He and his partner, Bryan Petroff, spent the summer turning out a more colorful version of. The pair also said the changing business landscape brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic played a role in their decision and that the small East Village shop would never “truly recover.” Then he saw a posting for an available ice cream truck, and New York's Big Gay Ice Cream Truck was born. The shop, which opened in 2015, was Big Gay Ice Cream’s first spot outside of New York City. The empty storefronts (kept vacant by landlords working tax breaks) that plague the city have settled in. Doug Quint and Bryan Petroff owners of Big Gay Ice Cream, announced on Wednesday, January 27, they would be closing the ice cream parlor’s South Street location for good. “The batteries have gone a bit dim on that street. Damn, that block had energy and we loved it,” co-owners Doug Quint and Bryan Petroff wrote.
They’re the cofounders and co-owners of Big Gay Ice Cream, the truck that first took to New York City’s streets in 2009 and. Giant, warm chocolate chip cookie topped with vanilla bean gelato and. Doug Quint and Bryan Petroff know a lot about soft serve ice cream. We wanted to be right there with Caracas, Luke’s Lobster, Porchetta, Butter Lane and Pylos. Delicious Tiffs Treats Snickerdoodle cookie blended with ice cream and caramel. In its heyday that section of East Seventh was one of the hottest food blocks in the city - even The New York Times singled it out. “We always knew that if we ever opened a shop it would be in the East Village.
Sundae /pg0IA27ix1- biggayicecream May 31, 2020 Free Falafel at Mamoun’s Big Gay Ice Cream Shakes It Up Plus: military drinks free at Rusty Knot, and more of today’s leftovers.