Monday, August 31, 2015

Ben & Jerry's - Strawberry Cheesecake

Strawberry Cheesecake - Strawberry Cheesecake Ice Cream with Strawberries & a Thick Graham Cracker Swirl


The Strawberry Cheesecake flavor was introduced by Ben & Jerry's in 2005.  Many of the recent reviews have focused on chocolate & peanut butter, but this contains neither.  Its a slice of strawberry cheesecake in ice cream format.  The graham cracker swirl even simulates the cheesecake's crust. 

Opening the pint, I see the light pink color of the strawberry cheesecake ice cream with small views of the strawberry pieces and the graham cracker swirls below.  I was curious about the strawberry cheesecake ice cream base.   Cheesecake is already a thick and heavy dairy dessert and they're going to make ice cream out of it?  Well, it still tasted like ice cream and not cheesecake. Checking the side of the pint, there is indeed cream cheese on the ingredient list but what it does here is soften the strawberry flavor.  Strawberry can be a very strong and sweet flavor that it can be too much.  I've seen some places cut it with sour cream but here the cream cheese has that same effect.  It's not that heavy of a base either.  Cheesecake by its nature is super rich and filling, but checking the side of the pint, this pint was "only" 260 calories per four oz serving which is about average by Ben & Jerry's standards.  The chocolate and peanut butter flavors are often 20% more.

The strawberry pieces are lightly dispersed through the pint and give that occasional unmuted punch of strong strawberry flavor.  As I've mentioned in previous reviews, frozen strawberry pieces are very unpleasant to bite into, but this pint contains nothing that is crunchy so I was able to eat the whole pint without using my teeth.  With that strategy in place, the strawberry pieces were quite delicious.  I was expecting a little bit more of the graham cracker swirl, but when I did encounter it, it was a tasty compliment to the cheesecake ice cream base. 

I enjoyed this pint.  Its a rare flavor that contains neither chocolate nor peanut butter so the flavor can be a nice break from those common ingredients.  And of course, if you like strawberries, this flavor is a must try for you.



Sunday, August 23, 2015

Ben & Jerry's - New York Super Fudge Chunk

New York Super Fudge Chunk - Chocolate Ice Cream with White & Dark Fudge Chunks, Pecans, Walnuts & Fudge-Covered Almonds


The New York Super Fudge Chunk flavor is one of the oldest flavors in the Ben & Jerry's line of pints.  The story behind the flavor's creation is quite interesting.  Back in 1983, Ben Cohen & Jerry Greenfield were just starting to explore expansion outside of the northwestern Vermont market -- which they thought they had covered pretty well.  So they decided to make their pints available at Dmitri's Cafe at 156 Spring Street in the SoHo neighborhood of Manhattan.  They had good word of mouth backing so the famed food critic Gael Greene went to try it out and published the following review in the New Yorker magazine that fall (scroll down about six paragraphs for the section on Ben & Jerry's)


Needless to say, "pleasant enough, but not thrilling, and the chips and bits seem rather sparse" were not words that Ben and Jerry wanted to hear. They took the review as a challenge.  The response was to add extra chocolate syrup to the ice cream to strengthen its chocolate flavor and then to load it up with 40% fill-ins than they had ever added before.  The extra fill-ins also made it the most expensive pint they had ever made as well.  The name "New York Super Fudge Chunk" was selected and it was launched with great fanfare.  The flavor was a big success thirty years ago and it still remains a popular flavor today. 

Since we're on the topic of loaded flavors in New York ice cream shops, here is a link to a very recent Wall Street Journal article that my sister sent me about the economics of ice cream flavors:


... some of the exotic, tastiest and most desired fill-ins are indeed the most expensive.  So shopkeepers either have to raise their prices or they have to rely on some customer only getting vanilla to subside the more costly flavors.

On to the pint of the day!  Opening the lid, I was surprised to see mainly plain chocolate.  Only a hint of the fill-ins that I had been reading so much about were visible.  Eating into the pint, I encountered the fill-ins fairly quickly.  There were the fudge chips.  White and dark chips -- each rectangular shaped like the chunks of Chunky Monkey.  Then there were the nuts which added extra crunchiness to each spoonful.  At first, I was not as overwhelmed by the density of the fill-ins as I expected to be especially after reading above articles.  I think the "40% more than any other flavor" line is a bit dated -- some of the newer flavors are quite dense.  That said, as I kept eating the pint and the base ice cream got softer as it melted the density of fill-ins seemed to increase as I got to the bottom.  So, by any standard a very stacked pint.  Plus it was very chocolatey!  I ate the entire pint in one sitting and as I write this a half an hour later I am noticing that the surfaces of my eyeballs are drying out from chocolate overload.    I have temporarily switched my beverage of choice from Diet Coke to water in hopes to rebalance my ocular electrolytes.  Its a good feeling though, it is like the chocolate ice cream version of having extra spicy Thai food.

So all in all, a successful pint.  I would rate it as one of the three top chocolate flavors available from Ben & Jerry's.  If you like your chocolate gooey, then you get Phish Food with its marshmallow swirls.  If you like like your chocolate chewy, then you get Chocolate Fudge Brownie with its stays-soft-in-the-freezer Greyston Brownies.  But if you like your chocolate chunky, you get New York Super Fudge Chunk.  Personally, I am a Phish Food guy but variety is the spice of life and I imagine I'll have this one again.

Update:  In the fall of 2018, Ben & Jerry's created a limited batch repackaging of this flavor called called Pecan Resist -- you can even see that the ice cream in the pint images at Pecan Resist and the old flavor are identical, the pint labels are swapped with photoshop.  The new artwork looks really cool, though!  Since this is not a new flavor, I'll just add a note here. 





Saturday, August 22, 2015

Ben & Jerry's - Peanut Butter Fudge Core

Peanut Butter Fudge Core - Chocolate & Peanut Butter Ice Creams with Mini Peanut Butter Cups & a Peanut Butter Fudge Core


Peanut Butter Fudge is a standard 'core' flavor from Ben & Jerry's which was introduced with most of the rest of the core flavors in 2014.  As you may recall a 'core' flavor features a solid cylinder of am unswirled goopy fill-in such as caramel, jam, cookie butter, or in this case fudge.  Here the core is listed as 'peanut butter fudge' so it will be interesting to see what exactly that is.  I wonder if they do the core flavors at the scoop shops.

The top of the pint looks a lot like the other core flavors.  The two ice creams are on opposite sides and the fudge core is visible right away.  Digging in, the peanut butter base is a little bit nutty, but not overpowering.  The chocolate on the other side was the standard chocolate.  The mini peanut butter cups were mainly on the peanut butter side.  When the cups are that small, the chocolate coating makes up a larger percentage of the nugget but you still got a burst of peanut butter flavor as you bit into one.  The peanut butter fudge core tasted mostly like fudge.  Its possible there was a hint of peanut butter in there, but chocolate was by far the dominant flavor.  It did have a thicker and slightly doughy consistency to it which was in contrast to the hazelnut core which had sort of a thick syrup consistency but flavor-wise it was basically chocolate.  The core of fudge was still tasty.  I did my standard eat-around-the-core method where I tried to get a bit of the core into each spoonful, but because of this, chocolate was far and away the dominant flavor of the pint.

Overall, it was a satisfying pint, but peanut butter lovers may be slightly disappointed that peanut butter plays a supporting role.  The name of the flavor is a bit misleading.  Amongst all of the chocolate and peanut butter permutations, this one is probably three parts chocolate and one part peanut butter.




Sunday, August 16, 2015

Ben & Jerry's - Coffee, Coffee BuzzBuzzBuzz!

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Ben & Jerry's - Peanut Butter Cup

Peanut Butter Cup - Peanut Butter Ice Cream with Peanut Butter Cups


Peanut Butter Cup is one of the older flavors in the Ben & Jerry's line.   It originated in the original scoop shops back in the 1980s.  Jerry used to buy whatever candy was on sale and mix it into the ice cream.  Reese's Peanut Butter Cups was such a popular mix in a the scoop shops that it was promoted to a full-time pint flavor in 1989 and has remained a favorite flavor ever since.  Its a very simple flavor, peanut butter ice cream base with peanut butter bups mixed in.

Opening the pint, you see the peanut butter base with a few of the chocolate-covered cups visible on top.  As I at my way into the pint, I was surprised by how large the peanut butter cups were.  They are full-sized cups!  I had gotten used to them using smaller cups in other flavors.  I don't think they use Reese's anymore so that they can remain GMO-free and fair trade and all that, but its about the same size and as the Reese's cups that you get at the store.  The cups are broken up a bit -- mostly quarters but a few halves (see picture) and some smaller sized.  As with other peanut butter flavors the base has a noticeable peanut butter flavor but is not too heavy or overpowering and serves as a good background for the heavier mix-ins.

There are so many permutations of peanut butter & chocolate in the Ben & Jerry's line these days and its fun to think that this is probably the one that started them all.  I can see why this has been so popular over the years, but to be honest some of the newer chocolate and peanut butter concoctions have been even more flavorful for me.  Peanut Butter World, Peanut Butter Half Baked, and I am very curious about the Peanut Butter Fudge Core flavor which is slated to be reviewed in the next week or so.  Still, if you are a fan of peanut butter cups, then you should try this (and you probably already have).




Friday, August 7, 2015

Ben & Jerry's - Vanilla Toffee Bar Crunch

Vanilla Toffee Bar Crunch - Vanilla Ice Cream with Fudge-Covered Toffee Pieces

The latest flavor is "Vanilla Toffee Bar Crunch".   The "toffee bar" here was originally a 'Heath Bar", but last year, Ben & Jerry's discontinued its relationship with Heath Bar's manufacturer Hershey because they use genetically-modified organisms (GMO's).  The original flavor was "Coffee Heath Bar Crunch" which was introduced way back in 1986.  This is the vanilla version of that flavor which was introduced in 2012.   The switch to generic toffee bars was done in 2014.


It looks like the first attempt at mimicking the Heath bar flavor was not a complete success but they have since refined the flavor:


Opening the pint, you see mostly vanilla but with quite a few of the toffee pieces visible on the very top.  Eating into the pint, the toffee pieces were decently sized.  They were hard enough to be crunchy but brittle enough not to be jawbreaking.  I am not a Heath Bar aficionado so I'm not sure how well the non-GMO toffee compares to the original but I thought they were tasty.  I noticed that in addition to the larger toffee pieces, there were also little bits of fudge dispersed throughout the vanilla base.  I'm not sure if this is intentional or just a side effect of the mixing process but I liked it.

A simple flavor, yet fairly successful.  If you like Heath-like toffee bars in your ice cream try this or the Coffee Toffee Bar Crunch.