nineteen seventy two. Her name was 112 00:06:39,880 --> 00:06:43,560 Speaker 1: Ubrey Blanca or white Utter in English. She was the 113 00:06:43,600 --> 00:06:46,520 Speaker 1: apple of Fidel Castro's eye. At a time when most 114 00:06:46,560 --> 00:06:50,320 Speaker 1: Cubans didn't have climate controlled homes, Ubrey lived in an 115 00:06:50,360 --> 00:06:54,520 Speaker 1: air conditioned stable. She was protected by armed military personnel, 116 00:06:54,800 --> 00:06:57,320 Speaker 1: and all of her food was tested on other animals 117 00:06:57,520 --> 00:07:00,240 Speaker 1: in case someone tried to poison her. To make her 118 00:07:00,279 --> 00:07:04,200 Speaker 1: four daily milkings more comfortable, calming music was piped into 119 00:07:04,240 --> 00:07:07,600 Speaker 1: her stable, and all of this luxury paid off too. 120 00:07:07,720 --> 00:07:10,840 Speaker 1: On average, Ubra created about four times as much milk 121 00:07:10,880 --> 00:07:13,840 Speaker 1: as a regular cow. In nineteen eighty two, she produced 122 00:07:13,880 --> 00:07:16,800 Speaker 1: twenty eight point nine gallons in a single day, which 123 00:07:16,920 --> 00:07:21,160 Speaker 1: was a new world record. Clearly she was special. Castro 124 00:07:21,240 --> 00:07:24,640 Speaker 1: called her the nation's great champion. When he met with diplomats, 125 00:07:24,800 --> 00:07:28,000 Speaker 1: he was always talking about his prized bovine. Sometimes he 126 00:07:28,000 --> 00:07:31,000 Speaker 1: would even bring foreign dignitaries in to meet her in person. 127 00:07:31,440 --> 00:07:34,800 Speaker 1: That's because Ubre Blanca was more than livestock. She was 128 00:07:34,840 --> 00:07:38,240 Speaker 1: a symbol of Cuban ingenuity and abundance. She became a 129 00:07:38,280 --> 00:07:41,960 Speaker 1: sort of national mascot, once having her image printed on 130 00:07:42,080 --> 00:07:46,280 Speaker 1: postage stamps. Ubra Blanca had a few calves, but none 131 00:07:46,280 --> 00:07:49,000 Speaker 1: of them could match her high milk production. It seemed 132 00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:51,240 Speaker 1: that she was a one of a kind miracle, and 133 00:07:51,280 --> 00:07:54,240 Speaker 1: no matter how hard the government scientists tried, they couldn't 134 00:07:54,280 --> 00:07:57,800 Speaker 1: make another cow like her. So when she fell ill 135 00:07:57,840 --> 00:08:00,400 Speaker 1: with a life threatening tumor in the mid nineteen eighties. 136 00:08:00,840 --> 00:08:04,480 Speaker 1: Castro was distraught. Knowing she would likely pass away soon, 137 00:08:04,760 --> 00:08:07,640 Speaker 1: he called for her eggs and other genetic tissues to 138 00:08:07,680 --> 00:08:11,880 Speaker 1: be harvested and kept for later research. Ubre Blanca died 139 00:08:11,960 --> 00:08:14,920 Speaker 1: in nineteen eighty five, but Castro ensured that she did 140 00:08:14,920 --> 00:08:18,760 Speaker 1: not go quietly. She received military honors, a full page 141 00:08:18,840 --> 00:08:22,320 Speaker 1: obituary in the state newspaper, and a eulogy written by 142 00:08:22,320 --> 00:08:25,360 Speaker 1: the poet Laureates of Cuba. A giant portrait of her 143 00:08:25,520 --> 00:08:28,480 Speaker 1: was hung in the National Library, and a marble statue 144 00:08:28,520 --> 00:08:30,960 Speaker 1: of her likeness was installed in the town where she 145 00:08:31,000 --> 00:08:34,720 Speaker 1: once lived. And as if that weren't enough, Ubra Blanca's 146 00:08:34,760 --> 00:08:38,640 Speaker 1: embalmed body is now permanently displayed at Cuba's National Cattle 147 00:08:38,720 --> 00:08:42,120 Speaker 1: Health Center. Her legacy will not soon be forgotten, at 148 00:08:42,200 --> 00:08:44,719 Speaker 1: least not if the Cuban government has anything to say 149 00:08:44,760 --> 00:08:47,360 Speaker 1: about it. In two thousand and two, it was reported 150 00:08:47,360 --> 00:08:51,000 Speaker 1: that Fidel Castro was attempting to clone the supercow using 151 00:08:51,120 --> 00:08:54,600 Speaker 1: DNA harvested in the eighties. Whether or not the project 152 00:08:54,640 --> 00:09:00,280 Speaker 1: worked is unknown, but the whole idea is utterly curious. 153 00:09:03,679 --> 00:09:06,400 Speaker 1: I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet 154 00:09:06,400 --> 00:09:10,280 Speaker 1: of Curiosities, subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn 155 00:09:10,320 --> 00:09:14,880 Speaker 1: more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. 156 00:09:14,920 --> 00:09:18,520 Speaker 1: This show was created by me Aaron Mankey in partnership 157 00:09:18,559 --> 00:09:21,839 Speaker 1: with how Stuff Works. I make another award winning show 158 00:09:21,960 --> 00:09:26,000 Speaker 1: called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, and television show, 159 00:09:26,280 --> 00:09:28,120 Speaker 1: and you can learn all about it over at the 160 00:09:28,320 --> 00:09:34,760 Speaker 1: Worldoflore dot com. And until next time, stay curious.