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    a spoon of swoon

    H-E-B's cool new specialty ice creams will make you swoon

    Ken Hoffman
    Aug 13, 2018 | 2:40 pm

    Courtney Lay is the Ice Cream Queen — well, officially, the business development manager for ice cream, novelties and frozen desserts at H-E-B corporate in San Antonio. That's a mouthful, but not a surprising career development for her.

    “I’ve always been an ice cream fanatic. When I was 14 or 15, I got a work permit for my first job at the Peppermint Stick restaurant in Long Grove, Illinois. My favorite part of the job was making shakes and malts in those old-fashioned metal cups. I’d always ask the customers if they wanted the extra in the cup. If they said no, I’d drink it,” Lay laughs.

    That could be the greatest perk ever in the history of the American labor movement.

    Until now, maybe. Every Tuesday and Thursday, she has standing two-hour sessions with her staff. They taste ice cream, brainstorm new flavors, try to predict trends, and discuss the virtues of chocolate vs. cherry vanilla. Lay says she balances her work-related consumption with exercise and yoga.

    These days Lay’s pet project is Swoon, H-E-B’s new line of super premium ice cream designed to compete and beat those high-end, high-priced pints from Ben & Jerry’s, Häagen-Dazs, and other ritzy ice cream makers. Swoon spent three years in development before hitting H-E-B supermarkets this summer. Its target demo: customers who want deep, knee-shaking flavors — and don’t mind paying a little extra for their favorite diet buster. Swoon pints go for $3.98, about a buck less than the next freezer case over. H-E-B landed on the name Swoon after suggesting several names to customers in the testing stage. (One of the rejects was "LegenDairy." Too punny.)

    Swoon-worthy flavors
    Swoon currently has nine flavors: Cherry Pistachio, Texas Brownie a la Mode, Banana S’mores, Triple Chocolate (has H-E-B been reading my diary?), Coconut Horchata, Walnut Carrot Cake, Dulce Churro, Chocolate Hazelnut Swirl, and Salted Caramel — with more to come. Next up are Blueberry Streusel and Cookie Lovers. Lay’s goal is to have 21 flavors to Swoon over.

    With her last name, shouldn't Lay be working in potato chips instead of ice cream? "I was teased about that all the time when I was growing up," she says. "I guess I'm just more of a sweets person."

    I used to think that supermarket house brands were leftovers or factory seconds from established food manufacturers. Say Bird’s-Eye bought too much green beans, or a batch of beans didn’t look exactly right. Bird’s-Eye would sell the extra beans to a supermarket, who’d slap their own label on them and sell them for slightly less than the national brands.

    Wrong. “We have our own ice cream plant in San Antonio,” says Lay. “We make only HEB products there. We have several lines of ice cream, from Hill Country Fare to Creamy Creations to Swoon. We make a lot of ice cream in our plant. We test our new ice cream products in Austin, Houston, and San Antonio before we put anything in the stores. We must have tested 50 flavors of Swoon before releasing the nine flavors we have now,” Lay said.

    One of the rejected flavors: Strawberry Red Velvet Cheesecake. Customers turned thumbs down during the testing stage. Good decision.

    “The biggest challenge for us is to educate our customers that we actually do make our own products. Creamy Creations ice cream came out 20 years ago. When we went to markets with Creamy Creations, many of our customers didn’t understand it, or even understand it today. We have more than 100 partners (employees) in our ice cream facility and they really are ice cream fanatics.”

    What makes it premium?
    Naturally the government sticks its nose (I would suggest spoons) in the ice cream industry. For a product to be labeled “ice cream,” it must contain at least 10 percent butterfat. Then there are categories: “premium” ice cream has between 12 and 14 percent butterfat, “super premium” between 16 and 18 percent butterfat. “Super premium” usually is denser, heavier, and has more “inclusions.” (That’s industry talk for mix-ins.) Anything higher than 18 percent butterfat and you’d need a jackhammer for the first few bites.

    Hill Country Fare is “ice cream.” Creamy Creations is “premium.” Swoon is “super premium.” Anything below 10 percent butterfat is “frozen dessert” and no thank you. That’s the big ol’ tub of ice cream you buy for when your kids have friends over.

    While the government imposes butterfat levels for ice cream, it doesn’t monitor the industry to make sure everybody’s following the rules. There’s a shock. Think I’ll tweet that tomorrow around 5 am.

    H-E-B came up with fanciful flavors for its Swoon line, but the names accurately describe what’s under the lid. There’s no wondering what’s in the pint, like Chubby Hubby or Phish Food from Ben & Jerry’s. You won’t need to bring your reader glasses to the frozen food aisle for the fine print. (They’ll fog up, anyway.) Lay likes to spell it out. There’s no mystery to Cherry Pistachio.

    Low-cal dreams
    Will there ever be a decent low-carb ice cream? Because so far, not even close. Those 230-calories per pint brands aren’t making it for me, either.

    “We are always thinking about developing that — I call it the ‘better for you’ category. It’s definitely the wave of the future. People are looking for healthier options. They want to indulge, but feel good about it.”

    H-E-B keeps it simple with no-nonsense names like Banana S'mores.

    H-E-B Swoon ice cream Banana S'mores
    Photo courtesy of H-E-B
    H-E-B keeps it simple with no-nonsense names like Banana S'mores.
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    holiday budgeting news

    Here's how much Houstonians are budgeting for holiday gifts in 2025

    Amber Heckler
    Nov 24, 2025 | 9:15 am
    Holiday shopping, holiday budgets
    Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
    San Antonio residents are expected to spend over $900 on their Christmas gifts this year, WalletHub found.

    Residents living in Houston's well-to-do suburbs aren't stressing about stretching their holiday spending this year: A new report from WalletHub found Pearland, The Woodlands, and Sugar Land residents are all among the top-25 biggest holiday spenders in the nation for 2025.

    Pearland gift givers are expected to spend $3,277 on their festive presents, says WalletHub's 2025 "Holiday Budgets by City" report.

    Pearland's holiday budget earned it No. 19 in WalletHub's national ranking of cities with largest holiday budgets, with The Woodlands and Sugar Land appearing right behind as No. 20 and No. 22, respectively.

    To determine the U.S. cities with the biggest holiday budgets, WalletHub's experts compared 558 cities across five categories: Income, age, a debt-to-income ratio, residents' monthly income-to-monthly expenses ratio, and their savings-to-monthly expenses ratio.

    The three U.S. cities that boast the loftiest holiday budgets are Palo Alto, California (No. 1); Mountain View, California (No. 2); and Newton, Massachusetts (No. 3). Palo Alto residents are expected to spend nearly $4,500 on their Christmas gifts this year, with the latter cities budgeting for $4,266 and $4,069.

    Pearland's current holiday budget is $711 higher than it was in 2024, when the city ranked No. 31 in WalletHub's list of U.S. cities with the biggest holiday spenders. It's also much higher than the $2,127 projected budget from the 2023 report, when Pearland ranked No. 36 nationally. They're definitely competing with Mr. Claus for the "best Christmas present" award.

    Festive neighbor The Woodlands ranked as the city with the 10th-highest holiday budgets last year, so its current rank as No. 20 is a bit surprising. Even with a dip in the rankings, The Woodlands residents are still expected to spend a lofty $3,265 on their holiday presents this year, or about $51 less than last year.

    Residents living in No. 22-ranking Sugar Land are projected to spend $3,191 on their holiday gifts this year, or $19 less than last year, the report found.

    Houston proper ranked 285th on the list with a $1,302 projected holiday budget this year, or $6 more than last year's budget.

    Five more Houston-area cities landed in this year's report on the heftiest holiday budgets:

    • No. 34 – League City ($2,997)
    • No. 291 – Pasadena ($1,294)
    • No. 321 – Missouri City ($1,233)
    • No. 412 – Conroe ($1,063)
    • No. 490 – Baytown ($890)
    Regardless of the dollar amount, Houstonians should pay attention to their spending and pick a budget that works for their financial situation, experts say. The National Retail Federation expects holiday sales to surpass $1 trillion this year, and the report warns credit card debt is a major challenge faced by many Americans as they plan their holiday shopping sprees.

    "The holidays bring plenty of joy, but they can also spark seasonal stress, much of it tied to overspending," the report's author wrote. "In Q3 2025, the average household carried $10,227 in credit card debt, up 2.3 percent from the year before, according to WalletHub data. Adding holiday shopping on top of that can quickly increase the financial strain, especially if balances roll into the new year."

    Other Texas cities that ranked among the top 100 biggest holiday spenders include:

    • No. 4 – Flower Mound ($3,941)
    • No. 12 – Frisco ($3,491)
    • No. 28 – Allen ($3,055)
    • No. 31 – Cedar Park ($3,028)
    • No. 40 – Plano ($2,812)
    • No. 47 – Round Rock ($2,641)
    • No. 55 – McKinney ($2,502)
    • No. 56 – Carrollton ($2,498)
    • No. 82 – Richardson ($2,146)
    • No. 96 – North Richland Hills ($1,985)
    According to the study's methodology, a consumer is considered to be in a "comfortable financial position to engage in holiday spending if they have: 1) enough emergency savings to cover at least six months of expenses and 2) a debt-to-income ratio smaller than 22 percent for a renter or 43 percent for a homeowner."
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