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Japanese convenience store’s 'Drinkable Soft Serve Ice Cream' is a top-tier dessert

7 Comments
By Casey Baseel, SoraNews24

The Japanese convenience store world is dominated by the “big three”: 7-Eleven, FamilyMart, and Lawson. Other chains do exist, but they have to do something really special to grab people’s attention, and we deeply, deeply appreciate how Ministop has chosen to do so: by providing the best soft serve ice cream you can get at a convenience store in Japan.

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Ministop’s ice cream is so good that the company even has a chain of ice cream parlors, called Minisof by Ministop, that ditch the convenience store part of the setup entirely and just sell ice cream.

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Somehow, this was something that our reporter Seiji Nakazawa wasn’t aware of until recently. When Seiji stumbled across a Minisof branch, he also found out for us that they serve “Drinkable Soft Serve Ice Cream,” found in the section of the menu labeled のむソフトクリーム.

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This was, of course, something that Seiji knew he needed to try as he continues to broaden his edible/drinkable horizons. The menu listed a number of different Drinkable Soft Serve Ice Cream flavors, all priced at 590 yen, and though he was tempted by the strawberry, cookies and cream, and tiramisu versions, in the end he decided to go with the Super Milk, or Cho Milk, if you’re ordering in Japanese.

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That might look like a large drinking cup filled up with ice cream and topped with a swirl of whipped cream, but it’s not. That whole thing is ice cream, from the bottom of the cup all the way up to the very tip. There’s so much ice cream that it actually makes us feel a little giddy to look at it.

Like we said, there’s no whipped cream, but there is a topping of sorts, which you can see in the glistening cervices in the photo here.

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That’s condensed milk which the staff pours on after they finish swirling the ice cream into the cup. So yes, the Super Milk is true to its name by being a cup of creamy vanilla ice cream enhanced with another dairy product to bring out the maximum amount of milky flavor.

Remember, though, this isn’t a dessert to eat, but one to drink. Seiji was honestly a little skeptical as he stuck a straw into the towering mass of ice cream, and was fully prepared to go ask the staff for a spoon if and when he couldn’t suck any of it up.

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But to Seiji’s surprise, and his taste buds’ delight, Minisof’s Drinkable Soft Serve Ice Cream really is drinkable! The ice cream isn’t runny or watery, but its texture is soft and consistent enough that it flows smoothly up the straw, like a river making its way from the cup to your mouth. This direct delivery made the ice cream taste especially sweet, and he’s now firmly convinced that Minisof is onto something in turning soft serve ice cream into a beverage.

The only downside is that the Drinkable Soft Serve Ice Cream isn’t available at regular Ministop convenience stores. You can only get it at Minisof branches, and there’s only one in Tokyo, in the Ikebukuro neighborhood (though there’s also a branch in Kawasaki, the city neighboring Tokyo to the south, and one in Yokohama, to the south of Kawasaki). Still, the Super Milk Drinkable Soft Serve Ice Cream is tasty enough to make a special sweets run for.

Related: Minisof location list

Photos ©SoraNews24

Read more stories from SoraNews24.

-- Does Lawson’s new “A Happy Pancake the Drink” live up to our pancake-loving expectations?

-- “Drinkable soft serve ice cream” in bottles to go on sale in Japan

-- Japanese convenience store ice cream solves plastic-vs.-wooden-spoon dilemma with edible spoons

© SoraNews24

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

7 Comments
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Soon the average Japanese person will be as obese as those in the “West”

-8 ( +1 / -9 )

The bar has been set pretty high. Not sure Japan can get there.

-1 ( +2 / -3 )

But to Seiji’s surprise, and his taste buds’ delight, Minisof’s Drinkable Soft Serve Ice Cream really is drinkable! 

Wait until Seiji hears about milkshakes for half the price!

2 ( +3 / -1 )

So disappointing and lack of flavor. If they can’t do basic chocolate and vanilla consistently right then what do you expect. Wish Japan still had Dairy Queen.

-4 ( +0 / -4 )

Soon the average Japanese person will be as obese as those in the “West”

That is not entirely true. Different cultures, different physiological structures, and food habits, not to mention, how much you consume these drinks, if you do it everyday, then yes, but once in awhile, it's ok.

-1 ( +1 / -2 )

Soft serve is not a science project. It is one of the best cool downs on a hot day. I know, I know. Eating one will make me drop dead before I'm finished, but my devil-may-care makes me want to try one of these. Is there a bad soft serve? I've never had one.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

WA4TKGJune 6  11:21 am JST

Soon the average Japanese person will be as obese as those in the “West”

Who told you that, misterrogers on the TV?

Here in America we get told every damn thing and there are sheep who will follow. The recent obviousness and kowtowing to the Diaper-Stinking sex deviant Mussolini is the most obvious and explicit example.

Skin and bones is not healthy for anyone, females are pressured into that all the time - with disasterous results.

*bass4funkJune 6  02:37 pm JST

Soon the average Japanese person will be as obese as those in the “West”

That is not entirely true. Different cultures, different physiological structures, and food habits, not to mention, how much you consume these drinks, if you do it everyday, then yes, but once in awhile, it's ok.

Exactly. We are diverse but should never be held to the same standards or templates. Besides, this is ice cream we're talking about here. Ice cream is a dairy product and by that factor alone it's healthy for you. Builds strong bones.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

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