The Science of Sneak
![]() |
| Fernando de Sousa, Wikimedia Commons |
Here, condensed for you with the incisive skill and fervor of a thousand Reader's Digests, are the lab notes from my most recent investigation, "An Inquiry Into the Efficacy of Endothermic Chemical Reactions in the Preservation of Frozen Treats":
| Dara Strickland |
- One (1) pint of Caramelized Pear and Toasted Pecan ice cream
- One (1) pint of Raspberry sorbet
- Tape
Methodology
| Dara Strickland |
(Note: In future experiments, I will use duct tape or packing tape to ensure appropriate levels of tape-age.)
After the endothermic cooling packs were appropriately rigged, I placed them within a standard handbag to demonstrate the easy clandestine portability of the entire apparatus. Removed, returned to counter to continue time-trial portion of the experiment.
Observations at 30 Minutes
| Dara Strickland |
Observations at One Hour
| Dara Strickland |
Conclusions and Applications
While this investigation was somewhat limited in time and scope, it has impressive practical applications for the maintenance of optimal deliciousness to the one-hour mark. Beyond one hour, additional chilling measures, such as wrapping the apparatus in insulating layers of aluminum foil and duct tape, must be implemented, and the boundaries of the endothermic pack alone was not pressed to such levels. Even without these additional tests, it's easy to see that the endothermic cold packs alone will keep ice cream of various kinds at sneakable and delicious temperature levels for at least one hour.
The Doctor, my mysterious long time gentleman caller and an actual scientist, was coaxed into helping me implement and track this experiment with the lure of home-cooked dinner, affection. Ever inquisitive, his main concern was not with my methodology but with its application. When so many movie theaters sell some kind of ice cream novelty...thing...and a movie is but two hours long, what is the point of delaying when the ice cream melts, pushing the limits from furtive, cranial-freezing slurping during the credits to taking the first frost-bound bite just as an M. Night Shyamalan movie becomes unwatchably silly?
While I take a certain Mallory-to-Everest approach to the justification of any sneaking challenge, the Doctor had not considered many things: homemade ice cream brought into a summer blockbuster; flavors impossible to procure at the theater; the joy of choosing when to eat dessert rather than having temperature play tyrant to your tastebuds; and, perhaps the greatest of all, the possibility that one day I will perfect my methods so entirely as to successfully sneak and chill a milkshake from Crown Candy Kitchen into a movie.
Dara Strickland is a leading expert on sneaking food and drink into the movies. She reports on her exploits for Gut Check (from an undisclosed location) every Monday.



























