logo
The Kardashian Jenner Family Takes Over Crumbl Menu

The Kardashian Jenner Family Takes Over Crumbl Menu

Six Signature Desserts
'We've never had an entire menu takeover before, and who better to do that than the legendary ladies of the Kardashian Jenner Family. Iconic family meets iconic desserts—it just makes sense.' — Sawyer Hemsley, Crumbl Co-founder
LINDON, UT, UNITED STATES, April 7, 2025 / EINPresswire.com / -- Crumbl is joining forces with the legendary Kardashian Jenner Family for a first-time-ever full menu takeover. Inspiration for these star-studded desserts comes straight from the six powerhouse women and into every Crumbl location across the U.S., Canada, and Puerto Rico. Name a more showstopping collaboration than Crumbl's iconic flavors with the Kardashian Jenner Family's flair for style and glam.
Everyone's favorite momager gives a nod to nostalgia with the Kris' Classic Yellow Layer Cake. Reflecting her clean-eating lifestyle, Kourtney's Flourless Chocolate Cake is not only gluten-friendly and free of refined sugars but also decadently rich and chocolatey. Snickerdoodle got a glow-up with Kim's Snickerdoodle Crumb Cake Cookie—a cinnamon lover's dream featuring streusel and white chips. The ooey-gooey goodness of Khloe's Cookies & Cream Skillet Cookie is balanced with scoops of fresh vanilla bean cookies & cream mousse. Kendall's Cookie Dough Cupcake Cookie takes the Crumbl signature to a whole new level, by topping buttercream on a warm brown sugar cookie. Last but not least, Kylie's Pink Confetti Sugar Cookie is a playful twist on a classic sugar cookie.
'We've never had an entire menu takeover before, and who better to do that than the legendary ladies of the Kardashian Jenner Family,' says Sawyer Hemsley, CBO and Co-Founder of Crumbl. 'Iconic family meets iconic desserts—it just makes sense.'
All six desserts fit perfectly in a chic, limited edition 6-Pack box. It's Krumbl, just Kardashian Jenner style. In all Crumbl locations April 7-12, 2025.
About Crumbl:
Crumbl is a popular dessert franchise with a mission to bring friends and family together over the best desserts in the world. Crumbl was founded in 2017 in Logan, Utah, by Jason McGowan and Sawyer Hemsley. In just seven years, Crumbl has grown from a humble cookie shop to the fastest-growing dessert chain in the US, with over 1,050 locations across all 50 states, Canada and Puerto Rico. The rotating menu offers new flavors every week, while regularly bringing back crowd favorites and unique original recipes, all served in Crumbl's iconic Pink Box. Don't miss the weekly menu drops posted every Sunday at 6 pm MST on Crumbl's social media accounts. Visit Crumbl online at crumbl.com, on social media (@crumbl), or at any of the store locations.
X
LinkedIn
Instagram
YouTube
TikTok
Other
Legal Disclaimer:

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

No 69-Year-Old Looks Like Kris Jenner IRL. Not Even Kris Jenner.
No 69-Year-Old Looks Like Kris Jenner IRL. Not Even Kris Jenner.

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

No 69-Year-Old Looks Like Kris Jenner IRL. Not Even Kris Jenner.

Illustration by Allure; Source images: Getty Images, Adobe Stock You will forgive me if the number of times I've uttered, 'Geezus Christ,' in the past few days has hit some kind of record. I was asked to write something about Kris Jenner's new face (you have presumably seen at least some of the flood of photos and online conversations that have saturated news and social media feeds since its debut a couple of weeks ago). I've consequently spent what now feels like half my life peering at many of those photos and drowning in mostly vacuous content about what appears to be her vastly changed appearance. I say 'appears to be' because there's really no way of knowing what Kris Jenner actually looks like. Which is one of the reasons for my incessant muttering. I've examined so many photos of the Kardashians/Jenners at this point that I can't even tell them apart. (Not that I was an expert at that even before this week.) The resemblance between Kris and Kim—I think it's Kim—after Kris's most recent facial renovation is similar enough that in photos they look like AI sisters, if not twins. Yet there's a 25-year age difference between them; one of them has birthed six children, is a grandmother of 13, and is only five years younger than I am at the cusp of 75. But in photos, the Kris/Kim's look basically the same age. Geezus Christ. I want to make it clear from the start that I don't judge anyone for their aesthetic choices, my attitude being: It's tough enough trying to reconcile the fact that, as mortals, we could vanish at any moment, so: Whatever gets you through the night. If that requires an all-out effort to diminish the manifestations of your gradual physical deterioration, bless you—go for it. The problem for me isn't, then, choosing to have plastic surgery. The problem is the way the results of that choice are represented in our news and social media feeds. Bottom-line, we're fed a steady diet of… junk food. Prime example: I just watched a plastic surgeon detail on his million-plus follower YouTube channel each step as he determined them, year by year, of Kris's facial evolution. But the photos he used to demonstrate the work she had done were obviously heavily filtered or otherwise edited. So, though he may have extensive experience with facial anatomy, without access to Kris's actual face, he was basically spinning a tale. At the end of the story, an estimated cost of the proposed work pops up: Not the kind of elective surgery money you or I will likely ever enjoy. But—this surgeon points out—you can afford the skin care he's selling, at a much more reasonable price. Small consolation for the sad fact that we can't afford the procedures Kris may or may not have had to make her look like—well, I have no idea what she actually looks like. And neither do you. Geezus Christ. I did find a 2022 video of Kris without makeup, promoting Kim's SKKN skin-care line. Barefaced, she looks very different, nicely preserved, like any well-cared-for civilian you might run into shopping for skin care at your local Walgreen's (you can only buy SKKN online… but you get my gist). According to many accounts, including some of her own, Kris had submitted to, by then, more than one facelift, a panoply of in-office treatments including neurotoxin, microneedling, and whatever else you might think of—or might not even think of, like an earlobe reduction—but her face still looks appropriately, pleasantly, if not excessively lived-in. Her glow, she claims, is due to the seven-step before-bed skin-care routine she has just demonstrated. Geezus Christ. I have no idea what she actually looks like. And neither do you. In the May 2025 version of Kris, she's presenting with a generally smaller face, a more tapered chin, softly oval face shape, and an emphasized jawline. Her new hairstyle, with bangs and a bow, is kittenish. In fact, the whole impression bears a remarkable resemblance to a classic anime girl, a look achieved not only with a facelift and other procedures, but maybe with weight loss, and definitely with elaborately and skillfully applied makeup, a more youthful hairstyle, and on most of these photos: digital filters. (While the Internet has been awash in images of Kris Jenner, I could find only two that were captured in the wild and not coming to us from her owned-and-operated social feed.) This iteration, in its freakish youthfulness and unnatural perfection is what finally shifted my Geezus Christ into the more secular Holy sh*t. Not because of the magic performed by a plastic surgeon, a makeup artist, a hairstylist, and the filters. It's because this artificial representation is being welcomed not only as if it were real, but as if it were achievable—and even desired—through aesthetic procedures. Some of the recent headlines include Kris Jenner's New Look Stuns Fans, Kris Jenner's Glow-up Sparks Positive Reactions, and from this very outlet, Kris Jenner's New Face Is a Great Case for Keeping Plastic Surgery Old School (although this did stand apart as a reported story on the surgical specifics of the type of facelift Jenner's surgeon is known to perform). I can't really say what beauty is. But I can say what it is not. It is not this, this 'sanitized digital simulacra of selfhood that appears online,' as Sophie Gilbert elegantly put it recently in The Atlantic. Nobody looks like Kris. Not even Kris. The detriments to our mental health of what Gilbert calls the 'subtle psychic violence' of the desire resulting from exposure to these simulacra are well-documented. Is there any hope for a more reasonable, healthier, more human and reality-based approach to beauty? The facial plastic surgeon Steven Dayan has proposed a model, as reported in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology, called the 'Special Theory of Relativity for Attractiveness.' An editorial published in the Journal of Aesthetic and Clinical Dermatology distills it this way: Dayan suggests that 'the pursuit of physical beauty alone is not enough, that… people also desire to appear genuine and feel confident. In other words, attractiveness is a multidimensional concept comprising beauty, genuineness, and self-esteem, with 'naturalness' being an interpretation of the optimal balance of these factors. It is a reminder that beauty, like time, is a relative concept, shaped by individual perspectives and cultural contexts.' Holy sh*t. What a divine idea! Read more from Valerie Monroe: At 74, I Don't Consider the Words 'Old Lady' Derogatory Mikey Madison Winning Best Actress Over Demi Moore Isn't Ageism Thank You, Bridget Jones, for Still Looking Like Bridget Jones Originally Appeared on Allure

Trader Joe's is Giving This Viral Chocolate Bar Its Own Spin and Shoppers 'Can't Wait' To Try It
Trader Joe's is Giving This Viral Chocolate Bar Its Own Spin and Shoppers 'Can't Wait' To Try It

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Trader Joe's is Giving This Viral Chocolate Bar Its Own Spin and Shoppers 'Can't Wait' To Try It

I'm sure I don't have to tell you, but the Dubai Chocolate Bar is literally everywhere. If you're not familiar, the viral sensation that's been taking the internet and seemingly every grocery store on the planet by storm was first created by FIX Dessert Chocolatier in Dubai. The original bar features a creamy milk chocolate bar filled with luscious pistachio cream, tahini, and knafeh, a type of Middle Eastern shredded filo pastry. It's both rich and chocolatey with a subtle crunch from the toasted knafeh and ripe for viral fame. 😋😋🍳🍔 In this day and age, all it takes is one video to change the entire game, and that's exactly what happened. Now, everywhere you look, there's some version of the Dubai Chocolate Bar—whether it's shed its usual bar shape and found its way onto strawberries or been turned into a delectable Crumbl cookie. You can find recipes for Dubai Chocolate Cheesecake Bars and even tiramisu. Sure, it may not be the OG, but who cares when it all tastes so good?Luckily, if you haven't tried it for yourself just yet, now there may be one more place where you can find the viral sensation—your neighborhood friendly Trader Joe's. That's right, folks. According to the r/TraderJoes Reddit thread, Dubai Style Pistachio Dark Chocolate Bars are heading to a TJ's near you sooner than you think. These delectable-looking chocolate bars swap the usual milk chocolate for rich dark chocolate for a sophisticated twist on the icon of TikTok lore. Fun fact: Dark chocolate is often considered more sustainable than milk chocolate. The more you know! According to the rumor mill, these bars will retail for just $3.99, and naturally, fans couldn't contain their excitement. 'Can't wait to try this!!' exclaimed one person. 'Please tell me this isn't a joke,' said another. It is, in fact, not a joke. Looks like we might have another viral sensation on our hands with this one. View the to see embedded media.

Edmonton Oilers are ‘more familiar' with Stanley Cup Final this year, coach Kris Knoblauch says
Edmonton Oilers are ‘more familiar' with Stanley Cup Final this year, coach Kris Knoblauch says

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Edmonton Oilers are ‘more familiar' with Stanley Cup Final this year, coach Kris Knoblauch says

Edmonton Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch hopes that familiarity breeds a championship. Knoblauch guided Edmonton to a second straight trip to the Stanley Cup Final this spring. The Oilers came up one win short last year, losing to the Florida Panthers in seven games. They'll try to avenge that loss when their rematch with the Panthers begins Wednesday night at Rogers Place. Advertisement The second-year coach feels his team is a lot more comfortable this time around. 'I don't know how much different it is from last year. Maybe just the fact that we're more familiar with it,' Knoblauch said at Media Day on Tuesday. 'We know the routine, we know the opponents. There were a lot of unknowns last year. Now that we've been here, we're just a little more, I don't know if I would say comfortable, but we just know what the routine is. The Oilers lost the first three games last spring, then won the next three before losing 2-1 on the road in Game 7. This season, Edmonton finished third in the Pacific Division during the regular season and dropped its first two games against the Los Angeles Kings in the opening round of the playoffs. But the Oilers are 12-2 since then. Including a five-game blitz of the Dallas Stars in the Western Conference Final. Advertisement Related: Stanley Cup Final preview, predictions for NHL championship between Panthers & Oilers Oilers are 'more familiar' with Stanley Cup Final hoopla, coach says Most of last year's cast is back, but Knoblauch said being more familiar with everything that goes in during the Final will be a big help to his team. 'Do we feel we're a bit stronger, a little more confident? Yeah, maybe,' Knoblauch said. 'But we also know the other team's probably stronger than they were last year, as well, so we're going to have to play our best to give ourselves an opportunity.' Knoblauch said being more accustomed to all the activities that surround the Final should be helpful the second time around. Advertisement 'I think it's just more that we're familiar with what today's like and what the travel is like, and what it's going to be like going back and forth,' he said of the difference in being prepared this year. 'That's about it.' Credit: Walter Tychnowicz-Imagn Images Stan Bowman, who's in his first season as general manager in Edmonton, said he's been impressed with his second-year coach's performance. 'I was watching from afar last year and I was impressed with Kris, just his knowledge of the game and the way he explained things,' said Bowman, the architect of the Chicago Blackhawks' three Stanley Cup-winning teams from 2010-15 who was hired last July as the Oilers' GM and executive vice president of hockey operations. 'Then I got a chance to meet him when I got here, and I was incredibly impressed with his job as coach. Advertisement 'I don't think he gets enough recognition for the way he's managed this group through this season. It's been a challenging year at time with injuries, and Kris has been able to manage the group and keep things on track all year long. I think we see the game the same way. He's a really smart guy, and he always comes up with a game play to prepare our team. I don't think we'd be here this year if it wasn't for the job Kris and his staff has done.' Knoblauch said one big task for the Oilers this time around will be dealing with the Panthers' in-your-face style of play – but feels his players will be more accustomed to Florida's physical play this year. Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images 'We've got our share of players who like that physicality too,' he said. 'I certainly don't think we're shy from that style of play, even last year. I think our team's made up a little bit differently than last year, but probably the best way to counter that (physical style of play) is just moving the puck well. Advertisement 'I think it's important that we're moving the puck quickly but precisely. If you're sloppy with the puck, you're probably chasing the game for most of it. They're a good forechecking team, they finish their checks regularly and we expect to be hit – but we're not a team that shies away from that.' Facing the Vegas Golden Knights in the second round, a series the Oilers won in five games, was a good tune-up for facing the physical Panthers, according to Knoblauch. Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images 'Vegas is a big, strong team that relies on its forecheck,' the coach said. 'They're a little more of a rush team than Florida, but they were good forecheckers. My best way to beat that is good puck movers. There's one thing in having a defenseman to be able to just get (the puck) out of the zone, but if we're continually just getting it out of the zone, we're giving the puck back and then we have to defend. Advertisement 'Our strength is (Connor) McDavid, Leon (Draisaitl) – our identity is being a good puck-moving team.' Related Headlines

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store