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Gourmet Ice Cream, Served From a Truck

Malaysia has one new ice-cream which has nice flavours apparently, it seems coming up soon for the Guinness Stout flavour! The Last Polka. Check out the flavours they got.

Below is another ice-cream served from a truck in New York.

Start-Ups 2010: Gourmet Ice Cream, Served From a Truck

Ben Van Leeuwen and Laura O’Neill on how to launch an ice-cream company.

By Kimberly Weisul |  Oct 1, 2010
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Michael Edwards

DREAM MOBILE: New Yorkers line up for a scoop of Van Leeuwen's gourmet ice cream, served here by co-founder Laura O'Neill.

Van Leeuwen Artisan Ice Cream

Co-Founders: Ben Van Leeuwen, 26; Pete Van Leeuwen, 33; and Laura O'Neill, 28
Location: Brooklyn, New York
Employees: 40
Funding: $80,000 from friends and family
2009 Revenue: $900,000
Start-Up Year: 2008
Breakeven: Their first summer. They grossed about $425,000, with about $125,000 as profit.
Insider Insight: Low overhead and high quality is a good model. Good Humor trucks are highly profitable, but nobody was selling premium ice cream from a truck.
Blind Spot: Manufacturers prefer the status quo. Few commercial dairies were used to making ice cream without industrial stabilizers and conventional ingredients.

The recipe was simple and pure. The first ingredient: three summers spent driving a Good Humor truck in college. "I realized that a truck is less risky than a storefront and costs less to start," says Ben Van Leeuwen, who traveled the world on what he made while passing out King Cones and Strawberry Shortcake bars.

The next ingredient: an obsession with food, especially of the locally sourced, sustainably grown variety that had long attracted serious foodies and environmentalists and is increasingly being sought by mainstream consumers. "Good food just makes me really, really happy," Van Leeuwen says.

The third ingredient: assembling the right team. He recruited his then-girlfriend (and now wife) Laura O'Neill and his brother Pete. Together, they started grappling with the realities of selling ultrapremium ice cream out of a truck on the steamy summer streets of New York City, where they all lived.

Ben had breezed through a college class on writing a business plan, but the real thing took three months to complete and ran about 60 pages. Ben's sister, a financial adviser, volunteered to check the numbers before they mailed out a few dozen packages to family and friends. The effort pulled in $80,000, with one of the biggest chunks coming from one of Ben's former professors. Ben and Pete's dad co-signed on a $20,000 line of credit in April 2008.

The money was quickly put to work. They bought a truck on eBay for $5,000. But it needed plumbing, a freezer, a generator, and big windows. And because they wanted the truck to reflect the quality and old-fashioned values of their ice cream, they installed new chrome grilles and gave the truck a butter-yellow paint job. Even with Pete's girlfriend doing the hand-painted menu for "mate's rates," the total cost was $45,000.

Meanwhile, the team was taking on an even bigger challenge: No wholesaler sold ice cream of the quality they wanted in the quantities they needed, so the partners would have to make the ice cream themselves. Months of painstaking at-home recipe testing ensued. Setting up a factory was financially out of the question, and most of the commercial dairies the team approached used the same stabilizers and conventional ingredients the partners were intent on avoiding. Eventually, they contracted with Mercer's Dairy, in upstate Boonville, New York. The first run, almost 500 gallons, cost $8,000.

Ben and Laura married in Central Park on June 20, 2008; Pete was the best man. The next morning, they pulled up to a street fair for their New York City debut. That first day, they sold about 500 scoops (one of them to a Whole Foods manager, who later helped them get their products onto the store's shelves). There were glitches, of course: Turns out it's virtually impossible to scoop ice cream if the freezer is set just a few degrees too cold. The three founders, plus one friend they hired on, worked virtually around the clock that first summer, scooping, fixing the cranky truck, and angling for the best corners on which to set up shop each morning.

Still, Van Leeuwen Artisan Ice Cream was a hit virtually from the start. One influential blog, Gothamist, called it "a taste of creamy ecstasy." More media attention followed. That first summer brought in about $425,000, of which some $125,000 was profit. In 2009, with two more trucks in circulation, sales were $900,000, with profit of $300,000. So far, nearly all their earnings have been plowed back into the business.

The partners originally planned to head to warmer climates in the off-season. Instead, they have tried their hand, with modest success, at selling high-end coffee and pastries in winter. In February, they opened a storefront in Brooklyn. This year, with 40 employees during peak season, they hope to bring in $1.5 million to $2 million in revenue. Now that would be sweet.

via inc.com

Singapore Peranakan Restaurant: The Arch

This is a nice restauranteur story interviewed by a Malaysian QuaChee. The restaurant is at 32 Seah Street, Singapore. When more options given to the society, people will tend to look for more indepth food than the cheap stuff. Cuisine is also a living thing, keep the same recipe is one way, but go with the flow, utilize the fresh ingredients provided at the market is what makes the restaurant more lively. Then you have to really know what is fresh and what goes well with the traditional recipes.

Singapore Peranakan Restaurant: The Arch

What comes to mind when one thinks of Peranakan (Baba Nyonya) cuisine? Usually, the first thing that comes to mind is an old shophouse serving nothing but spicy & tasty food of mix Chinese-Malay.

Well, The Arch Restaurant Singapore is close to that in someways, but yet different.

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...I next ask him about his future plans, and he mentions - rather than going expanding its 'width', he is expanding in 'depth' - ie rather than more outlets, he wants to expand in more in this outlet itself, eg. catering and at the same time to introduce more 'lost recipes' which even the true blue Peranakans misses!

It's a good chat with him, an inspiring food-preneur.I left the meeting somewhat inspired by his entrepreneurial skills and passion of keeping the heritage alive.