Current:Home > ContactA real nut case: Cold Stone Creamery faces suit over lack of real pistachios in pistachio ice cream -Edge Finance Strategies
A real nut case: Cold Stone Creamery faces suit over lack of real pistachios in pistachio ice cream
View
Date:2025-04-12 07:04:21
Is it nuts to assume a scoop of pistachio ice cream should contain actual pistachios? Or how about real butter in a dish of butter pecan?
Such weighty questions about a favorite summertime confection could soon be decided by the courts.
A federal judge in New York has given the go-ahead to a Long Island woman’s class action lawsuit that claims consumers are being duped by Cold Stone Creamery when they purchase certain flavors that “do not contain their represented ingredients.”
Lead plaintiff Jenna Marie Duncan purchased her serving of pistachio ice cream from a Cold Stone Creamery store in Levittown, New York, in or around July 2022. According her lawsuit, Duncan “reasonably believed that the Pistachio ice cream she purchased from defendant contained pistachio.”
But Duncan later learned after reading the company’s website there were no pistachios — a member of the cashew family — in the frozen dairy product, but rather “pistachio flavoring” that’s defined as a mixture of water, Ethanol, Propylene Glycol, natural and artificial flavor, Yellow 5, and Blue 1, according to the lawsuit.
“When consumers purchase pistachio ice cream, they expect pistachios, not a concoction of processed ingredients,” Duncan’s lawsuit reads, noting that competitors such as Haagen-Dazs use real pistachios in their ice cream.
Duncan also takes issue with the ingredients in Cold Stone’s mango, coconut, orange, mint, butter pecan ice creams and its orange sorbet.
A message was left by The Associated Press seeking comment from Duncan’s attorney.
U.S. District Court Judge Gary R. Brown, whose sometimes tongue-in-cheek court ruling is sprinkled with song lyrics about ice cream — from Louis Prima’s “Banana Split for My Baby” to Weird Al Yankovic’s “I Love Rocky Road” — writes how the case “raises a deceptively complex question about the reasonable expectations of plaintiff and like-minded ice cream aficionados.”
Should a consumer ordering pistachio ice cream expect actual pistachios?
“And if the answer is no, should that leave them with a bitter aftertaste,” wrote the judge, whose decision was released in May.
Brown acknowledges in his ruling, which now allows the case to proceed, that Duncan’s alleged claims of deceptive practices under New York’s General Business Law “are plausible on their face” when it comes to the pistachio ice cream she purchased. The state’s law prohibits “deceptive acts and practices in the conduct of any business, trade or commerce or in furnishing of any service.”
Messages were left seeking comment with lawyers for Kahala Franchising LLC, the parent franchiser of nearly 1,000 Cold Stone stores worldwide. One of the lawyers declined to comment on the case when reached by The Associated Press.
In court records, Kahala sought to have the case dismissed, arguing that a detailed list of the ice cream ingredients are published online. A regional director of operations for Kahala said in court records that no flavor placard at the Levittown location indicated the ice creams are “made with” any particular ingredient.
For the flavors named in the lawsuit, he said “consumers are able to see for themselves there are no ‘chunks’ of what appear to be any specific ingredients in the ice cream that would indicate a particular ice cream contains a certain ingredient.”
There have been numerous lawsuits filed over the years about products not living up to advertising hype, including suits against fast food restaurants for not providing big, juicy burgers or a soda not providing promised health benefits. There have also been lawsuits over products not containing ingredients they purport to contain.
Brown notes in his ruling that some of these disputes have led to an “etymological analysis” over whether a word such as vanilla is being used by a company as a noun to reflect an actual ingredient in a product, or simply as an adjective to describe a flavor.
But the judge acknowledged it’s a tricky argument for an ice cream manufacturer to make when it comes to modern-day flavors, noting “when one orders a ‘Moose Tracks’ ice cream cone, the hoofprints of the largest member of the deer family linguistically acts as an adjective.”
veryGood! (5)
Related
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Pink Shares She Nearly Died After Overdose at Age 16
- Christopher Bell wins at NASCAR race at Homestead to lock up second Championship 4 berth
- The yield on a 10-year Treasury reached 5% for the 1st time since 2007. Here’s why that matters
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- South Korean auto parts maker plans $72.5M plant near new Hyundai facility in Georgia, hiring 500
- Milwaukee comic shop looking to sell copy of first appearance of Spider-Man, book could go for $35K
- Large waves pound the northern Caribbean as Hurricane Tammy spins into open waters
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Australians’ rejection of the Indigenous Voice in constitutional vote is shameful, supporters say
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Michigan State didn’t seek permission or pay for Hitler-related quiz content, YouTube creator says
- Horoscopes Today, October 21, 2023
- Orbán blasts the European Union on the anniversary of Hungary’s 1956 anti-Soviet uprising
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- The hospital ran out of her child's cancer drug. Now she's fighting to end shortages
- Don Laughlin, resort-casino owner and architect behind Nevada town, is dead at 92
- Bobi, known as the world's oldest dog ever, dies at age 31
Recommendation
Average rate on 30
Man charged with 83 counts of attempted murder after threat on Alaska Airlines flight
Israeli family from Hamas-raided kibbutz tries not to think the worst as 3 still held, including baby boy
Taylor Swift's 'Eras' wins box office as 'Killers of the Flower Moon' makes $23M debut
Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
California Gov. assures his state is always a partner on climate change as he begins trip to China
Cincinnati Zoo employee hospitalized after she's bitten by highly venomous rattlesnake
Dispute between Iraqi military and Kurdish Peshmerga turns deadly, killing 3