Ice cream. I eat a lot of ice cream. It is part of my *daily* life (yes, really). Thank goodness I have a large freezer.
I eat ice cream as the "a la mode" to warm pie or fruit crisps, I stuff cookies with it to make ice cream sandwiches, and of course, I make a mean ice cream sundae.
I've been this way my whole life. As a kid, we always had gallons of multiple flavors of ice cream in the freezer, Carvel ice cream cake was the birthday cake of choice (even though my mom is an avid baker!), and for a quick grab-n-go, we always also had assorted "novelties" from the frozen food delivery service on hand. And of course, elementary school lunch had ice cream day, iirc it was Fridays, and I took it quite seriously - I was the one who took the ice cream order regularly, or was the distributor, etc.
For the most part, I left generic ice cream novelties, the kind sold from neighborhood ice cream trucks or the school lunch program, behind long ago. I continued my ice cream eating, no question, but upgraded to more premium brands (ok, in college I'd trade in my "meal equivalency" for pints of Ben & Jerry's at our diner ... sssh, don't tell mom!), but otherwise, I've turned towards more ... grown up offerings.
That is, until I started traveling for my job frequently, and learned about all the generic brands in other countries, which were rarely better than what we had, just, different. It became part of my world travel experience, checking out the ice cream freezers at every office, and trying as many ice cream novelties as I possibly could (like Heartbrand in Europe or its Australian counterpart Streets). And of course, for the lucky offices that had quality products, trying those too (such as the Belly Artisan Ice Cream in Toronto, the Great British Ice Cream Company or Jude's in London, Mövenpick Ice Cream in Zurich, and international only flavors of Ben & Jerry's). It was during these times that I also got back into American novelty ice cream, partially out of curiosity how we compared, but also, well, because the ice cream freezers in other US offices had them, so, why not try? In the Cambridge, MA office I had all the regulars - Hood, Nestlé, and Blue Bunny/Blue Ribbon - and really fell back in love with novelties (but sorry, I still will rarely go for an It's-It ... does this make me a bad San Franciscan?
Anyway. Are you still reading? Let's get back to reviewing some ice cream, er, frozen dairy desserts.
Good Humor is perhaps the most well known brand in the US. They were the original sponsors of ice cream trucks, the ones who introduced us to "the ice cream jingle", etc. I probably don't need to tell you much about their product line: ice cream sandwiches, eclair bars, etc. These are the same kind of items I remember from elementary school, although I do not know for sure what brand we had in particular then.
It turns out, some are actually quite decent ...
Giant Vanilla "Frozen vanilla dairy dessert sandwich" |
Not a treat that I think I have ... ever picked? Literally. I am pretty sure I never, ever, ever picked an ice cream sandwich like this in my life. I have no idea why, but, they have never called out to me. Even as a child.
And yet, here I am, an adult, deciding to try one for the first time. I tried it on a day when I was having a strange craving for a chocolate whoopie pie (so random) but also kinda wanted ice cream, and remembered seeing the classic, soft chocolate cookie, vanilla ice cream filled, ice cream sandwich in my parent's freezer.
It was time to try. This one came supersized, "Giant".
Giant Vanilla. |
I knew exactly what to expect, having obviously seen many an ice cream sandwich consumed over the years, although this one was, as named "Giant", bigger than a standard ice cream sandwich. Otherwise, it looked exactly like every ice cream sandwich I have seen other's enjoy: large, soft, chocolate rectangular wafer cake-like cookies that have little tiny holes in them for some reason, filled with vanilla "dairy dessert". Simplicity.
I took one bite, and ... well, I liked it. It really did match the craving I had, in many ways. Sure, not a whoopie pie, but the "chocolate flavored wafers" were quite soft, lightly chocolately, and more like a soft whoopie pie cookie than anything else I can think to compare them to actually (certainly not a cookie ...).
The vanilla dairy dessert inside was sweet, not really "vanilla" in any way, but sweet and plain, and quite smooth. Not a premium ice cream, not even an ice cream, technically, but it melted perfectly, and balanced well with the chocolate wafer.
I also truly enjoyed the form factor - not sure why I always went for other sorts of novelty treats, really, as it fun to lick around the edges as it melted. I will note however that it did leave quite the chocolate residue on my hands!
Overall though, this matched my craving, and pleased me. Classic for a reason. I'd have another, if the mood ever hit.
***+
Chocolate Eclair. |
Chocolate Eclair: Coating. |
Chocolate Eclair: Inside. |
Oreo Dessert Bar |
Oreo Dessert Bar: Side View. |
Oreo Dessert Bar: Inside. |
Reese's Dessert Cup. |
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