Oct 22 2010

Giants love jimmies, too.

I’ve never liked sugar as a topping, not even confectioners’ sugar. But I do like candy, especially jimmies! Out here in Los Angeles they call them sprinkles.

giant with hot fundge sunday and sprinkles

"Uh oh, we're out of jimmies. (Or sprinkles, for you weird people.)" ©D. Barstow 2010

I like them especially on ice cream, but on a sugar cookie or other interesting place they’re also good. I prefer all chocolate.

Here‘s a whole forum on jimmies, in Boston, and Boston does know its ice cream. (favorite flavor in Boston? Coffee.)

Someone at school told me that jimmies is actually a ra-cial slur related to the Jim Crow laws (‘course, she was from Jersey)…anyone else heard this?

I hope not! I never heard that before. More comments ideas, below.

Yeah, I’ve heard that they’re sprinkles if they’re multi-colored, and jimmies if they’re chocolate, because it was slang for Jim Crow. And even if it’s not true, enough people around think it’s true, so I call them all sprinkles.

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Sep 13 2010

Have some respect, Whole Foods!

Whole Foods 365 Organic Chocolate Ice Cream Bars dipped in Chocolate. Long name, but it doesn’t need it. Best of all chocolate bars I’ve ever had. Not as musky as Dove, not as middle of the road as Haagen-Daz – this is real chocolate in the coating and the chocolate inside doesn’t compete, it enhances.

I contacted the PR person at the store to get a picture of the ice cream – which isn’t on their website – and the rep replied that they have over 2000 “365″ products up, (and I like most of the 365 foods) but not this. Now I see why so many chocolate and food product bloggers take their own photos – food sellers don’t make them public! She never got back to me, so I’ve drawn my own.

whole foods ice cream bar

whole foods ice cream bar

I was delighted to see the price, too: $2.50 for 3 bars! A deal at the usually overpriced Whole Foods, especially for their dessert case.

Only the price went up. Their prices on bakery and ice cream go up about twice a year, I’ve noticed – I won’t put up with it, I won’t. Last I checked on these they were $3.49. Still below the other guys in price, SOME of the time,  but I don’t like to be dissed, so I’m sulking in the corner unless and until these go on sale. And I’ve never seen them on sale. So I don’t buy them anymore.

Still, they are the best. Sigh.


Aug 30 2010

Best ice cream of 2010.

I’m on deadline, so that’s why this review is older (written in 2008), but it’s still true!!

I warn you, this is very pricey, at an outrageous $4.99 a pint! (on sale at Gelson’s which is the only store that has it that I know of.) Normal people shouldn’t have to pay this much. But I decided to splurge one evening last year, and now that I know it’s the best, I keep watching for sales, and hope they’ll get it in other stores at a more reasonable price.

Greek Gods Honey Pomegranate Pagoto Ice Krema.

The website says:

In the 4th century BC, it was well known that a favorite treat of Alexander the Great was snow ice mixed with honey and nectar.

Okay…well-known???

Greek Gods decided the best kind of marketing is the kind with no separate photos, so I uploaded this cheerful one from Fancy Flours.

But everyone does know the benefits of pomegranate juice by now, a powerful antioxidant. I don’t think everyone knows how great honey is, though; it was used to cover wounds in the battlefield during WW 1, before antibiotics were invented. I myself remember clearly that when I was 8, I was so sick, lying on the couch while the grownups played cards, and my grandmother’s friends made me honey toast. I wasn’t even hungry, but I ate it and got well within the hour. Really. (I collect honey cookbooks and booklets, but I think it’s hard to bake with – it doesn’t have the same binding qualities as sugar, or some technical cooking thingie.)

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