
I tried ice creams & lollies with boozy twist… the best was a £1.70 spritz on a stick but top brand was a frozen flop
Laura Stott
Published: Invalid Date,
WHAT could be better than a refreshing ice lolly on a hot summer's day?
How about one with an added measure of your favourite booze?
Supermarket Aldi has just introduced a range of 'hard' desserts in the form of vodka and rum-laced cocktail-flavour sorbet pots.
And if that's not enough to make you feel merry in the freezer aisle, the good news is that they aren't the only alcoholic afters available.
From feisty, funky ice pops to sloshed sorbets, here Laura Stott tastes and rates a range of adult-only frozen puds.
Carte D'Or Rum & Raisin 825ml, £4.50, Morrisons 0.18% rum - 1/5
LIKE a hint of alcohol but not too much of the real thing?
This ice cream, which contains only the tiniest amount of rum, might hit the perfect frozen spot for you.
There are a few rum-flavoured components, including the chocolate sauce and the raisins themselves, but the tipple taste is barely detectable.
The ice cream itself was okay, but for this high price I think it could and should be a lot better – it was more of a 'whippy'-style vanilla with a light, aerated texture, and no taste or sight of the black flecks of the real bean.
It also melted quickly as it's very thin.
The chocolate sauce was poor quality and the cake pieces scattered over the top were dry and tasteless.
You'd be better having a scoop of a decent vanilla and pouring a shot of your preferred rum over the top.
Shuda Passion Fruit Martini Flavour Alcoholic Sorbet 250ml, £1, Iceland, 4% vodka - 3/5
PORNSTAR martini fans will be licking their lips at the prospect of slurping these boozy, slushy cocktails that are delivered in a frozen pouch.
The pre-mixed sachets come as a liquid and you have to freeze them for a few hours, then cut them open and squeeze gently to enjoy a slushy sorbet-style vodka-laced fruity glugger.
Sitting somewhere in the middle of a sorbet and a boozy, iced punch, it feels more like you're sipping a drink than eating a dessert but is no less enjoyable as a result.
It has a nice fruity flavour but I did find them rather sweet and quite messy.
They also seemed to melt rather quickly.
I think they'd be best squeezed out into a bowl and slurped up that way – with an extra shot of booze added should you fancy one.
Tipsies Cocktail Pops 12 x 70ml, £19.99, amazon.co.uk 5% rum, vodka and others - 3/5
IF you loved ice pops as a kid then these are the intoxicating adult equivalent.
The alcohol-laced 5% abv freezer pops aren't called Tipsies for nothing.
Each box of 12 contains a cocktail menu selection including mojito, passion fruit martini and pina colada, so you can pick your tipple and enjoy in frozen form.
Details of the exact percentage of spirits included in each squiffy suck aren't given but all come in at 5% abv and are made with the real spirit the drink equivalent is based on.
My favourite was the zesty and refreshing mojito flavour, which had a real kick of rum and vanished far too fast!
Jude's Rum & Raisin Ice Cream 460ml, £5, Sainsburys, or £3, ocado.com 4% rum - 5/5
YO ho ho and a bottle of . . . ice cream?
If you want to round off your meal with a scoop or two of something that will make you feel merry then this is definitely the ice cream to opt for.
Containing 4% rum, this pirate-friendly pud offered the second most generous measures of neat booze of all the drunken desserts I tried, and it's not subtle either – you really can taste and smell the spirit in every spoonful of this potent frozen pud.
Booze aside, this is also a wonderful tasting tub.
Made with fresh cream there's a melt-in-the-mouth richness that certainly tastes a cut above, and that's before you savour the masses of juicy raisins and yet more rum and raisin sauce.
Watch out if you scoff the lot as you might be unable to walk straight afterwards.
Baileys Ice Cream 825ml, £4.50, most supermarkets 0.21% Baileys - 2/5
BAILEYS fans will be in pudding paradise with this ice cream laced with the Irish cream liqueur.
The idea of turning the famous tipple into a dessert makes a lot of sense as the sweet, rich and creamy choc and vanilla-flavoured glug – served in a glass with lots of ice – is already as good as a pud for many sippers.
Freezing it and putting it in a tub to eat with a spoon seems a logical next step.
Flavour-wise the results are mixed, however.
What you end up with is essentially Baileys vanilla ice cream, decorated with dark choc flakes on top and throughout.
The main component giving you the liqueur flavour is the 22 per cent caramel sauce, and there is an awful lot of this gloopy mix – which is great if you enjoy the toffee taste.
I personally found it rather sickly, but in fairness it is precisely what a lot of Baileys fans will want.
Gianni's Cocktail Mini Pots 4 x 110ml, £2.99, Aldi 1% vodka or rum - 3/5
DON'T be fooled by the innocent appearance of these frozen cocktail pots from Aldi.
They are small but the 1% booze in each tiny tub means they pack a pretty powerful punch.
Each box contains two different flavours of frozen drinks – passion fruit martini and mojito.
The former contains a shot of 1% vodka and the latter 1% rum, making them a refreshing option for a warm day that will also give you a bit of a buzz.
Tipsy qualities aside these mini-tipple treats are also rather tasty.
My favourite was the smooth, mellow passion fruit flavour which slipped down a treat.
Scoff too many of these and you might start to feel a bit squiffy.
Remeo Malfy Spritz Sorbetto Lolly 3 x 70ml, £5, ocado.com 5% Prosecco, 2% gin - 5/5
IF your idea of bliss is glugging an Aperol spritz or a similar bitters-themed boozy refresher in the sunshine then this aperitif on a stick should be a must in your freezer this summer.
The lolly equivalent of sipping something sharp and refreshing while nibbling on some olives, this sophisticated abv sucker is classy, grown-up and really rather chic.
For such a simple little eat with minimal ingredients, the flavours are fabulous, concentrated and extremely potent.
It's made with 45 per cent blood orange along with a whopping 5% Italian sparkling wine and an added 2% orange flavour gin on top.
If you love the drink you can't go wrong.
Considering how much booze you get, they are great value too.
Tiramisu Gelato 380g, £4.50, Sainsburys 0.5% Marsala Wine - 4/5
WITH thick coffee sauce, mascarpone ice cream, a thick cocoa dusting and a strong waft of sweet wine, merely looking at this gorgeous gelato for grown-ups was enough to make my mouth water.
If you thought tiramisu – the classic Italian pud made with sponge, chocolate, coffee, soft cheese cream and Marsala wine – couldn't be beaten then you haven't tried it as an ice cream yet.
This drool-worthy tub doesn't just look incredible.
When you get your spoon into it, the flavours are just as good too.
The gelato is smooth and creamy, the thick layer of chocolate powder on top isn't too sweet and there's just enough kick from the 0.5% marsala wine.
Shame you don't get much in the container.

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BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
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Daily Mail
27 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
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Dani went onto strike up a romance with Jarrod a short time later, and the couple tied the knot just a couple of months ago in a Bridgerton-themed wedding. They share share two children together, Summer and Star, while Danny also has Santiago with Sammy. Made in Chelsea star Victoria Baker-Harber met art dealer Inigo Philbrick in 2016 on a friend's yacht in the Mediterranean when he was still with his ex-girlfriend, and they embarked on a romance. Born in East London, where his artistic parents were living in an abandoned warehouse, Inigo grew up in Manhattan and Connecticut, and in 2005 followed in his father's footsteps by studying art curation at Goldsmiths, University of London. In 2010, he was taken on as an intern at the prestigious White Cube gallery in London. Gallery founder Jay Jopling — later one of Inigo's victims — was impressed by the bright, sophisticated young man. In 2013, with Jopling's financial assistance, Inigo opened his own gallery and consultancy in London's Mayfair, specialising in post-war and contemporary art. A second Inigo Philbrick gallery opened in Miami in 2018. While some clients were wealthy collectors, wanting art to hang on the walls of their homes, he increasingly focused on those known in the art world as 'specullectors', who purchase artworks, or a percentage of them, as an investment. Inigo would then help these investors re-sell the artworks at a higher price, taking a share of the profits. As is the norm in this line of dealing, the artworks themselves remained in secure storage facilities — meaning clients were completely in the dark when Inigo began selling works to several parties, or over-selling shares in paintings that investors never actually set eyes on. The piece that brought down his house-of-cards existence was a 2012 painting of Pablo Picasso by Rudolf Stingel, a photo-realist painter from northern Italy. In 2015, Inigo signed a deal with financial services provider Fine Art Partners (FAP) to sell it to them for £5.8 million as part of an agreement to re-sell the work together at Christie's for a supposedly guaranteed price of £7.5 million. Such guarantees are a marketing strategy used by major auction houses to lure valuable artworks away from competitors. Yet he went on to sell the same work twice again — including to an investment firm, Guzzini Properties, for $6 million (£4.9 million). However, disastrously for Inigo, when the painting was finally auctioned in March 2019, it realised only £5.3 million. When FAP got in touch with Christie's, the auction house told them that not only had they never signed a guarantee, but the painting had not even been brought to auction by Inigo. FAP launched a lawsuit in Florida civil court in October 2019, with other clients launching their own legal actions in the U.S. and the UK, where Inigo's assets were frozen by a judge. But by the time it came for the dealer to appear in court, he had closed his gallery, disconnected his phones and disappeared. He went on the run for six months, with pregnant Victoria by his side, before the FBI tracked him down to Vanuatu in the South Pacific. When he was sentenced seven years behind bars in May 2022, for masterminding the £80 million art swindle, Victoria vowed to stand by him throughout his prison sentence, calling Inigo the 'love of her life' and insisting, 'There's no way I was going to get up and let him go through whatever s*** was going to come his way on his own.' As soon as he was released in 2014, the couple swiftly married and Victoria recently announced she is expecting their second child. Demi Jones After shooting to fame on series six of Love Island, Demi, 26, struck up a romance with music producer Miami. But a few months later he was thrown behind bars for an unknown crime, serving 26 months in jail before being released last year. 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Chelsee and Eddie share their baby daughter Cookie together, whom they welcomed in December in 2023.


Daily Mail
27 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Samantha Womack reveals quitting EastEnders WASN'T her choice as she admits she was 'REJECTED' by BBC bosses
Samantha Womack has opened about leaving EastEnders, revealing she was forced out of the show after being 'rejected' by its directors. The actress, 52, became a fan favourite as the fiery Ronnie Mitchell on the BBC soap opera, having bagged the part in 2007. But after a decade in Walford, Samantha's time on the show came to an abrupt and brutal end in 2017 as Ronnie and her sister Roxy (Rita Simons) were killed off together on Christmas Day. The move was a widely unpopular one, with some EastEnders die-hard fans even choosing to boycott the prime-time soap over the death of the much-loved Mitchell sisters. Now, Samantha has opened up on her EastEnders exit in an interview with MailOnline, revealing she still 'doesn't understand' why her and Rita's characters were killed off. The much-loved siblings were brutally killed off on Christmas Day in 2017 after an accident in a swimming pool (pictured) - Samantha still 'doesn't understand' why fan-favourites Ronnie and Roxy were killed off by BBC producers The mother-of-two said: 'It was really hard for us because it wasn't in our hands. 'We didn't make the decision to go. I don't really understand what happened, one producer was leaving and another was coming in, I don't know what went on. 'At the time it felt like bereavement, it felt like losing a family member. It was like losing family and losing stability. 'But the thing that was the most painful - and it really was painful - was that me and Rita loved feeling like we belonged there, and then to be rejected, and I know that's emotional but that's what it was, it hit us both so hard. 'I do look back now and think, "God, I could still be there", I would never have moved to Valencia, I would never have done half the things I've done. I was like getting a barnacle off a rock, I probably needed to be forced off at that time.' Since leaving EastEnders, Samantha - who shot to fame on EuroVision aged 18 - has made her way into the world of theatre, appearing in a West End production of The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe in 2022. But it was during her time playing the White Witch that she was diagnosed with an 'aggressive' form of breast cancer. 'I didn't have any lumps or feel ill,' she said, 'I've never been a doctor person so in the middle of two shows I went for a check-up not expecting to find anything. 'So I went for the ultrasound and there was a little screen on the wall in the doctors' room, looking at it afterwards we saw this little black shadow that wasn't a circle. My step-dad is doctor and I knew that most things natural are circular. Everyone just went quiet. 'In my brain, I did think, "there you are". I do feel like somewhere in our brains, our intuition is important. I've learnt to listen to that voice in my head as it basically saved my life.' Samantha was back in the theatre just hours after her scan, and recalls giving a hectic performance on-stage as the reality of the situation sunk in. 'I hadn't thought the whole thing through, I think we all knew that it was cancer but it hadn't been confirmed yet,' she said. 'I didn't have any time to think about going back to the theatre to do a second show. I was playing the White Witch, and the play's all about life and death and how close those two things are. 'For my entrance, I was lifted into the sky on this machine and all of this snow is coming down, there's cello music playing. I just remember having this moment of floating in all this snow, looking out into all this black space - I couldn't process what was happening. 'It was sinking in on-stage in front of everybody. I was mad that evening, I was doing all kinds of crazy things. In a way I was letting go of everything.' Samantha was later diagnosed with a high grade three form of breast cancer and required chemotherapy in order to recover. The EastEnders star - who was diagnosed in her late 40s - called the treatment 'terrifying' and remembers the 'awful' smell of chemotherapy on her skin, but went on to announce she was cancer-free five months later. Three years on from her recovery and the actress is now working with GenesisCare on their Keep Abreast of your Breast Density campaign to educate women about breast cancer diagnosis. In particular, they're encouraging women to ask vital questions during mammograms about issues such as their breast density. Women with extremely dense breasts are shockingly six times more likely than those with fatty breasts to get breast cancer. 'Cancer-free's a weird term,' Samantha said, 'we all have cancer in our cells all the time, so there's always a chance it can come back. 'To get a proper diagnosis you need proper information. There are four types of breast density, A, B C and D, but if you're extremely dense it's really difficult to spot a tumour. 'There are options though, if there's anything bothering you at any time, you can instigate these investigations on your own. GenesisCare are empowering women to ask the right questions, and they will tell you what your breast density is. 'Early diagnosis is the difference between cancer sounding like a death sentence and like something you can work through.' Samantha says that she's now feeling 'better, calmer and happier' than ever as she enjoys life at her home in Valencia, Spain. She's more picky and 'willing to say no' to opportunities now, but didn't close the door on a possible return to soap television in the UK. 'The fanbase for Ronnie and Roxy is extraordinary,' the actress said. 'They still to this day go loopy when they hear there's any sort of chance we could come back. 'I don't know (how we could come back), the only way is that they could possibly say that we didn't actually die. I don't know. 'It's a big commitment, I know only too well what those working days are like. But I have a strong affection for the show, I love everyone there and I miss everyone there. 'I loved working with Rita, it felt silly, it felt fun, we were controversial, we were naughty.