โApr-26-2014 11:46 PM
โMay-04-2014 07:15 PM
Dick A wrote:
i had a double scoop cone of Pecan Praline, for $2.50:B
$2.50 :h Back in the fifties we could get locally made hand-dipped ice cream for a nickle a scoop. Oh, also we had had a water cooled Coke machine that gave you an 8 oz bottle for a nickle.
Even considering normal inflation these products are very overpriced thise days. Few people pay much attention but rather just pull out the plastic. Its no wonder many of these things have become so expensive and the majority of the population is carrying considerable debt.
That $2.50 cent cone probably cost most of you $3.00.
โApr-30-2014 01:39 PM
pnichols wrote:Okie in Wyoming wrote:
My favorite is my own homemade ice cream! A no-cook recipe and VERY easy! And served with fresh peaches or strawberries! YUM!
I'm curious ... have you made your own ice cream when out camping in your RV?
If so, IMHO life doesn't get any better than that! ๐
โApr-30-2014 08:54 AM
pnichols wrote:Okie in Wyoming wrote:
My favorite is my own homemade ice cream! A no-cook recipe and VERY easy! And served with fresh peaches or strawberries! YUM!
I'm curious ... have you made your own ice cream when out camping in your RV?
If so, IMHO life doesn't get any better than that! ๐
โApr-30-2014 08:51 AM
โApr-30-2014 01:24 AM
โApr-29-2014 08:34 PM
Dick A wrote:
i had a double scoop cone of Pecan Praline, for $2.50:B
$2.50 :h Back in the fifties we could get locally made hand-dipped ice cream for a nickle a scoop. Oh, also we had had a water cooled Coke machine that gave you an 8 oz bottle for a nickle.Man those were dirty nasty things,but you just stuck your hand down in them,pulled out the bottle you wanted,popped the cap and drank it.
Even considering normal inflation these products are very overpriced thise days. Few people pay much attention but rather just pull out the plastic. Its no wonder many of these things have become so expensive and the majority of the population is carrying considerable debt.
That $2.50 cent cone probably cost most of you $3.00.
โApr-29-2014 05:26 PM
Okie in Wyoming wrote:
My favorite is my own homemade ice cream! A no-cook recipe and VERY easy! And served with fresh peaches or strawberries! YUM!
โApr-29-2014 01:43 PM
โApr-29-2014 09:32 AM
โApr-29-2014 09:02 AM
โApr-29-2014 08:59 AM
โApr-29-2014 02:10 AM
Well, I did find another good one that I haven't seen at home in San Diego, Tillamook. I've heard of the cheese, I didn't know they made ice cream too? I learned something new!
โApr-29-2014 12:21 AM
โApr-28-2014 09:40 PM
ol Bombero-JC wrote:Fredzo wrote:
In California, Rite Aid bought out the Thrifty Drug chain. They (Thrifty) were known for their hand dipped cones, and California Rite Aids (some of them) still have the ice cream counter.
You have to go back 'some' for that trivia!
When Thrifty Drug was in So.CA, the chain had something like 200 stores.
Sav-On had 20 (1960s) and did more volume than Thrifty's 200! (probably why Thrifty was sold).
Both were long before discount stores - like Zody's, K-Mart, etc. came on the scene, but Sav-On had 'discount' prices - and a better stocking plan.
Each store was it's own warehouse - while Thrifty kept minimal stock in the stores, relied on a central warehouse - resulting in 'outages' on the store shelves.
Like Thrifty, all Sav-On stores had an ice cream counter (hand-dipped), and like Thrifty - it was *not* their own brand.
(Sav-On was Carnation, forgot who supplied Thrifty).
Sav-On would have two or three gals (always busy) working at the ice cream counter during business hours, selling cones, hand-packed qts & 1/2 gallons - as well as 'commercially' packaged 1/2 gallons.
Single was 5 cents, double 10 cents. Thrifty would do "triples", but not Sav-On. (too many clean-ups).
When the younger generation of the Call family inherited the family business, they weren't interested in running a drug store chain and sold Sav-On also - and has been re-sold several times since.
Most of those stores are now CVS.
Doesn't matter - the ice cream counters have all disappeared.
The 'foot traffic' - won't support it.
Doubt a CVS (or a Rite Aid) could sell five cones in an hour - no matter what brand it was, LOL!
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