tl;dr

To some ice cream experts, chocolate chip feels plain. "It's not the worst, but it's not that good," said Ani Ward, 8, standing in the frozen-food aisle.

NYT article

Chocolate chip ice cream, once a year-round staple, has fallen out of favor.

By Matt Richtel

Reported from ice-cream shops and frozen-food aisles in Boulder, Colo.

Feb. 15, 2024

Banana pudding, chocolate fudge brownie, salted caramel, Cherry Garcia, Dr Pepper Float and dozens of other flavors packed the ice-cream freezer at a local Safeway. Robin Sawyer, one recent Sunday afternoon, hunted for her personal favorite, black raspberry chocolate chunk.

Her husband, Mark, 68, has long been a fan of chocolate chip, but he doesn't see it around much anymore.

"Here it is!" Ms. Sawyer, 66, said to him, kneeling in front of the Haagen-Dazs section. "In the small container." Then she corrected herself: "Oh, that's chocolate chocolate chip."

Vanilla chocolate chip ice cream, once a staple of the ice cream world and one of the top sellers of all time, has fallen out of favor. The flavor can still be found (a closer inspection of the Safeway aisle in this university mountain town revealed pints of Baskin Robbins's chocolate chip), but it has been losing ground to flavors with more stuff, like cookies and cream and chocolate chip cookie dough.

Those two flavors are among the nation's top five best sellers, according to the International Dairy Foods Association, while chocolate chip no longer makes the top 10. It is now sold only in selected markets or at certain times of the year, according to major manufacturers.

"Chocolate chip used to be a flavor we produced constantly," said Christine Crowley, communications specialist for Babcock Dairy Plant, which has 75 years of ice-cream making under its belt, in Madison, Wis. Chocolate chip hasn't been a staple for a decade, she said: "Now it's seasonal."

Meaning, made for summer only. Even then, chocolate chip is not such a hot seller. Last summer, Babcock took four and a half months to sell through the 110 gallons of chocolate chip it had made, compared to three months for the same amount of chocolate chip cookie dough. "It's kind of not fair," Ms. Crowley said of the comparison. "We stock chocolate chip cookie dough all year," giving it such an edge that it's "creeping up on vanilla" in popularity.

The reasons for chocolate chip's slide aren't exactly clear. Ice cream tastes change, as they always have, and there are more choices than ever, in every category. Blue Bell Creameries, based in Texas, took a few days to get back to a Times reporter's question about the changing fortunes of chocolate chip ice cream. But there was a good reason. "We released a new flavor, Cinnamon Twist ice cream, to consumers this week, so it has been a crazy past few days for our team," read a vanilla email from the Blue Bell public relations team.

The company had chocolate chip as a staple until the early 2000s, Blue Bell said in its email, but with growing demand for flavors like cookies and cream, chocolate chip has become "a market-specific flavor based on consumer preferences." The company's email added, "While Chocolate Chip may not be a standard flavor in our ice cream lineup, there are still many fans in our markets that can't get enough of it."

Joe Mruk, 39, can — get enough of it. He came to the Safeway aisle in search of a different Blue Bell flavor, Cookie Two Step, which he described as having "chocolate-chip cookie dough filling but based on cookie dough ice cream." It became "an instant hit" when introduced in 2016, according to Blue Bell. Mr. Mruk used to like regular old chocolate chip ice cream, he said, "but it's not here." Even if the flavor were available, he wouldn't gravitate to it. "Cookie Two Step is my jam."

To some ice cream experts, chocolate chip feels plain.

"It's not the worst, but it's not that good," said Ani Ward, 8, standing in the frozen-food aisle. To be fair, she could not remember the last time she'd had chocolate chip ice cream. Her father, Sean Ward, reminded her that the flavor involves vanilla ice cream with chocolate chips.

"It's similar to cookies and cream," she said.

"But no cookies in it," he said.

Mr. Ward said that when he was growing up in Ohio in the 1980s and early '90s, there were not as many ice cream choices. "There's a whole aisle now," he said. "Every time I go over there I'm, like, What am I buying now?"

Tillamook, a major ice-cream maker based in Oregon, noted that vanilla's fortunes have slid, too. According to industry data, sales of vanilla ice cream dipped 6.4 percent in volume from 2018 to 2022, compared with a 22 percent decline for chocolate chip, while volume sales of cookies and cream rose 72.6 percent. Austin Blythe, a publicist for Tillamook, noted that the company had deepened its flavor bench recently, adding Brownie Batter, Chocolate Hazelnut, German Chocolate Cake "and, yes, a Dark Chocolate Cookies & Cream."

Mr. Sawyer, in the Safeway aisle with his wife, has largely forsaken chocolate chip ice cream for other flavors.

"I now eat vanilla," he said. "It goes well with rum."

He did offer a close approximation: stracciatella, which is vanilla with chocolate flakes.

"But it's gelato," Mr. Sawyer said. He seemed to feel sorry for the Times reporter, who had come to the grocery store, and visited various ice-cream shops, in search of his beloved chocolate chip flavor and owned up to his investigation into why he couldn't find any.

Mr. Sawyer again pressed the gelato option, while noting it wasn't a simple solution: "You have to go to Italy."

    • InevitableSwing [none/use name]
      hexagon
      ·
      9 months ago

      Chocolate chip notices it's raining but doesn't care. Walks home. Alone. Dejected. It starts to hail and the pellets are surprisingly large and they hurt. The pain distracts chocolate chip and when they step off a sidewalk - they twist their ankle.

  • InevitableSwing [none/use name]
    hexagon
    ·
    9 months ago

    I knew the comment section wouldn't disappoint. And I was dead right.


    I am in my seventies. When I was growing up, chocolate chip ice cream was the only ice cream in which you could find chunks of chocolate. Now there are a raft of alternatives, all of which contain more chocolate pieces and scads of sugary inserts. The decline of chocolate chip ice reflects in shift in the American palette to sweeter and sweeter food products.


    MINT chocolate chip ice cream has, and always will be, the best flavor ever.


    Hi from the story's author. Registered as an independent. Died-in-the-wool fair-and-balanced journalist. My wife hates that I don't have stronger opinions on various topics. But an outright partisan when it comes to chocolate chip ice cream. Some things are just correct, right, proper, and decent, like saying thank you and please, and chocolate chip ice cream. Like tucking the kids in at night, and guacamole.

    Honestly, let's get the little things right, people! Long live Chocolate Chip ice cream. And keep those cards and letters and emails coming, especially if you're on the bandwagon. We'll bring this back yet.


    I owned an ice cream parlor for several years and never bought plain chocolate chip to sell. My guess is that the rise of chocolate chip cookie dough and mint chip edged it out entirely. I never had anyone ask for it. Flavors are generational. I once had a man walk in and say 'guess what I want' and I said 'chocolate malt shake' and he was delighted. I didn't tell him probably 1/3 of men of a certain age order a chocolate malt.


    In college, I participated in dairy product tasting. As we learned, after 3 bites, your tastebuds are too cold to really taste the product. So I buy the best ice cream I can find and just have 1 small scoop. For me, simple is better. A good vanilla is my favorite bc I can feel the ice cream and all the subtle characteristics of the vanilla and milk. Now, my local dairy makes gelato from their milk. I swoon over their stracciatella which does not have vanilla. And yes- they do not make it very often!

    • DayOfDoom [any, any]
      ·
      9 months ago

      MINT chocolate chip ice cream has, and always will be, the best flavor ever.

      Don't eat icecream andymore and this is correct. I am also 70years of old. To get my recommended daily sugar intake the TV doctor recommended I've been adding back in 39g of sugar into my daily Diet Coke.

  • ReadFanon [any, any]
    ·
    9 months ago

    It's already been covered by other comments but texture-wise there are far better vehicles for getting bits of chocolate flavour into your ice-cream.

    Give me vanilla icecream with little chunks of brownie mixed into it or something but not chocolate chip, thanks.

    This is coming from a person who appreciates vanilla icecream with little chunks of toffee in it and no I will not reconcile this contradiction.

  • Umechan [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    I'm surprised they're not blaming millennials for this.

  • SerLava [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    Side note, chocolate is great in vanilla ice cream, but chocolate ice cream is fucking horrible, it tastes like a Tootsie roll, what the fuck. What do they use??? Why is it so bad???

    • InevitableSwing [none/use name]
      hexagon
      ·
      9 months ago

      chocolate ice cream is fucking horrible, it tastes like a Tootsie roll

      Serious question - have you ever tried Ben & Jerry's or Häagen-Dazs? Everybody likes different stuff but I find it hard to believe anybody would compare the chocolate flavor of either of those brands to Tootsie rolls.

      • Hello_Kitty_enjoyer [none/use name]
        ·
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        he's right, I've known since 1996 at the ripe age of 3 that chocolate (that word's doing some heavy lifting here) ice cream sucks

        honestly I think white people just don't like the taste of chocolate that much. Their chocolate ice cream doesn't taste like chocolate and their most popular actual chocolates are saturated with milk hazelnuts and pralines (to the extent where hershey's is unironically more chocolatey). And noone seems to mind it

        Western chocolate is either this milky caramel cloyingly sweet thing that I can't wait for to leave my mouth, or it's 70% bitter

        I randomly bought Meiji (Japanese version of Hershey's) and it blew away every Western brand I've ever had. And I'm not a weeb, I've seen like 4 animes in my life

      • SerLava [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        I like those ice creams but I don't think I've had the Chocolate Ice Cream from them, I always avoid it and usually only get it by mistake. Even my absolute favorite ice cream and custard places have that same weird chalky cocoa powder taste in their chocolate ice cream

    • Hello_Kitty_enjoyer [none/use name]
      ·
      9 months ago

      They're both horrible

      Nobody wants to finish their mouthful of icecream only to be left sucking on 32°F chocolate chips for 3 minutes while the rest of their ice cream melts

      • SerLava [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        Yeah no, chips are usually bad, what's good is chocolate swirls, chocolate syrup, hot fudge, non-hard cookie or brownie pieces, stuff like that

        pralines

    • ElChapoDeChapo [he/him, comrade/them]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Most chocolate ice cream yes but I once found a dark chocolate ice cream that was fantastic, pretty sure they don't make it anymore

  • FlakesBongler [they/them]
    ·
    9 months ago

    Mr. Sawyer again pressed the gelato option, while noting it wasn't a simple solution: "You have to go to Italy."

    NOT ITALY ooooooooooooooh

  • Dolores [love/loves]
    ·
    9 months ago

    skill issue if your choclate chip were simply as good as coffee flavor maybe people would eat more of it edgeworth-shrug