Sticky toffee pudding ice cream haagen dazs

Ice cream and summer go hand-in-hand, even when the weather isn’t very summery at all. There’s something about it being August that means our bodies have to be at least 30 per cent ice cream at all times, right? Although we love to turn to the refreshing treat during the hotter months, ice cream tastes just as delicious served alongside a hot sticky toffee pudding, apple crumble or chocolate fondant in the chillier months.

Häagen-Dazs has been treating us to mouthwatering ice cream for years now. But now, as part of its winter collection, the luxury ice cream brand has launched two new cocktail-inspired flavours so we can enjoy ice cream even more, without the need of something hot on the side.

Sticky toffee pudding ice cream haagen dazs
Häagen-Dazs

The first of the two new Häagen-Dazs flavours is Rum Salted Caramel, which features rum-infused ice cream combined with a mix of the classic vanilla and crunchy butter biscuit. It’s finished off with a rum salted caramel swirl.

The second cocktail-inspired flavour is Irish Whiskey with Chocolate Waffle, which is made up of a caramel ice cream, mixed with chocolate coated waffle pieces and an Irish whiskey and cream swirl.

Imagine the scene: it’s snowing outside and you’re sat on the sofa, under a blanket, a gripping drama is on the telly and you’re tucking into one of the new Häagen-Dazs ice creams… glorious!

Sticky toffee pudding ice cream haagen dazs
The new flavours will be available in supermarkets from 27 September. They cost £4.99 per pint-sized tub, but they will also be available in a mini cup where four smaller tubs make up one pack.

As much as we wish the tempting new tastes could stick around forever, they are limited edition, so it’s probably best to bag them before they disappear from shelves.

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The Häagen-Dazs winter cocktail ice creams follow on from the brand’s summer cocktail flavours – Mojito sorbet and Piña Colada – which were a hit with ice cream and cocktail lovers alike.

We are down to our last pint of Häagen-Dazs “Sticky Toffee Pudding” ice cream. I knew this would happen eventually, but I guess I was hoping for a reprieve. How, I thought, how could they possibly discontinue such a terrific product? Well, yes, it was one of their “contest” flavors, the ones they run for just a year.

And then they did it. They stopped making their best ice cream flavor, ever. Well, what do you expect? After all, what do they care? They don’t give a hoot about flavors, just profit; they’re a corporation, for crissakes.

Wait. Stop. Deep breaths.

The story begins with our trip to Yorkshire, England in 2006. We had no budget for Michelin restaurants, and we made our way eating pub food. If you do the research, you can eat very well in pubs. And without going into detail, we almost always had good meals, sometimes at places we hadn’t even investigated. We consumed things we’d only read about, like Pimm’s Cup, gammon, bubble-and-squeak, Timothy Taylor Landlord Ale and Swaledale cheese. All delicious. And some that were even exotic! I will be sentenced to months of alfalfa smoothies and wheatgrass enemas when the Food Police hear about this, but how could I resist “Free Range Pork Belly, Sage and Onion Risotto, Black Pudding, Old Spot Bacon, Scrumpy Reduction”? (That’s all one entrée. “Scrumpy” is a strong cider from Lancashire.)

One of the guilty pleasures of British cuisine is an odd dessert called “pudding.” It really has no parallel in the US. It’s a flour/egg/sugar concoction that can be delicious or disastrous. Seldom the same twice: a kind of puffy sweet soufflé, or maybe a dense sugary tart. Pudding is so ubiquitous in the UK that it is used conversationally as a synonym for “dessert,” as in, “What’s for pudding?”

Then there’s something called “sticky toffee.” Toffee is familiar to Americans chiefly as a form of almond brittle: milk and sugar cooked with butter, crushed almonds added, like the inside of a Heath Bar. Sticky toffee is made with caramelized dates, and it’s rich, sweet and addictive. We had it as an ice cream flavor one day at an ancient abbey, sold in tiny cups from a freezer.

But as a pudding, sticky toffee comes at you from a totally unexpected direction. Dense, chewy, creamy and intensely sweet. And you just know it isn’t something you should be eating, unless you are already overweight and on vacation. Fortunately, I was both.

But then we left the rolling dales and fells of Yorkshire, and the heaths and stone fences, and the charming villages with old graveyards, dark pubs and bitter ales. And on our return, we discovered that there was a new Häagen-Dazs flavor in the dairy case: Sticky Toffee Pudding, now mixed with vanilla ice cream, which gave it a breath of relief from the unremitting sugar. It was even better than in England!

That was last July. By September, we noticed the Co-op had stopped stocking it, and we asked. “Oh, that’s just their ‘flavor of the year,’” we were told. It seemed the company has a yearly recipe contest, and the winner’s ice cream is selected to be featured for the following year, after which it’s retired, usually by Thanksgiving. Oh, no!

It was still available, but no longer easy to find. We ordered a case of pints, and squirreled them in crannies of our freezer. By January there was no more to be found in any store.

Now we’re down to one. We’ve tried their English Toffee, which we used to like all right, but it’s a pale shadow. So after the end of our stash is gone, I figure I’m going to have to reverse engineer it.

I’m already assembling the elements.

First, the pudding. Here’s one recipe:

Sticky Toffee Pudding

8 oz. caster sugar
8 oz. self-rising flour
8 oz. butter
3 eggs
6 ounce (2/3 cup) pitted dates
1 cup boiling water
1 t. baking soda
1 t. vanilla essence
8 oz. butterscotch sauce (see below)

Butterscotch Sauce

8 oz. butter
1 capful whisky
3 heaped tablespoons treacle|
4 heaped tablespoons golden syrup
2/3 cup double cream

Most of this is available at the Co-op. Caster sugar is unrefined cane sugar, roughly equivalent to Turbinado brand. I can’t use regular butter, which has too much water and too little fat; so, a quarter pound of Strauss Family Farms butter. I’d guess the whisky should be malt Scotch, but that comes with a cork, not a cap, so my estimate is a couple tablespoons (other recipes call for Meyer’s Rum). Treacle is molasses, and golden syrup is a honey-like product, made in the process of refining sugar cane juice into sugar. It’s available as an import, but not at a price I’m eager to pay, so I’ll substitute honey diluted with a little Karo. Double cream is analogous to Organic Valley heavy cream. In short, this is not looking like a low calorie dessert.

Then the ice cream itself. Well, in for a dime, in for a dollar. I go back to the notes I made from online sources last winter, and there is the original recipe, by PastryScoop.com’s editor-in-chief, Judiaann Woo.

Sticky Toffee Pudding Ice Cream

250 grams sticky toffee pudding
250 ml 2 percent milk
250 ml 35 percent cream
90 grams demerara (unrefined cane) sugar
15 ml molasses (1 tbsp)

Break sticky toffee pudding into small pieces, and caramelize 125 grams in a small, dry sauce pan. Add milk, cream, and sugar and heat to 82C/180F. Remove from heat, add remaining 125 grams of sticky toffee pudding, cover tightly with plastic wrap and steep for 20 minutes. Puree mixture in a blender, and run through a fine strainer. Chill overnight.

Oy. I’ll have to convert the ingredients from metric. But at least I’ll have already made the pudding. It sounds intricate, but hardly daunting.

Just to check, I go back online to see if there’s anything I might have missed ... and the recipe’s gone! Huh. Strange. But the name comes up in Wikipedia, which says, “Sticky Toffee Pudding ice cream was the winning ice cream flavor in the 2006 Häagen-Dazs contest, submitted by Judiaann Woo. Sticky Toffee Pudding ice cream was slated to be produced from July 2006 to January 2007. Now, due to the popularity, it will be released as a full-time flavor.”

No! Wait! What about my column?

I go to Häagen-Dazs.com, and it’s true!

“...because you loved the winner of our “2006 Scoop!” flavor search so much, we decided to make it a full-time flavor. Enjoy this tribute to the popular English dessert: rich vanilla ice cream swirled with sticky toffee sauce and morsels of moist brown sugar cake.”

So. Um. Never mind.

Those who would rather forego the labor of making their own are advised that Murphy’s Market in Sunnybrae and Safeway carry it regularly.

Joseph Byrd hopes to make Yorkshire pork pies this summer. You can write him at [email protected].

Where is famous for sticky toffee pudding?

Cartmel is the home of Sticky Toffee. It's something we're very proud of, as we are of our 12th century Priory and the racecourse which runs straight past the Village Shop. That's where Cartmel Sticky Toffee Pudding was born – we started baking in the shop's back kitchen and selling it in the front 20 years ago.

What is in Gordon Ramsay's sticky toffee pudding?

Ingredients.
5 ounces dates, pits removed, roughly chopped (about ¾ cup).
½ teaspoon baking soda..
¼ cup boiling water..
3 tablespoons (42g) unsalted butter, room temperature..
6 tablespoons (84g) light brown sugar..
1 egg..
½ cup + 2 tablespoons (78g) all purpose flour..
½ teaspoon baking powder..

What does sticky toffee pudding taste like?

What Does Sticky Toffee Pudding Taste Like? Sticky toffee pudding has a decadent, soft and almost chewy caramel/toffee flavor and texture.

Is sticky toffee pudding the same as Christmas pudding?

Or maybe we do. Like the Christmas pudding and figgy puddings before it, the sticky toffee pudding is usually steamed for maximum moisture. Instead of figs, however, very finely chopped dates are added to the cake, which gets covered in a toffee sauce.