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  • Scooped up across 38 countries

  • and up to 75 flavors,

  • Ben & Jerry's is no pint-sized operation.

  • Its two Vermont factories run 24/7,

  • operated by hundreds of flavor makers.

  • Together, they pump out nearly a million pints a day,

  • from classic flavors like Cherry Garcia and Half Baked

  • to flavors on a mission for criminal-justice reform

  • and refugee rights.

  • And all those flavors have to be delicious.

  • Sarah Fidler: Our minimum run size,

  • once we get a flavor to the factory,

  • is 80,000 pints.

  • So not only do we have to love it,

  • but 80,000 fans have to love it too.

  • Narrator: We visited the St. Albans plant

  • in northern Vermont to see how these famous pints

  • flip their way to our freezers.

  • Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield started Ben & Jerry's

  • Homemade Ice Cream in 1978.

  • From a renovated gas station in Burlington, Vermont,

  • they launched a brand based on sustainable ice cream making

  • and advocating for causes they believed in, and it worked.

  • Today, Ben & Jerry's is the best-selling single brand

  • ice cream label in the US.

  • To pump out its iconic flavors,

  • first it starts with ingredients.

  • Ben & Jerry's partners with 250 farms globally

  • to source everything from vanilla bean to milk.

  • Milk comes from the St. Albans Cooperative Creamery,

  • just a mile and a half from the factory.

  • Once the milk's at the plant, it heads to one of these

  • massive, 6,000-gallon silos.

  • But before it can be made into ice cream,

  • everyone involved has to suit up, including us.

  • Gowns, hairnets, caps, and boots.

  • To make the ice cream base,

  • the milk heads to the blend tank.

  • Cream, milk, and lots of sugar are churned together.

  • The factory goes through 6,700 gallons of cream

  • every single day.

  • Every ice cream flavor starts with either

  • a sweet cream base or a chocolate base.

  • Next, the Mix Master will pour in eggs, stabilizers,

  • and cocoa powder if it's a chocolate base.

  • Then it's piped into the pasteurizer.

  • You can't see it happening, but hot steel plates

  • are heating up the mix to kill any harmful bacteria.

  • The newly pasteurized milk is stored in a tank

  • for four to eight hours, so the ingredients

  • can really get to know each other.

  • After making the two bases, they'll head to one

  • of the 20 flavor vats to get a flavor boost.

  • Fidler: We're always coming up with new flavors,

  • hundreds of flavors a year, and we usually narrow it down

  • to about three or four.

  • We really love to bring our social mission values

  • into our naming process.

  • For example, Empower Mint to talk about voting rights.

  • Narrator: Before Ben & Jerry's famous chunks

  • can be added, the mix has to get

  • to below-freezing temperatures.

  • It's pumped through this giant freezing barrel,

  • and when it gets to the front, it's finally ice cream.

  • Along the way, it's quality tested,

  • meaning lucky factory floor workers

  • get to taste the ice creams.

  • Then it goes into the first of two freezer visits.

  • When it comes out, it's 22 degrees

  • and somewhere between the consistency

  • of a milkshake and soft serve.

  • Now for the best part, the chunks.

  • Founder Ben actually didn't have a great sense of smell,

  • which meant he couldn't taste much either.

  • So his big thing was texture.

  • That's why Ben & Jerry's has some of the biggest chunks

  • in the ice cream industry.

  • These chunks end up in flavors like Half Baked,

  • Chubby Hubby, or the one we're making, Chocolate Therapy.

  • Workers dump in add-ins through the Chunk Feeder,

  • from brownie bites and cookie dough globs

  • to chocolate chunks, fruits, and nuts.

  • They let us give it a try,

  • but it's not as easy as it looks.

  • Then it's finally time to pack those pints.

  • Workers stack the empty containers

  • into the automatic filler.

  • The machine drops the pints into position

  • and perfectly pumps in ice cream.

  • It can fill up 270 pints a minute.

  • The pints are pushed towards the lidder and sealed tight.

  • At this point, six pints every hour

  • are pulled off the line for quality testing.

  • Quality assurance personnel first cut pints open.

  • They're making sure the ingredients are symmetrical

  • and there aren't any big air bubbles.

  • Worker: There is a small gap,

  • but that's what we call a functional void.

  • If we saw large voids, it would be concerning.

  • It's actually quite the workout, as you can tell.

  • Narrator: They also measure the weight and volume of pints

  • to ensure that the right amount of ice cream

  • makes it into each container.

  • Worker: So, we know the weight of the ice cream,

  • and anything below 460

  • is not passable.

  • Narrator: Now back to the factory line.

  • It's now time for the pints

  • to take a second spin in the freezer.

  • The ice cream has to get even colder,

  • down to minus 10 degrees.

  • The pints travel along the Spiral Hardener,

  • a corkscrew-shaped conveyor belt inside a freezer.

  • With the wind chill,

  • it can get up to minus 60 degrees in there.

  • After three hours, the pints are finally frozen

  • and ready to be packaged.

  • They're flipped over and shrink wrapped

  • into groups of eight.

  • Together, they make a gallon.

  • But you'll never actually see a gallon tub

  • of Ben & Jerry's ice cream,

  • because the company never wants its ice cream

  • going bad sitting in the back of your fridge.

  • Once the pints are packaged,

  • they're ready to be shipped across the globe.

  • Abby Narishkin: Hey, guys, my name's Abby,

  • and I'm one of the producers on this video.

  • My favorite flavor is definitely Ben & Jerry's

  • Milk & Cookies, but let me know your favorites

  • in the comments below and if you have any ideas

  • for the next episode of "Big Business."

  • Don't forget to hit the subscribe button

  • so you don't miss out.

Scooped up across 38 countries

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