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Fans are going bananas for soft serve fruit

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Soft serve fruit “makes so much sense,” she said. “It’s an almost guilt-free treat and you actually feel good about giving it to your kids and you feel good about giving it to yourself.”

For Chloe Epstein, a partner in the Soft Serve Fruit Co., the love of soft serve fruit began with bananas. Expecting for the second time (twins, as it turned out), she craved something sweet, but she wanted it to be healthy, too. Up to then her career had been in law, but she was always looking for innovative ways to create healthy alternatives to favorite indulgences so she decided to try to come up with her own solution.

“We started to experiment with frozen, old, over-ripened bananas in a blender, juicer and Cuisinart and learned, like many who play in the kitchen, that there was a way to create something like the creamy frozen consistency we craved without all the other ‘stuff,’ ” she said. The first few efforts encouraged them to incorporate soft serve machines and learn the steps needed to guarantee consistency and taste.

The big challenge was sticking to the goal of keeping the product simple – minimal ingredients – wholesome and nutritionally sound. After a lot of trial and error, they found fruit, filtered water and a touch of organic cane sugar – to keep the machine from “hard-freezing” the mix, not for taste – did the trick. After perfecting bananas, they moved on to mango and apple, working with a food professional to get things right.

Today, Epstein, her husband Jason, and business partner Michael Sloan run the company (soon to be renamed Chloe’s Soft Serve Fruit Co.) together. They have two stores, one on the Upper East Side and one in Union Square, as well as a seasonal store in Watermill, Long Island, and are carried in several cafes in the region. They’re also considering opening a branch “somewhere warm,” such as Miami, Atlanta or Los Angeles, and have plans to grow their wholesale business for outlets such as schools and universities.

Epstein expects interest in soft serve fruit to grow along with the general emphasis on eating healthier and more wholesome and natural foods. As for the at-home devices, Epstein says her product has been developed to have a creamier, more frozen yogurt-like texture “that we feel is unique. Nonetheless, eating a frozen banana in a home machine or a blender is a fun way to eat fruit and maintain a healthy diet, always a priority for us!”

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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