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Getting the scoop: Steve's Ice Cream plans return to Somerville

Ed note: Post corrected to reflect that it's not the original Steve who is bringing back the Steve's name.

A guy who once scoped ice cream at the original Steve's in Davis Square has restarted Steve's and is planning a return to its original Somerville roots, but this time as a purveyor of small batches of artisanal ice cream.

We learned of the re-Steveization of Somerville from Megan, who reports on a party last night at Taza, Somerville's artisanal chocolate maker and a Steve's partner.

A summer opening is planned; alas, they didn't say exactly where in Somerville. Steve's current company bought back the name from whichever defunct entity was holding onto it after what became a national chain collapsed in the late 1990s, and it recently opened its first shop in Brooklyn:

If ice cream can be said to have a terroir, the new Steve's is definitely that of Brooklyn. The company, which began developing and testing new flavors last year, is creating partnerships with a number of the borough's artisanal producers: To date, Salvatore Bklyn is supplying the ricotta in Steve's strawberry ricotta ice cream, Kombucha Brooklyn's eponymous brew is the base for a kombucha sorbet, and Plowshares coffee stars in a coffee-cinnamon ice cream.

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Comments

Does this mean he's no longer involved with Herrell's? I know the Boston locations closed. But I think the Northampton one still exists. Use to love that place when I went to college, some time back in the last century.

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In a Facebook comment exchange with me this morning, Judy Herrell (of Herrell's) says that Steve is still fully involved with Herrell's Ice Cream and has nothing to do with the new Steve's Ice Cream!

https://www.facebook.com/juherrell/posts/134576319206

I've asked her to come here and clarify; hopefully she will.

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Here's what I read on the new Steve's site:

Our founder, then a 20-something philosophy student in nearby Cambridge, learned to do expert Mix-Ins and how to make Steve's ice cream by hand in the original store. Ever since, he's dreamed of recreating the excitement that was unique to Steve's – the lines around the block, the wild flavor creations and the sheer joy of ice cream Steve's inspired. Now he's living that dream by bringing Steve's back to start the next ice cream revolution.

So it's not Steve, but some guy who worked at Steve's. I may not have a drinking problem, but I might have a reading problem. I'll fix the initial post.

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Not what you wrote, but what it says on the Steve's web site. I would have made the exact same mistake that you did. Why don't they identify their "founder" ?

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Somerville without the cachet.

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This comment is one of a small batch of pretentious comments, prepared exclusively for UniversalHub using the fastest internet connection and a Macbook Pro imported from China.

That'll be $20, please.

(For fuck's sakes, people really need to stop labeling "made by some 20-something who has no fucking clue what he's doing save what he read off the internet or learned working the job for a year or two elsewhere, then overpriced and stuffed with marketing crap and social media" as "artisanal."

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not in 2011.

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20-somethings.

I'll never forget the time I walked into Herrels in Harvard Square, asked for two flavors in a small, and as the kid was finishing scooping, this old bat came FLYING out of the office and grabbed the dish from him and asked him what he was doing while she WEIGHED it.

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I'm just so darn happy he used the correct adjective form, "artisanal," that I can't even be mad about the context. I swear, the next person who offers me an "artisan sandwich" is gonna get it. I mean, if you're going to be so pretentious to say that your fast food was made by an artisan, at least be grammatically correct about it.

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...they were eating artisans.

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Yes, but were they locally produced, sustainably farmed artisans?

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