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"ColdStoneCreamery" news and stories

Cold Stone Creamery's No-Melt Ice Cream Solidifies Dessert Trend


saltpepper
Salt and Pepper ice cream
at Humphry Slocombe.
Photo: Bradley Allen, Flickr.
Cold Stone Creamery last month introduced an ice cream that doesn't melt, which has led New York Magazine to say this week that Cold Stone's Jell-O-like dessert is proof positive that ice cream has become the latest playground for culinary innovation.

Indeeed, the world of frozen cream is much changed from those triple-threat Neapolitan cartons of chocolate, vanilla and strawberry many of us grew up with.

Just last month, our editors were smitten by Vosges' new curry coconut ice cream at the Fancy Food Show, Gourmet recently featured the wackiness that is San Francisco's Humphry Slocombe shop (prosciutto ice cream, anyone?) and Jeni's in Columbus, Ohio, peddles Thai chili ice cream alongside not so plain honey vanilla. In New York, Wylie Dusfresne serves a perfect miniature "everything" bagel -- made entirely of ice cream, naturally -- at his restaurant wd-50.
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Filed under: Trends, Food News

Cold Stone moves into Mexico, Southeast Asia

cold stone creamery
"Taking the international sweet tooth by storm." Surely such a phrase could only have been penned by the a PR person for an ice-cream chain.

And so it has.

This gem comes from the press release announcing Cold Stone Creamery's expansion into Mexico and Southeast Asia. I'll admit it's a better turn of phrase than "taking the international sweet tooth by cavity." Full disclosure, I've never eaten the Creamery's ice cream, I suppose I should since there's one in a mall near my house.

The Scottsdale, Ariz.-based purveyor of fresh-made ice-cream that's blended to order with mix-ins on, you guessed it, a cold stone, started scooping up international markets back in 2005, when it opened its first overseas store in Tokyo. Since then Coldstone has opened 22 more stores throughout Japan, Korea, China and Taiwan.

Its first Mexican store will open in September. There's been no word yet as to whether the Creamery stores South of the Border will forgo the signature stone slab in favor of a gigantic molcajete y tejolote to mix the ingredients with the ice cream. The company's next international markets will be Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia. I don't think it's gonna happen, but I'd love to see the Creamery's Southeast Asian stores use young coconut, jackfruit and some of the brightly colored gelatinous squiggles that are a staple of the region's frozen confections.

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Filed under: Business, Ingredients

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Ice cream of the day: French Toast


I know Sarah has mentioned before that she isn't a big fan of Cold Stone Creamery ice cream, but I have a feeling this flavor may be enough to change her mind, especially knowing how much she adores French toast.

In an attempt to make ice cream acceptable at all times of the day, Cold Stone has introduced French toast-flavored ice cream (apparently only available for a limited time) and has made one of their custom desserts called "French Toast with the Most™ - the flavored ice cream topped with apple pie filling, pecans, and cinnamon.

Acceptable breakfast food? Maybe not, but it sounds tempting enough to try.

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Filed under: Ingredients, New Products

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