Forget the Blizzards. Forget the mix-ins. Forget the upside-down cup trick.
If you want the perfect bite of ice cream in Toronto, it doesn’t come from some corporate test kitchen. It comes from a tiny stand that’s been doing things the same way since 1958.
Here’s how you do it
Order three things from Tom’s Dairy Freeze: a container of their homemade hot fudge, a container of their chopped peanuts and a container of their vanilla soft-serve. If you’re feeling adventurous, upgrade to the Skor soft-serve.
Tom’s soft serve is different. It’s the kind of premium soft serve your parents probably enjoyed — still made the old-fashioned way in high-quality machines using rich, high-butterfat milk, not some chemical goo pretending to be dairy.
When you get your fudge, chopped nuts and a container of soft ice cream, don’t mix everything together.
First, take a spoonful of ice cream, then dip the bottom of the spoon into the hot fudge. Now comes the important part: rookies sprinkle the peanuts on top, but veterans know better. The peanuts need to stick to the fudge.
Take that fudge-coated spoon and plunge it into the chopped peanuts until they’re embedded, then take the bite. The peanuts and the fudge need to be close together, not separated by ice cream.

That’s it.
Cold, creamy ice cream. Warm chocolate fudge. A salty crunch from the peanuts. These simple ingredients combine into something better than any over-engineered concoction a modern chain can dream up.
One bite and you’re transported back to 1958, when Tom’s first opened. Another bite and you’re reminded why generations of Torontonians still line up today.
Tom’s remains one of the last places in the city still making soft ice cream the old-fashioned way, using high-butterfat dairy and recipes that haven’t been focus-grouped into oblivion. The closest competitor might be La Diperie, but even that’s not particularly close.
The magic of Tom’s isn’t nostalgia; it’s that the product is actually that good.
In an era when every chain is trying to invent the next outrageous flavour combination, Tom’s proves that vanilla ice cream, hot fudge, and chopped peanuts can still kick the living daylights out of anything fast food has to offer — even if their spoon can defy gravity, they can’t defy how good Tom’s is.
Bite Size Verdict: A perfect bite. A Toronto classic. A time machine disguised as dessert.












