If you need pieces of ice, why wouldn’t you just buy a bag of ice cubes or chips, rather than buying a block and processing it yourself?
Not to mention that I’ve never actually seen blocks for sale, just cubes, chips, etc. And that I’ve never been in the situation where I needed a big block of ice. And that when friends have frozen their own water in big blocks, they simply put it in a bag and drop it on the ground, effectively breaking it into pieces without the use of a pick.
OK, right now, start a new list in Notepad. Put icepick and potato masher on it. Seriously. I keep a “dry goods” shopping list on my computer, and also a grocery list, plus my master grocery list of things that we buy fairly often.
What do you use to mash your potatoes with, if not a potato masher? When our daughter moved out and took our tater masher with her, it was a royal PITA to make mashed taters without the masher.
I know people with both - And that use them. When I was younger, scrubbing boards were rare, but not so rare as to be remarkable. But then I knew people with outhouses, too.
And spinning is now seen as a high-value craft art. Hell, the HBIC at the Boarder Collie rescue where I volunteer has an entire flock of sheep specifically for their wool, so she can sell it to the hand-spinning market. It pays well enough to support the flock, and more. Hell, come to think of it… She has a scrubbing board. But no outhouse.
Yep, I had an ice pick and washboard. We also had a bottle opener and corkscrew, although I never, ever saw a container that needed either one (we liked our cans.)
One thing I haven’t seen in forever is a jar opener. I swear, that was my favorite thing in the house.
Yes, we had an ice pick. And a junk drawer. But the ice pick was in the “big utensil” drawer, not the junk drawer. Batteries, 3x5 cards, old keys, and broken stuff lived in the junk drawer.
I mostly used it for opening locked doors - the little hole for non-keyed locked doors is perfect for an ice pick.
I have the ice pick, now. It has a wooden handle, and advertises some California ice company, with a phone number that starts with letters.
I saw an old-school ice pick at an estate sale today. It even had the name of the ice delivery company and its six digit telephone number on it. It was about the size of a medium-sized screwdriver. It would have made an excellent shiv.
Yes! Hadn’t thought about it in years. We have a junk drawer, but no ice pick in it. We do have an all metal jar opener in there that isn’t at all helpful.
The drawer with the pick was in my grandparents’ house. I never saw it used for ice. Gram used it to make a new hole in a belt or purse strap, and to poke/scrape gunk out things like the logo plate on the blender.
I’ve used block ice, but only on camping trips. I usually use the hammer I use for tent stakes to chunk it up.
We had an ice pick in the metal Colman cooler. It was held in it’s bracket on the inside cover with a bottle opener held with the same bracket. There was also a bottle opener as part of the handle bracket. At sometime the ice pick went in the kitchen drawer before we threw out the rusted out cooler. It did get used when we could only get block ice and not cubes.
15 years or so ago I lived in central-ish Maine and spent a good chunk of 2 years living in an ancient shortie school bus outfitted as a low-rent RV. It had squashed-caterpillar green shag carpet on the walls and floor LOL.
It also had an icebox. Same size and dimensions as a dorm room fridge, but no electricity. I used to buy blocks of ice for it, they melt much slower than the cubed version. It was a serious bummer though when I mis-timed my shopping trips and the last of the milk was curdled when I poured it in my tea.
I can’t remember the last time I saw ice blocks for sale.
Best use of the ice pick we kept in our kitchen stuff drawer when I was growing up was:
Poking a hole through the unopened bottle cap of a bottle of coke or other soda of your choice. Drinking Coca-cola through a hole in the bottle cap is a vivid childhood memory of mine.
Easy to find around here. Just about every grocery store has it. You might have to ask somebody where they stash it, but it’s there. We use it camping all the time.