
I tried UK's wackiest ice cream flavours from pickled onion to Bisto – the crazy £4.50 winner surprised me
How does Sriracha ice cream sound?
I SCREAM! I tried UK's wackiest ice cream flavours from pickled onion to Bisto – the crazy £4.50 winner surprised me
WHATEVER will Mr Whippy say? To compete, he may need to stick more than a 99 Flake in his cone.
An ice-cream parlour in posh Knightsbridge, Central London has come up with some very crazy flavours, ranging from, er, Twiglets, to Bisto and Irn-Bru.
11
Alexander McLeod has tested some of the craziest ice cream flavours
Credit: Ian Whittaker
Summer pop-up The Ice Cream Project is the idea of eccentric fashion designer Anya Hindmarch, as Waitrose recently revealed Gen Z enjoy a twist of baked beans, soya sauce or cheese in their tubs.
She bills her ices, at £4.50 a scoop, as 'a celebration of Britain's kitchen cupboard culture'.
But do we likey-lick?
Alexander McLeod, right, tries Anya's ice creams and gives his verdicts and marks out of ten . . .
read more on TASTE TESTS
CRUSH IT I tested budget slushie makers vs £350 Ninja – and a £10 dupe works just as well
Jacob's Twiglets
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The Jacob's Twiglets ice cream has a Marmite tang
Credit: Peter Jordan
MALTY, yeasty and spiked with a Marmite tang.
It's also smooth, which feels strange given how much your brain expects crunch.
Oddly, I quite liked it.
Rating: 7/10
Punters divided over Scots takeaways loaded ice cream fries
Quaker Oats
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The Quaker Oats offering tasted bland
Credit: Peter Jordan
SWEET, toasted oat flavour was bland and packed all the joy of a cold bowl of porridge.
This ice cream has a velvety vanilla base but is a little coarse.
Rating: 5/10
Filippo Berio Extra Virgin Olive Oil
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The extra virgin olive oil version was Alexander's favourite
Credit: Peter Jordan
CREAMY base has fruity richness of quality olive oil.
Gentle peppery taste lingers to keep you interested.
Smooth and balanced.
Rating: 8/10
Bisto Gravy
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The Bisto ice cream nearly works as a treat
Credit: Peter Jordan
SUBTLE gravy flavour brings roast-dinner warmth but frozen into a silky, scoopable form that nearly works.
Shows even Bisto can be made posh.
Rating: 6/10
Romney's Kendal Mint Cake
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The Romney's Kendal Mint Cake version captures its mint sweetness
Credit: Peter Jordan
AS snow-white as the original slab, this captures that sharp mint sweetness.
Refreshing palate- cleanser.
Rating: 7/10
Flying Goose Sriracha
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The Sriracha flavour is bold and strange but not entirely unlikeable
Credit: Peter Jordan
IT'S Sriracha from the first icy hit – tangy, garlicky, with a slow-building heat that creeps up on you.
Bold and strange but not entirely unlikeable.
Rating: 6/10
Garner's Pickled Onion
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The Garner's Pickled Onion flavour tastes more like a dare than dessert
Credit: Peter Jordan
NORMALLY, when you smell a dish from across the room, it's a good sign. Not here.
Vinegary, briny punch feels more like a dare than dessert.
Rating: 2/10
Ovaltine
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The Ovaltine ice cream is really quite nice
Credit: Peter Jordan
MALTED warmth comforts like a favourite jumper.
Balances the sweetness and slight earthiness well, and is really quite nice.
Rating: 7/10
Irn-Bru
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The Irn-Bru flavour looks and tastes just like the drink
Credit: Peter Jordan
BRIGHT orange and proudly so, this sorbet looks and tastes just like the drink.
Fizzy on the tongue, and very sweet. Perfect for a hot summer day.
Rating: 6/10
McVitie Club Orange
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The Club Orange version includes crushed-biscuit pieces for a nice crunch
Credit: Peter Jordan
NOSTALGIC mix of milk chocolate and zesty orange.
The crushed-biscuit pieces provide enjoyable texture and crunch.
Rating: 8/10
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Daily Record
a day ago
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River Island's 'stunning' £50 bag 'matcha girlies' need 'immediately'
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Daily Mirror
a day ago
- Daily Mirror
River Island's 'stunning' handbag is 'the epitome of girlhood'
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Scottish Sun
2 days ago
- Scottish Sun
Our neighbours have painted their posh homes black to deter influencers taking pics – but we've taken different approach
TOK OFF! Our neighbours have painted their posh homes black to deter influencers taking pics – but we've taken different approach Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) RESIDENTS of a world famous London neighbourhood have painted their homes black to put off idiot influencers - but others are resorting to more drastic measures. Locals living in swanky, colourful homes in and around Hillgate Village, Notting Hill, say TikTokers and tourists are ruining their lives. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 11 Homeowners have begun painting their homes black to put off infleuncers Credit: Alamy 11 Annoying content creators posing outside the famous Bankrobber house Credit: Peter Jordan 11 Homeowner Diane has gone to desperate measures to put off unwanted visitors Credit: Douglas Simpson A small collection of former slum houses, the neighbourhood is now home to the wealthy, with property prices in the millions. It was made famous worldwide by the 1999 film Notting Hill starring Hugh Grant, with the area's bright and pastel-coloured homes continually being swamped with TikTokers doing impromptu photo shoots and dance videos for years. Residents have told how "vain" influencers sit on their steps, peer in their windows and litter on the street. Now, several homeowners in Hillgate Village and the surrounding area have taken drastic measures to curb the "irritating" visitors. Some are dumping rubbish outside, while others are putting up chains, while one plans to chuck a bucket of water over any unwanted tourists. Diane, who lives in a pastel blue house on Hillgate Place, told The Sun that she "doesn't clean the front" of her house and leaves piles of rubbish dumped outside. She hopes to make her home a less attractive backdrop for photo shoots and has employed the unusual tactic to help maintain her privacy. Diane is also deliberately neglecting to repaint her house. She said: "My privacy is interrupted, these houses go for a lot of money and sometimes it gets to the point that it's not even worth it." Residents on nearby Lancaster Road have taken to repainting their houses black or dark blue to contrast to the pastel colours. Restaurant loved by celebs and royals has to close after it's infested with rats Some residents spoke of taking more extreme measures, Patricia Smith, who lives on Hillgate Place said the issue has "got worse and worse year by year". She added that she "wishes she had a bucket of water to pour over them [the influencers]." Residents have put up privacy signs, CCTV, chains and ropes at their front doors in a desperate bid to discourage the hoards of influencers. Despite the locals' best efforts, "hundreds" of influencers still show up to snap pics in front of their homes. Residents told of TikTokers lugging around tripods, changing tents and professional cameras to be used in extended photo shoots outside their front doors. They also use garden fences as clothes racks and leave their possessions on residents cars, and several locals have had to shoo them away. One resident, who asked not to be named, said: "In the last few years it's gotten really out of hand, people are quite rude actually. 'They just leave rubbish all over. 'You can hardly move sometimes. I think it's a shame because there's nobody famous living here. 11 Diane leaves rubbish outside her home, and has stopped cleaning it Credit: Douglas Simpson 11 Michael Freeman said residents have had to put up with the issue for years Credit: Douglas Simpson 11 The brightly coloured, pastel homes attract hundreds of visitors Credit: Alamy "If you ask someone 'why are you taking a picture' they look at you blankly like you're mad." The resident went on to say the neighbourhood has become an "influencers paradise" with other locals calling it a "pain in the arse". Brent, who lives on Callcott Street, said: "I often have to tell them to get off the steps because they don't realise the difference between the pavement and the steps. "It's incessant, its irritating. When people just come up and think it's a nice background because the doors purple and take a photo I resent it." Locals are subject to dozens of visitors a day with hundreds coming during the holidays, weekends and when the weather is nice. My privacy is interrupted, these houses go for a lot of money and sometimes it gets to the point that it's not even worth it Diane They tell horror stories of influencers propping phones against their doors and dancing in front of their windows, completely disregarding residents' privacy. Michael Freeman, a photographer who lives on Callcott street, said: 'We've been here for years, it wasn't meant to be a tourist attraction. "When we moved in, a lot of the houses had regular brick finishes. "We went to some trouble to paint it, in the process of gentrification neighbours started to do it. 'It's only in the last few years because of social media that it's become a tourist attraction for heavens sake." Why are the homes in Hillgate Village pastel coloured? The brick and stucco homes have only become pastel coloured after WW2 as the area has become increasingly affluent. Kensington & Chelsea council has since designated Hillgate Village a 'character area'. There remains some homes in the village which have the original brickwork exposed. The area was once described as a "slum" and the homes were lived in by brick makers, blacksmiths, and coach drivers. Hillgate was nicknamed 'The Racks' and had a rough reputation for a century, until the area become popular in the post-war period. He continued: 'At some point, clearly it became promoted on foreign sites. "Of course it's an invasion of privacy, particularly at a weekend it's full of people walking around taking pictures. It's a bit silly." Michael went on to call Hillgate Village a 'TikTok village' and said tourists flocked to the coloured houses mistaking them for movie locations. Referencing the romcom Notting Hill, also starring Julia Roberts, which features a home with a blue door, he said: 'It's frustrating. Any blue door would do, you find people photographing opposite the wrong blue door. 'It's to do with social media. It's now been taken over by tourists, this street in particular. "It is a bit annoying when people start climbing on steps. Yesterday I had to go out, some girls put their stuff on the hood of my car. A few times I've had to shoo people off. 'It's obviously popular because they're clean, bright colourful backgrounds. 'Some [influencers] are thoughtless in a way, a couple of girls a few weeks ago were sitting on my neighbours steps having lunch and left their rubbish there.' 11 Hugh Grant and Julia Roberts star in the 1999 film Notting Hill 11 Residents in Notting HIll famously have colourful houses Credit: Alamy 11 A quiet zone sign on a black fence indicating private property and no trespassing Credit: Alamy The famous blue door which features in the movie, is in fact a mile away from Hillgate Village. Homes all across Notting Hill are painted in bright or pastel colours and have been used in several films and TV series, the nearby Portobello Market also attracts thousands of tourists a year. While The Sun was there this week an Italian tourist, who was visiting London for one day, arrived to take photos. Beadrice, ignoring the other attractions London has to offer, said that despite only having a day in the Big Smoke she was desperate to use her time visiting the colourful Notting Hill streets. Beadrice said: 'We are here just for one day, we're doing a super fast trip. I think that this district is famous for the film. I think that this is one of the most characteristic districts of London. "We're not taking photos for Instagram. We take photos for memories.' Despite being drawn by the film Notting Hill, Beadrice and her friends were far from any location used in the making of the Richard Curtis-directed comedy movie in which a US film star falls in love with a shy Brit bookshop owner. Patricia Smith who lives on Hillgate Place, said: "They're here the whole time, especially on Saturdays, it's a joke, they're very funny, very vain. "It's very intrusive - they sit on your steps and don't even get out the way. The behaviour is really extraordinary. 'They're not interested in your privacy they're interested in their own self importance. It's a bit sad if that's their main ambition in life. 'It tells more about them than it does about us, the vanity, I've seen people prop their phones on doorknobs and then dance, they come with little tents and change clothes and everything. 'It is irritating, sometimes I wish I had a bucket of water to pour over them. It's not a massive problem but it is an irritation because they don't respect your privacy. "They actually assume it's okay whereas it's actually not, these are our properties. It's just got worse and worse and worse year by year." 'There's nothing you can do it about it' Diane, who deliberately leaves the front of her house uncleaned and unpainted, added: 'It's very nice that people like our houses enough to want to photograph them. "But you get people who are influencers and they bring lots of gear with them, cameras, tripods, it's really annoying because they're talking outside and there's nothing you can do about it. "They sometimes do photo shoots, professional ones are fine, they're well organised and they don't upset anybody. "It's quite annoying when they don't ask the council for permission, it's disruptive. I don't want people to take photographs of my home. "I don't clean the front because I don't want people taking photographs. "If the weather is nice there's a lot of people. They come and sit on the steps which is private, I would tell them to move but some people don't feel they can. They hang their clothes on the railings, I have to tell them to move it. 'My privacy is interrupted, these houses go for a lot of money. Sometimes it gets point that it's not even worth it.' On nearby streets residents have taken to leaving out donation tins as a way of asking for compensation for the influencers intrusions. Andrew, who lives on Westbourne Park Road, just round the corner from the famous blue door, said his neighbours have taken to putting up ropes and chains to stop entitled influencers sitting on their front steps. He said: "They are oblivious to you completely. You just have to walk past them if they are in the middle of their photograph." Is your street overrun with annoying influencers and tourists? Email 11 Piles of rubbish are often left behind Credit: Peter Jordan