The image on the cover be like: No shit, Sherlock.
Isn’t that the Bi-gender Pride Flag?
Closer to trans. Bi is just pink and purple. Trans flag is white, pale blue and pink. Like your avatar.
*bigender, not bisexual
There’s apparently a lot of bigender flags, but the original version per that site does match the ice cream
As a French, the fact that no white flag was mentioned in these comments like it would have inevitably on reddit shows the quality of the chaps in here.
You sure wouldn’t hear that from me. French forces have been badass for a long time.
I don’t really care about glorifying past military victories but rather about the fact that the white flag internet meme appeared when the French government refused to follow the USA into Irak War II. https://edition.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/meast/03/07/villepin.transcript/
I had no idea that’s where those jokes came from, that’s so ridiculous
Fucking good on them. That war was bullshit.
Liberté, égalité, fraternité. The Americans learned it from you lot. Might do them well to remember.
Wasn’t the American revolution like a decade before the French one?
Yep, you’re right. After a quick search, it looks like the American Revolution started in 1765, and the French Revolution started in 1789.
However, I know French policies and political development had a profound impact on the ideas central to liberal democracies, as it could also be said of American policies and political development.
Way to ruin it.
Fun fact: the white flag of surrender became widely known in Europe because people were surrendering to the French.
Y’all fight in the streets better than us. We’ve got no leg to stand on.
France has shown themself to be made of much sterner stuff in the last couple decades then the stereotypes and jokes like to make out. I mean that’s not going to stop the English from making fun of France, but they still have nobility like this was 1650 or something.
Last couple decades? There historically the most winningest military of all time bar none.
Ashencore
/s
You mean Agincourt?
I even look up the spelling…
The English were assroped by the French Normans that they had to rename many common foodstuffs.
And then by French Angevins, which was later but left an even bigger impact on the language. So twice.
Rename or simply discover what food actually is?
That it seems is yet to come.
The French have always been pretty strong. I don’t know what history you read, but they’ve pretty consistently had one of the strongest militaries in the world. Sure, they surrendered quickly on WWII, but the people kept fighting even then when their government was occupied. They were one of the first nations to aid the United States also and have always been pretty active.
Is this all good? Idk. Besides resisting the Nazis after the occupation, I would very much argue much of this is bad (or at best self-serving). It’s nation-state shit. It’s never out of marality. They’re strong though.
I said it was a stereotype. Overcoming that popular stereotype has been a lot harder than actually having a good military. And demonstrating that you have a good military is different than having one at all. Right or wrong, in the minds of many Americans they didn’t start seeming strong until after 9/11.
Wait what fuck the nobility no matter what country
If the Queen was still alive, I’d have had to eviscerate you for that.
But nobody cares about Jug Ears.
What has the queen ever done for you?
France has shown themself to be made of much sterner stuff in the last couple decades
WDYM? France has been participating in plenty of undeclared, unofficial and gray zone wars practically since WWII till now.
the stereotypes and jokes like to make out
These change with time. Most of European history the stereotypic image of French people was much tougher than that of Germans.
After 1971 - yeah. Interwar - no. After that - again yes.
This ice cream is jokingly called “Le Tricolore” in Denmark. You just can’t serve a simple “three coloured ice-cream” in a gourmet meal.
This specific ice cream – strawberry, vanilla, blueberry?
'Cause there are other three-color/three-flavor ice creams, and they all have different names: “neapolitan” is vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, and “spumoni” is cherry, pistachio and chocolate, for example.
The one we call “trefarvet is” in Denmark is usually the one otherwise known as Neapolitan.
Could be any of the combinations, though, given that it literally just means “three-colored ice cream” 🤷
Funny, it’s called “Fürst-Pückler-Eis” in German, which sounds way fancier than it actually is.
I hate to break it to you, but sounding like “First Pucker Ice” does not sound fancy. I’m not sure it can get less fancy in fact.
Well “Fürst” means Prince, so it’s actually named after THIS fancy lad!
Well he is pretty fancy. Born in a castle? And look at all those names!
I’m not sure it can get less fancy in fact.
Nah; it can totally be würst.
Huh, it actually makes a lot more sense than the English name, since it’s named after the guy who invented it. Americans named it after Naples, Italy because the colors originally resembled the Italian flag.
Ok those three flavors are on point though
Oh the irony lol. 🤣
I can’t ever remember if Breyers or Dreyers is the shitty one, so I always just buy Tillamook or Blue Bell.
Dreyer’s is the legit one, though capitalism is starting to work it’s way in. (1.41L now instead of 1.66L; same price)
Breyers is the shitty one, you can tell because they can’t legally call it “Ice Cream”. It is a “Frozen Dairy Dessert” as you can see on the packaging.
Breyers is good. Tillamook and Blue Bell are still better though.
I was very unimpressed by Tillamook when I tried it cause I thought it was supposed to be good. I’m also not a fan of Blue Bell.
Which brands do you like? That’s surprising.
Haagen-Dazs and Ben & Jerry’s. Talenti is good too. Ben & Jerry’s just has good flavor combos.
Breyers USED to be good.
I just pointed it out under a different comment, but this isn’t actually ice cream. It’s a frozen dairy product, because they have fucked up the ingredients so much to cut down on cost they can’t call it ice cream anymore.
Unilever bought it and fucked it up.
I used to love Breyers. Remember how their claim on a tub of ice cream tubs was ‘only X ingredients’? Now it reads like a chemistry experiment and tastes similar.
Breyer’s used to have ads specifically about how it was free from shitty ingredients. It only had cream, sugar, salt, and whatever the flavor was. Now, the list of ingredients is longer than on a shampoo bottle.
Well if the shampoo had half as many ingredients maybe it would taste better
i haven’t heard of any of those apart from breyers and breyers isn’t very good on my region at least. feels whipped into frozen foam to fill the container with like a quarter of the product, the only one other than nestle that gives me a mouth full of air and a teaspoon of liquid every bite that melts. If I don’t let it melt it feels like I swallowed air after what would be over indulging by volume but not weight.
Vive la révolution!
Vive la surgélation !
Something about the colors makes me feel like this ice cream is full of TRANS fats.
I just really need to point out that no where on this product is it called ice cream. It’s a frozen dairy product.
It really bothers me that they’re allowed to slap whatever bullshit in an ice cream container, and as long as it’s called anything else in the fine print, the fact that we all assume it’s ice cream is on US.
From the United States Code of Federal Regulations:
§ 58.2825 United States Standard for ice cream.
(a) Ice cream shall contain at least 1.6 pounds of total solids to the gallon, weigh not less than 4.5 pounds to the gallon, and contain not less than 20 percent total milk solids, constituted of not less than 10 percent milkfat. In no case shall the content of milk solids not fat be less than 6 percent. Whey shall not, by weight, be more than 25 percent of the milk solids not fat.
It continues on in that fashion, but if I’m honest I see this as the system working correctly. The food in that carton likely doesn’t meet the legal, technical definition of ice cream and thus cannot be labeled as such, and it isn’t. There are things that are labelled as ice cream in Europe which cannot be labelled as such here because they don’t conform to the above standards. But if you were served a scoop of it and asked what it was, you would confidently identify it as ice cream.
I’ll tell you what does bother me though: The front of the package and a marketing blurb on their website refers to it as vanilla, strawberry and blueberry flavored, but the ingredients are listed as:
INGREDIENTS: SKIM MILK, CORN SYRUP, SUGAR, CREAM, FRUCTOSE, STRAWBERRIES, WATER, COCONUT OIL, WHEY, LESS THAN 2% OF: MONO AND DIGLYCERIDES, GUAR GUM, NATURAL FLAVOR, BEET JUICE (FOR COLOR), CAROB BEAN GUM, TARA GUM, SPIRULINA EXTRACT (FOR COLOR), ANNATTO (FOR COLOR), VITAMIN A PALMITATE. CONTAINS MILK
Vanilla and blueberries are not listed among the ingredients. I’m guessing whatever wood pulp derived vanillin that most of the vanilla flavored things in the world are actually flavored by is included in the “natural flavor” and we’re left to guess where any “bold blueberry deliciousness” is supposed to come from.
I’ve long thought they shouldn’t be allowed to put “natural flavor” as an ingredient as that is too vague, what if there is a “natural flavor” you are allergic to? What if that “natural flavor” is cat smegma?
There are things that are labelled as ice cream in Europe which cannot be labelled as such here because they don’t conform to the above standards
What are the standards for labeling something ‘Ice-cream’ in Europe?
I think you mean beaver anal scrapings and not cat smegma… But the point is valid.
There out of the top five ingredients are different kinds of sugar. I love how companies try to hide how much sugar is in their prices foods.
The blueberry and vanilla flavors are included in the “natural flavors” listing. The FDA defines natural flavors as those that are made by extracting/distilling the flavor from an actual food. It doesn’t have blueberries or vanilla; it has the flavor from blueberries and vanilla in the form of blueberry and vanilla extracts.
Artificial flavors are those synthesized in a lab without ever using the original food item.
I don’t think it requires “actual food” sources. “Natural” strawberry flavour used to be made from beaver anal glands, which I doubt anybody would consider food.
Yeah, which actual food? People have allergies to actual foods.
Let’s say they derive a blueberry-like flavor from grapes because grapes are cheaper or something. I think that’s a reasonable thing to allow them to do, grapes are food, they’re fruit, “we made one fruit flavor out of another fruit” okay fine. But what if you’re allergic to grapes but not blueberries? It should say on the label that this is made from grapes.
“Turns out the blueberry flavored snack that doesn’t say the word ‘grape’ anywhere on the package has grapes in it” is a great reason to visit the ER.
If they’re allowed to use basically any ingredient they want and call it “natural flavor” why aren’t they just allowed to put the word “substance” in the ingredients list?
It says natural blueberry, vanilla and strawberry flavors on the top of the package. You don’t get natural blueberry, vanilla or strawberry flavor from grapes. You get them from blueberries, vanilla, and strawberries. If you derived a blueberry flavor from a grape, it would count as an artificial flavor.
I’d be more concerned about “and other natural flavors” that aren’t even mentioned anywhere.
But The Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act says if the natural or artificial flavor contains any of the 8 most common food allergens, it must be labeled.
What if that “natural flavor” is cat smegma?
That’s fine, thanks. I’m not allergic to cat smegma.
I’d be kind of annoyed if it wasn’t cat smegma for my cat smegma ice cream.
I think natural flavors have to be related to the name on the product - a small amount natural grape juice in apple juice to modify the flavor would be listed as an artificial ingredient.
I recall that used to be true, but don’t have a good way to verify it ever was other than reading the labelling laws, or if it still is, since companies fight a constant battle to degrade the usefulness of food labels.
Blaming the person being lied to instead of the liar is kind of BS.
It’s on the company and the FDA which was literally created to stop this kind of nonsense and abandonded its duties decades ago.
Except on their actual ice cream it says ice cream and on their frozen dairy treats they call them frozen dairy treats.
Just the United States acknowledging its debt to General LaFayette.
From another perspective it could be ‘Murica
From another perspective it could be The Netherlands.
FROZEN DAIRY DESSERT
Yum, I love air, gums, and stabilizers in my dairy desserts
yeah, but they call them “shakes”.
“shakes”, heh. don’t know what you’re gunna get.
I’m fine with the air part. There’s air in all kinds of whipped desserts.
depends whether the price reflects it or it’s an attempt to trick you into paying more for less
Personally, I care more about the volume of ice cream I eat than the mass. I don’t want to pay more for more calories when diminishing marginal utility is already in effect.
Always helps to check the unit price by weight that you can usually find on grocery store price tags (often written on a red/orange background but sometimes just in small print off to the side).
The volume of 2 containers can be the same, and checkout price can be the same, but if one is listed as $0.15/oz and the other is $0.20/oz, the cheaper one has more in it.
All ice creams have air in them… it’s sort of the point. If you freeze dairy without whipping it it turns solid.
I looked into making my own ice cream once and had to realize, that practically any store bought ice cream must contain at least some, because my homemade ice cream immediately melted and was impossible to keep im a freezer…
Yep, screw Breyer’s. They legally cannot call it ice cream.
Cor gov! ‘Assa union jack i’ is
I thought Union Jacks were more… asterisky.
Less starsy, more barsy.
Maybe not asterisky, but that ice cream is definitely Asterixy.
I Caesar what you did there…
No*
(*actually yes)
scOOPS, all French people!