Bubble Play
Good Humor's baseball-glove ice-cream pop, with a bubble-gum "baseball" tucked in the mitt. A mid-'90s ice-cream-truck treat that paired a frozen cherry glove with a gumball prize — then quietly vanished.
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Good Humor's baseball-glove ice-cream pop, with a bubble-gum "baseball" tucked in the mitt. A mid-'90s ice-cream-truck treat that paired a frozen cherry glove with a gumball prize — then quietly vanished.
Two thick chocolate-chip cookies hugging a slab of vanilla ice cream. Invented by a New York lawyer and launched off a fleet of Manhattan street carts, the Chipwich made the ice cream sandwich a handheld event.
The waffle-cone shell folded like a taco, packed with vanilla ice cream, fudge, and peanuts under a milk-chocolate coating — the ice cream truck's most architecturally ambitious treat. Klondike's Choco Taco was a summer ritual until it was discontinued in 2022.
Pick your ice cream, pile on mix-ins, and watch a scooper fold it all together on a frozen slab of granite — then tip them and they sing. Cold Stone Creamery turned dessert into a performance across 2000s America.
Beaded "ice cream of the future" invented in 1988 by microbiologist Curt Jones, who flash-froze ice cream mix in liquid nitrogen into tiny spheres. Served in a cup and eaten with a spoon, Dippin' Dots became a quintessential 1990s amusement park and mall treat — a novelty that felt futuristic and tasted like the 90s.
The ice cream truck treat with a surprise at the bottom: a conical cup of ice cream hiding a bubble-gum ball down at the point of the cone. Eat your way to the bottom, then keep chewing.
Vanilla ice cream backed with chocolate and fronted with a cookie embossed with a wrestler's face, on a stick, with a trading card in the wrapper. Biting Hulk Hogan's cookie face off was a formative summer experience.