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Milltown Ice Cream Depot owner Joan Trent remembered as town s heart

Before becoming the ice cream queen, Trent owned a swimming pool company on Washington Avenue. When the opportunity arose to continue the ice cream shop tradition in the borough, she decided to give it a go. After the original owner, Elfie, left after 17 years, and a second person came in without success, Trent connected with the landlord, sharing her thoughts about reopening the ice cream shop.   I told the landlord I didn t know anything about ice cream, but I would learn,  Trent told MyCentralJersey in 2019. The landlord asked me, ‘If kids came to the window and were counting their pennies and they didn t have enough, what would you do?’ I told him I would give them their ice cream and tell them they could pay me when they came back next time. Then he asked me what would happen if ice cream fell off a child s cone. I told him I would give them another ice cream at no charge. He handed me the keys.

Central NJ old-fashioned ice cream parlors are a blast from the past

View Comments The pandemic has put almost every type of food business you can think of into a tailspin. But ice cream shops? They seem to be going strong.  Whether you attribute their success to outdoors, walkup-window service or just the fact that people really love ice cream  especially when they re looking for comfort  these ice cream shops are as busy as ever. In Central Jersey, these old-fashioned shops have continued to dish up scoops of everything from strawberry to s mores flavors for decades. Here are just a few to check out when you re looking for something sweet.  As You Like It, Raritan

The sun is keeping ice cream cold for all of western Canada

EDMONTON Talk about sweet, sweet irony.  An array of 1,860 solar panels was just installed at The Ice Cream Depot, a 30,000-square-foot deep freezer in Nisku, Alta., south of Edmonton. The privately funded setup generates 500kW, or half a megawatt, of electricity and will help the storage warehouse and distributer reduce its carbon footprint by 512 tonnes each year. According to president Mike Rogiani, it ll save the company tens of thousands throughout the year.  We wanted to lower our carbon footprint because we re a power pig, he told CTV News Edmonton. Our energy costs continually go up. We want to be able to mitigate those costs.

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