If you’ve been buying favorite day ice cream and sticking to the same familiar scoop, you’re missing out on how much better it can get with one smart pairing. In the first few spoonfuls, most people aren’t craving “more sugar.” They’re craving contrast: a little salt to sharpen sweetness, a bright fruit note to cut richness, or a crunch that makes each bite feel fresh again. That’s why even the simplest base flavor can taste like a premium dessert when you build it intentionally.
Favorite Day is Target’s owned brand with a rotating assortment of ice creams and frozen treats, and its strength is variety: there are enough classic profiles and mix-in styles to create combinations that feel like scoop-shop specials without the scoop-shop price. You can browse the current Favorite Day ice cream lineup on Target’s site to match these ideas to what’s in stock near you.
Why surprising ice cream combos work
Great pairings rely on balance more than novelty. Creamy dairy carries aroma and richness, but without a counterpoint it can taste heavy or one-note. A tiny amount of salt makes sweetness taste clearer and more “buttery.” A bright ingredient like citrus or berries gives the palate a reset. A bitter note from coffee or cocoa can deepen chocolate and caramel flavors. Texture matters too, because crunchy elements break up the soft cold scoop and keep it from feeling monotonous.
Ice cream also remains a mainstream grocery staple, which is why simple “base flavors” are so common in home freezers and why remixing them with pantry add-ins is such a practical upgrade. USDA ERS tracking shows frozen dairy products remain a significant category in American consumption patterns over time.
Favorite Day ice cream flavor combos you probably haven’t tried
These combinations are designed so you can replicate them with minimal effort. If your exact Favorite Day flavor isn’t available, you can swap with a similar profile. Think in families: vanilla-based, chocolate-based, cookie-heavy, minty, or fruit-forward.
Vanilla Bean with olive oil and flaky salt
This one tastes like a restaurant dessert because it’s built like a chef’s trick. A small drizzle of fruity olive oil adds depth and a faint peppery finish that makes vanilla taste richer rather than greasier. Flaky salt sharpens the sweetness and keeps the scoop from tasting flat. Let the ice cream soften for a couple minutes, drizzle the oil lightly, and finish with a pinch of salt.
Cookies and cream with tahini and honey
Tahini adds a nutty, toasted backbone that pairs surprisingly well with cocoa cookie bits. Honey smooths the edges and ties the flavors together. The key is restraint: start with a small spoonful of tahini, then add a thin honey drizzle. If you like it, you can scale up on the next scoop.
Chocolate-based flavors with a tiny pinch of chili and roasted peanuts
Chocolate loves heat. A small pinch of cayenne or a tiny dab of chili crisp creates a slow, warm finish that feels sophisticated rather than spicy. Peanuts add crunch and a familiar “candy bar” vibe. Keep the heat minimal so it reads as warmth and aroma, not burn.
Mint chocolate chip with crushed freeze-dried strawberries
Mint can sometimes feel sharp or overly clean. Freeze-dried strawberries bring tart fruit aroma and crunch without watering down the bowl. The result tastes bright, cool, and layered, like a specialty scoop you’d pay extra for.
Banana-pudding style ice cream with espresso and cocoa nibs
This is an affogato-style upgrade that turns nostalgia into “dessert coffee.” Espresso adds bitter depth and aroma that makes banana taste more complex. Cocoa nibs add a crisp, slightly bitter crunch. If you don’t have espresso, strong cold brew concentrate works too.
Orange-cream style ice cream with toasted coconut
Orange and vanilla already scream creamsicle. Toasted coconut adds warmth and a subtle chew that makes it feel tropical and elevated. Toast the coconut quickly in a dry pan until fragrant, cool it, then sprinkle right before serving so it stays crisp.
Cookie-butter style ice cream with pear and ginger snap crumble
Cookie butter profiles are spiced and caramelized, so they pair naturally with gentle fruits like pear. Ginger snaps reinforce the spice and add crunch. The combination tastes like a fall dessert without baking anything.
Vanilla with lemon curd and shortbread crumble
This gives cheesecake energy without the density. Lemon curd brings tang and brightness, while shortbread adds buttery crumble and structure. Place a spoonful of lemon curd at the bottom of the bowl, add the scoop, then finish with a little more curd and crushed shortbread.
Cookies and cream with raspberries and balsamic glaze
This is a “dinner party” combo that tastes fancy but is effortless. Raspberries bring acidity and perfume. Balsamic glaze adds sweet tang that deepens chocolate notes. If you don’t have glaze, a small amount of good balsamic reduced gently works, or you can use a thick berry jam plus a squeeze of lemon for a similar effect.
How to build your own favorite day ice cream combo without guessing
Start by choosing a base that matches your mood. Vanilla and chocolate are the easiest foundations because they accept almost any contrast. Cookies-and-cream and cookie-butter styles already have bitterness and spice built in, so they shine with fruity brightness or nutty depth. Mint and fruit-forward flavors tend to benefit from crunchy texture and a mild sweet drizzle.
Then add one strong contrast. Salt, citrus, coffee, and gentle heat are the most reliable because they change the perception of sweetness and richness. After that, add one texture element, because crunch makes the bowl feel “new” even when the flavor base is familiar. Finally, use a sauce sparingly, because too much liquid can freeze into hard patches and make the scoop feel icy.
Featured snippet FAQ about Favorite Day ice cream
What is Favorite Day ice cream?
Favorite Day is Target’s owned brand that includes snacks, desserts, and frozen treats, including ice creams and novelties sold in Target stores and online.
What are the best flavor combos for favorite day ice cream?
The best combos balance richness with contrast. Vanilla with olive oil and flaky salt tastes like a scoop shop. Cookies and cream with tahini and honey tastes nutty and deep. Banana-pudding style with espresso and cocoa nibs tastes like a dessert coffee. Mint chocolate chip with freeze-dried strawberries tastes bright and layered.
How do I make store-bought ice cream taste better fast?
Let it soften for two to four minutes, add one contrasting element like salt or citrus, add one crunchy texture, and keep sauces light so the bowl stays creamy instead of icy.
Why does my ice cream get icy?
Icy texture often comes from temperature swings or adding watery toppings that freeze into hard crystals. Using thicker add-ins like curd, jam, nut butter, or freeze-dried fruit helps preserve a creamy mouthfeel.
Conclusion: Upgrade your favorite day ice cream with one smart contrast
Favorite day ice cream doesn’t need a complicated recipe to feel special. When you pair a familiar scoop with one bold contrast and one satisfying crunch, you get a dessert that tastes intentional, modern, and scoop-shop worthy. Start with vanilla plus olive oil and flaky salt, or try cookies and cream with tahini and honey, and you’ll immediately understand why these combinations work. Then use the same approach to remix whatever Favorite Day flavor you have in the freezer tonight.
