Baskin Robbins once made ketchup ice cream.
Baskin-Robbins' Ketchup Ice Cream Disaster
Yes, you read that right. Baskin-Robbins, the ice cream empire known for its famous "31 flavors," once concocted ketchup-flavored ice cream. And no, it wasn't an April Fools' joke.
The ketchup catastrophe was born in Baskin-Robbins' Burbank factory, where flavor scientists churned out hundreds of experimental creations each year. The process was ruthless: only about 12 flavors would be promoted as "Flavor of the Month," while the rest got scraped into the trash after a single tasting.
The Laboratory of Frozen Horrors
Ketchup ice cream wasn't alone in its failure. The company's testing floor became a graveyard for truly baffling ideas:
- Lox and Bagels - because who doesn't want smoked salmon in their dessert?
- Grape Britain - a pun so bad it somehow made the flavor worse
- Gummy Gummy Gum Drops - texture nightmare fuel
These weren't just minor missteps. They were described by industry insiders as "famous disastrous flavours" and "plain bad ideas." The ketchup flavor, in particular, represented everything wrong with the "throw it at the wall and see what sticks" approach to ice cream innovation.
The Method Behind the Madness
Here's the thing: Baskin-Robbins has created over 1,400 flavors throughout its history. That level of innovation requires taking risks, and sometimes those risks involve freezing condiments.
The company's experimental philosophy meant flavor developers had permission to get weird. Very weird. Each year, fewer than ten new flavors would actually reach store freezers. The rest? Relegated to the "what were they thinking?" files of ice cream history.
The ketchup experiment perfectly captures this culture of culinary chaos. Someone in that lab looked at a bottle of Heinz, looked at an ice cream maker, and thought: "Why not?" The answer, it turns out, was very obvious once people actually tasted it.
Why It Failed (Obviously)
Ketchup is sweet, sure. But it's also tangy, vinegary, and packed with tomato flavor. None of these qualities translate well to frozen desserts.
The savory-sweet combination that works in barbecue sauce or sweet-and-sour dishes completely falls apart when your brain expects ice cream. The cognitive dissonance alone probably caused headaches.
While Baskin-Robbins has successfully pulled off unconventional flavors - their Turkey Day flavor featured actual turkey, stuffing, and cranberry - ketchup crossed a line that even adventurous eaters wouldn't approach.
The legacy? Ketchup ice cream remains one of the most infamous examples of flavor development gone wrong, a cautionary tale told in culinary schools and a reminder that just because you can make something doesn't mean you should.