Lick this Icecream Parlour

Lick this Icecream Parlour Ice Cream Parlour - Ice Cream, Gelato, Sorbet and Espresso Coffee. Est 2004 Opened in January 2005 - we specialise in Ice Cream, Sorbet and Gelato.
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There are normally 43 flavours on offer at any one time. We hand-make our own Gelato and Sorbet on site using a traditional 3 day method following our own unique recipes. Real Kiwi "Ice Cream" using local ingredients. We hand-make the Gelato Ice Cream and Sorbets you see displayed at Lick this! using our own recipes. We use natural ingredients and local fruit where we can eg Strawberry and Feijoa.

We only use the best quality ingredients. We have developed our recipes to suit Kiwi tastes and created typical Kiwi flavours. More oh (Moro Bar), Mint Choc chip, Gingernut, Pineapple Lump, Hokey Pokey etc – no one else knows our recipes, they are not available anywhere else – they are totally unique to Lick this! We don’t add any preservatives to make our Ice cream last longer so we only make it when we need it – we don’t carry excess stock – it is all freshly made. Making good Ice Cream and Sorbet is a mixture of Science and Art. It is a 3-day process which involves -

1. Day one - making the Custard then ageing it overnight
2. Day two – Mixing each flavour individually, Batch churning it and then Blast Freezing
Day three – decorating and placing out for serving

Our method
We make Ice cream the “traditional” way because we want to make the best quality product we can possibly can. Day 1 - We make the white “Ice Cream Custard” the mixture of milk, cream, sugars and natural Gums that act as Emulsifiers and Stabilisers are heated up to 85C to cook the mixture and pasteurise it. At the bottom of the machine is a device that homogenisers the mix to make it taste much better. We then leave the “custard’ to age overnight. At this stage it tastes a bit like Sweetened Condensed Milk or a thin Vanilla Custard. Day 2 – Churning day, we add the flavours, ripples and fruits etc to the white custard base to create the Ice Creams we need that day. We can only make 1 tin (5 litres) at a time. As the Ice cream comes out of the churn we add any solid additions – things like crushed Cookies, Hokey Pokey bits, Raisins or nuts. We then blast freeze (freeze very quickly) the finished Ice Cream. This makes it taste very smooth. We then leave the Ice cream to harden and flavour up overnight. It takes 1 person all day to make 25 to 30 tins. You can take short cuts in this process but your finished product will never be as good – we believe you can taste the difference. Chocolate Ice Cream
Good Chocolate Ice Cream is the hardest to make – we make ours using 2 different Cocoa’s, milk, cream, natural gums, sugars and Whittaker’s Dark Chocolate Bars. This mixture is cooked up in the pasteuriser like the white base, to form a Chocolate custard which is aged and churned the next day as normal. Our intention is to make a chocolate that tastes like Milk Chocolate Bars rather than the Cocoa Hot Chocolate taste. We are very proud of it – we only make 9 tins in a batch on Chocolate Ice cream day. Sorbet
We have worked particularly hard on our Sorbet recipes – Sorbet’s are more than 50% fruit and don’t contain any dairy. They are completely natural and only contain fruit, some sugar to stop them freezing solid and natural gums. The base mix is made on day 1 – this is aged overnight and unsweetened fruit is added on Day 2 just before churning – it is then Blast Frozen. Good sorbets are tricky to make and need to be eaten within a few days of being made. Great sorbets flavours are Passionfruit, Lemon, Forest Berry (Strawberry, Boysenberry and Raspberry) and Feijoa. We sometimes make Chocolate Sorbet which is becoming a favourite for Lactose intolerant people. Our Flavours
We are particularly proud of what we do. Developing our recipes over the last 13 years has involved some trial and error – when we create a new flavour we initially only make one tin (5 Litres) of it and put it out to sell. We only make it again if we get good feedback and it sells quickly. Flavours that we consider standouts include Coconut Bounty, Peanut Butter Choc Chip, Moro Oh, Pineapple Lump, Salted Caramel and Gingernut. We do make special flavours for particular times of the year – Christmas Cake, Christmas Mince Pie, ANZAC biscuit and Easter Smash to name a few. We have made some usual flavours – “Bacon, banana and maple syrup”, Beetroot sorbet and fresh Fennel sorbet for example. Following a recipe is only a small part of making a good Ice cream or sorbet. The method is very important as is attention to detail and “love” of what you are doing and creating – we are always striving to make the best Ice Creams we can. We have discovered that to succeed we have to make flavours our customers like and not just ones we like ourselves. If you have any flavours you think we should make please let us know – we are always open to suggestions. If you are not sure what to pick you can always ask to try a couple of flavours before you buy.

Thank you to all stuff readers who recommended us for this article!
05/01/2024

Thank you to all stuff readers who recommended us for this article!

As some of - if not the - biggest ice cream eaters in the world, Kiwis naturally consider themselves to be experts on where to get the best.

Freyja Roper wrote this speech to deliver to her class on Monday. It was touching to get a copy delivered to the shop on...
19/11/2023

Freyja Roper wrote this speech to deliver to her class on Monday. It was touching to get a copy delivered to the shop on our last working Sunday. Thanks very much Freyja and all the best with your speech.

Congratulations to Charlotte, Martin and  Nsiah  Mei who have all been chosen as winners of a $20 Lick This voucher. Tha...
31/10/2023

Congratulations to Charlotte, Martin and Nsiah Mei who have all been chosen as winners of a $20 Lick This voucher.
Thank you to everyone who sent in their fantastic art work - it was very hard to choose winners.

We will open tomorrow after the All Blacks beat South Africa at about 10:30 am. Happy Days
28/10/2023

We will open tomorrow after the All Blacks beat South Africa at about 10:30 am. Happy Days

School Holidays Sunshine
04/10/2023

School Holidays Sunshine

This old photo was left in the store. Does it belong to you or do you recognise the child? Please come and collect it if...
26/08/2023

This old photo was left in the store. Does it belong to you or do you recognise the child? Please come and collect it if it is yours.

Caroline Manning and I have decided that after 19 years it is time to hang up our scoops and retire. We hope that someon...
20/08/2023

Caroline Manning and I have decided that after 19 years it is time to hang up our scoops and retire. We hope that someone else can take Lick this to the next level and it continues to delight customers for another 20 years.

Special thanks to all our lovely and loyal customers that have contributed to the success of Lick this!

It has been a challenge for us to start a business from scratch and grow it to this point. We have enjoyed the journey and learnt a lot along the way.

We are NOT closing - it is business as usual.

If you are interested in being the proud new owner you can find the listing at

A well-established and highly profitable Ice cream Parlour is for sale for the first time since it began in 2004.

Do these belong to you? Left in the shop over the school holiday break. Nice boots - made for walking. (In mud)
17/07/2023

Do these belong to you? Left in the shop over the school holiday break. Nice boots - made for walking. (In mud)

“No cotton wool kids” enjoy their ice creams this morning
13/07/2023

“No cotton wool kids” enjoy their ice creams this morning

A penny lick was a small glass for serving ice cream, used in London, England, and elsewhere in the late nineteenth cent...
25/05/2023

A penny lick was a small glass for serving ice cream, used in London, England, and elsewhere in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century. Street vendors would sell the contents of the glass for one penny. The glass was usually made with a thick glass base and a shallow depression on top in which the ice cream was placed. The customer would lick clean the glass and return it to the vendor, who would reuse it. The thickness of the glass made the contents appear greater than they were, often disappointing the customer, and the glasses commonly broke or were stolen.

The penny lick was banned in London in 1898 due to concerns about the spread of disease, particularly cholera and tuberculosis, as the glass was often not washed between customers. Questions of hygiene led Italo Marchiony to introduce a pastry cup in New York City in 1896, which he patented in 1903. The waffle ice cream cone rapidly became popular soon afterwards, displacing the penny lick

EIT students visit to Lick this! Today. Lovely to see them all.
06/05/2023

EIT students visit to Lick this! Today.

Lovely to see them all.

Thanks guys
04/05/2023

Thanks guys

🍦 Thankful Thursday 🍦

This Thankful Thursday we'd like to shout-out Lick this Icecream Parlour for their continued support as a mentor discount partner.

With so many ice cream and gelato flavours to choose from, you can't go wrong at Lick This. Our matches love stopping in for an ice cream while out and about (and so do we!)

Thanks Lick This!



Address

290 Marine Parade
Napier
4110

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 9pm
Tuesday 10am - 9pm
Wednesday 10am - 9pm
Thursday 12pm - 9pm
Friday 10am - 9pm
Saturday 10am - 9pm
Sunday 10am - 9pm

Telephone

+64278359427

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