The Best Built Ice Cream Machines For A Century. Made In Brooksville,FL USA
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EMERY THOMPSON
WHERE WE COMBINE CUTTING EDGE TECHNOLOGY WITH
OLD WORLD CRAFTSMANSHIP


As the expression goes “necessity is the mother of invention.”

Back in 1903 Emery Thompson, the founder of our company, was working in the basement of a large department store on 14th. street in Manhattan. He ran the ice cream concession in the department store. Back in those days there were no ice cream parlors. You bought your ice cream either at a pharmacy or at a department store. Emery was working long hours making ice cream on an old fashioned rock salt and ice machine – similar to the ones we all owned as we were growing up. He needed to cut down the hours he was spending making the ice cream for the store. Thus the necessity. Emery went back to his home in New Rochelle, New York and in his garage, built the first modern day ice cream making machine – the invention.
 
Emery Thompson’s “new” ice cream machine consisted of a long wooden tank and a vertical freezing cylinder. The tank held salt water (which freezes at a lower temperature than fresh water) and ice. The solution, called brine, was circulated around a vertical freezing chamber, which in turn converted milk, cream, sugar and flavor into ice cream. For his efforts he was awarded a U.S. patent. Over the years the machine progressed from this simple unit to one that was chilled by ammonia. The barrel was also turned horizontally so that the finished ice cream would flow out more easily. The machines continued advancing forward into freon and today, more environmentally propellants. The drive system changed from a motorcycle chain to steel reinforced belts and the materials used became all stainless. But the concept of making old-fashioned ice cream remains the same.
 
        Emery Thompson batch freezers are sold in every country in the world in ice cream parlors, hotels, restaurants and large ships. During World War II there was an Emery Thompson on board every aircraft carrier. If a pilot missed the aircraft carrier and had to be rescued, there was a flurry of activity between the other warships to rescue the pilot. They knew that the ship that pulled the pilot “from the drink” would be rewarded with ten gallons of fresh ice cream from the aircraft carrier. I have seen footage of a pilot being transferred in a bosons chair over to the carrier at the same time that the ice cream was being rope delivered over to the destroyer! Our machines are very popular in developing countries. As their economies develop, they want to be like the Americans. The want steak, beer,hard ice cream. Our machines provide the ice cream, Italian Ices, Sherbet, Sorbet, and Artisan Gelato.
       
        My father, Ted and his brother Emery Junior (we called him June) left Cornell University during the Great Depression to run the company when their father Emery Sr. died suddenly. It was tough times for them in the Bronx, but they persevered using any materials they could find to build their ice cream machines. For the past seventy years the company has been located a mile from Yankee Stadium and it was not uncommon for Ted and Uncle June to “run out on a sales call” and sneak down to the stadium for an afternoon with Mickey Mantle and Roger Marris. Nobody walked or jogged in those days so they would catch the #4 subway train a block from the factory and travel down to 162nd street to what we today call the world headquarters for baseball!
The only true competition that Dad and June ever faced was their own machinery. The old machines would last 40 years or more and would be sold and re-sold numerous times. Today the same holds true. I take numerous calls from customers who have just bought an “Emery” only to find out it left our factory in 1948! The difference today is I have access to welding techniques and materials that didn’t exist in 1948. Therefore the life of the machines we are building today will be greater than Dad and Uncle June’s machines.
 
       When I attended graduate school at Rollins, my teachers all told me the way to expand Emery Thompson was to diversify. “Build DeLorean cars or vending machines or heart bypass machines – things that used our expertise in stainless steel. I took a different approach. I kept the product line firmly locked in on hard ice cream making machines and went after my competition in a different way. I convinced them to stop making machines that were “like an Emery Thompson” and actually buy and sell Emery Thompson’s. Today we sell more batch freezers to more successful frozen dessert businesses than anyone else in the world. A small company with big ideas! It’s increasingly difficult to manufacture anything in the United States, but we’re here and that’s why we chose Florida, Hernando County and Brooksville to be the new home of Emery Thompson Batch Freezers. We use the best materials, the simplest designs and the most dedicated workforce of any company in the industry. Today, the Italians import Gelato making machines into the U.S. but they just don’t hold up to the standards that Americans expect from their machinery….and because of the Euro vs. the Dollar, we cost far less. One of my customers put it best. He said, at the end of the day, the European worker will spend time polishing their machine making it look nice for the next day’s work. The American on the other hand, shuts the machine off, throws a wrench at it and damn well expects it to run “as advertised” again tomorrow! That’s what we do – build the most durable, longest lasting all American made machines for customers who are making an investment in their business and their future
Emery Thompson Batch Freezers are available in finished capacities of 5 quarts, 12 quarts, 24 quarts and the world’s largest batch freezer – 44 quarts. With our new infinite overrun control, we are able to vary the air content (overrun) to any level the customer desires on any product.

 

Copyright ©1998, 1999, 2001,2002 04,05,06,All Rights Reserved
Emery Thompson Machine & Supply Co.
15350 Flight Path Dr
Brooksville, FL 34604
Phone:1+(718)-588-7300 or 1+(813)-862-2776
Fax:1+(352)-796-0720

Products Made In U.S.A