Four months after Fenton's Creamery offered her free ice cream for life following her Olympic gold, Alysa Liu made her first visit to the 132-year-old Oakland institution this week — baseball cap, takeout, photos with staff.

Alysa Liu stopped by Fenton's Creamery this week to collect on a promise four months in the making: free ice cream for life, extended by Oakland's 132-year-old Piedmont Avenue institution the day after Liu became the first American woman in 24 years to win individual Olympic figure skating gold.

The visit, reported by NBC Bay Area and KRON4, was characteristically low-key — a baseball cap, a takeout order, photos with staff at 4226 Piedmont Ave. She told staff she'd be back for more.

Fenton's made the offer via Instagram on February 20, the day after Liu's career-best 226.79 score at Milan Cortina sealed the medal. No commercial deal sits behind it. The creamery also created a limited-edition flavor for the occasion: "Alysa's Gold," golden Oreos folded into caramel ice cream with a caramel swirl, which has stayed on the menu since.

Liu, 20, grew up in Richmond, trained at the Oakland Ice Center, and attended the School for the Arts in Oakland — a genuine hometown athlete. She'd already done the civic lap: a Frank Ogawa Plaza homecoming rally in March, Mayor Barbara Lee's key to the city, G-Eazy and Kehlani on the bill. Fenton's was the last stop to make good on.

Founded in Oakland in 1894 and at the Piedmont Ave. address since 1961, Fenton's has outlasted arson, trend cycles, and any number of neighbors. A custom flavor and an open standing invitation is how a room like this plays its longest game: the one measured not in quarters but in generations.