Ice Cream for Lunch
Posted by in FoodRecently, I was lucky enough to be invited to visit Perry’s Ice Cream for a tour and ice cream taste testing of their new flavors. And I got to bring a guest, which meant that my husband has now checked an item off his bucket list: become an ice cream taste tester!
Pick Perry’s
If you don’t live in NY or PA, you’ve probably never heard of Perry’s, but anyone from around these parts thinks of them as THE ice cream company (and might remember the “Pick Perry’s” jingle). Perry’s ice cream is found in schools, hospitals, grocery stores, and ice cream stands, often to the exclusion of other brands. It’s THE brand you buy if you live around here. If you live in the Buffalo, NY area, you grew up eating Perry’s. I went to Perry’s on a field trip as a child and when I was a teenager, my first job was scooping Perry’s ice cream at an ice cream shop. That is where I
met and fell in love with my first love: Peanut Butter Fudge Ice Cream.
I now know why Perry’s ice cream tastes better than any other brand. They cook their ice cream for two hours to develop the flavor, instead of using an instant pasteurization method, as most national brands do. It truly does result in creamier, more flavorful ice cream. Perry’s makes 75 flavors (crazy, right?) and produces 13 million gallons a year. This 95-year-old local company is well-loved and appreciated and anyone who knows the brand can taste the difference. They source their ingredients locally as well – 98% of the milk they use is from local farms.
All of the taste testers in the room were asked to name their favorite flavor of Perry’s ice cream and of the 20 or so people there, nobody chose the same flavor!
The Tour
Our experience was fun afternoon. We learned about the history of Perry’s, which is a family-owned company, now in its 4th generation of Perry’s (it’s always great to see a locally-owned company that is family-owned) and employing over 300 locals. We got to see the production line, hear about the huge strides they make with sustainability (setting industry standards in many ways), and meet many wonderful people. We also were invited into the 25
degree below zero storage freezer where they keep ALL the ice cream. It was COLD.
Taste Testing
The best part was of course the tasting. Lest you think it was all fun and games, we did learn how to really taste and evaluate ice cream.
- First, evaluate for aroma
- Next, consider the feeling factors. There are two categories of these: temperature and chemical feeling (spicy, cooking, astringent, prickly)
- Texture is the next factor and you experience this both with your lips and with your teeth – smoothness, firmness, hardness and moistness
- The final component is a sensory evaluation
The sensory evaluation is the most complicated, since there are different terms to use when evaluating the different types of flavors categories (dairy, brown and sweet flavors, vanilla, and chocolate). For example, there are 19 words we were given that can be used to evaluate chocolate flavors alone (some include roasted, astringent, winey, buttery, caramel, prune/raisin, smokey, barny, and tobacco).
Ice cream preferences vary by region – here in Western NY, tasters like to taste dairy first, then flavors, then sweetness. In the south, sweetness is the first taste they want. This is why there are regional ice cream companies, and why national brands may not be able to compete with the local companies (they are catering to a national preference while your region probably has specific taste preferences not found elsewhere).
We were told we should taste each sample at least three times (SUCH a burden) and to note that the first taste is often too cold to really evaluate well.We were also told to sip water in between flavors to reset our palates.
Then the ice cream came out. Fortunately I skipped lunch for this event. We tasted 7 different flavors:
– Lactose Free Vanilla
– Oh My Cherry Pie (vanilla ice cream with cherry swirls and graham cracker crumbs)
– Sponge Candy (this is designed to get locals excited since sponge candy is a local area specialty – sponge candy flavored ice cream with pieces of chocolate covered sponge candy)
– Movie Time (popcorn flavored ice cream with sea salt caramel swirls)
– Black Raspberry
– Queen of Hearts (dark chocolate ice cream with raspberry swirls and fudge truffles)
– Party Sandwiches (ice cream sandwiches with vanilla wafers, cake batter ice cream and sprinkles)
I’ve enjoyed ice cream before (who hasn’t?) but it was a different experience to be evaluating and describing the flavors, textures, and appearance of the ice creams. It was hard work to concentrate on the flavors and try to find words to describe all the nuances. There’s so much involved in one flavor of ice cream. My favorite flavor was Queen of Hearts. The husband picked the Lactose Free Vanilla. Perry’s collected our evaluations to help them as they refine and develop new flavors.
Do you have a favorite ice cream brand? Is it a local brand? What’s your favorite flavor?
[Note: I obviously was given Perry’s products to sample, however Perry’s did not require me to produce a post nor do anything in exchange for this post and I received no payment.]
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I don’t live on the east coast and don’t know this ice cream, but it sounds wonderful. What a fun outing!
Oh, yum! I would love to taste that Queen of Hearts. I really love Toscanni’s ice cream in Cambridge, MA. They have a flavor called simply chocolate #3, it is the darkest and most chocolately. They put so much chocolate in that they do not make it as often as other flavors, due to cost.
I would love that!
I could easily spend a day – a week – a month – tasting ice cream. What fun!
Oh my I’m drooling over here! I developed a milk allergy and haven’t had any REALLY good ice cream since then. The dairy free ones that I have tried just can’t compare. My favorite was homemade peach, but out of actual brands, it was Bruster’s Cake Batter ice cream. There was definitely sweetness first, then flavor. I’m a southerner and didn’t realize my sweet tooth was because of my location!
I have to take Lactaid to eat dairy but fortunately that works for me. I did try some of the non-dairy alternatives and they were all pretty bad except there is one brand that is almond milk ice cream and they sell these little nuggets of ice cream covered with chocolate. I found those to be almost indistinguishable from the real stuff.
Oh how fun! That Movie Time ice cream sounds really interesting. What did you think about that one?
I wasn’t a fan, but my husband liked it. It mostly tasted kind of buttery and caramel-y. They let us bring some samples home if we wanted them – one of my kids ate that one in 2 seconds flat.
I want this job! How fun that you did it together, too.
One of the sadnesses of getting older is lactose intolerance. I used to love ice cream, but it kills my GI tract.
Lactaid!
So fun! I want to be an ice cream taste tester!
Lucky you. I always joke that I want to be a dessert writer, but it’s really not a joke. I would love to taste test ice cream.
The movie time popcorn ice cream sounds cool. Now you need to come to Ohio and try Jeni’s ice cream.
I would love to. I love to try local ice cream wherever we go.