KICKSTARTING IT
UP A NOTCH
Red Wagon Creamery tries a novel funding model
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BY SHANNON FINNELL
As failures go, this one was pretty successful. Red Wagon Creamery co-owner Emily
Phillips says she knew that the ice cream cart probably wouldn’t be able to raise $13,000
using the crowd-funding website Kickstarter, but she didn’t realize the small, less than
one-year-old company would make it to more than $3,000, either.
“It was a lot of fun,” Phillips says, partially because the Kickstarter project let her see
many of the donations shared on social media sites, and she says she takes a lot of pride
in how many people were excited enough to see the business grow that they’d donate their
own money.
Red Wagon’s ice cream flavors range from the conventional to the surprising. The
Smoked Salt Caramel No. 6 is a standby that sells out quite often. It’s a rich, strongly
flavored caramel that confuses the mouth — is this really ice cream you’re eating?
Because it tastes like sea salt caramel candy, and it’s bold and delicious. Phillips says that
she usually makes twice as much of it as any other flavor.
Frozen Goat is another favorite, and it’s made with Wandering Goat’s Café Femenino
coffee. Red Wagon’s Mint Chocolate Chip uses real mint that’s local and organic, plus
vegan chocolate. And there’s always a sorbet on-hand, so bringing your favorite vegan is
encouraged.
Other popular flavors include Phillips’ attempts to work her way around the cheese
wheel, with flavors like gouda and walnut or goat cheese with roasted pine nuts, rosemary
and Blue Dog Meade swirled through. “It’s nice to be able to highlight local products like
Blue Dog Meade and local goat farms,” Phillips says.
One notable Kickstarter donation came from Humphry Slocombe Ice Cream in San
Francisco. “For them to notice us was great,” Phillips says. “They’re sort of the rock stars
of ice cream.”
Phillips and her husband, Stuart, envisioned using the Kickstarter money to buy a more
efficient ice cream machine that would allow them to make more ice cream at a faster rate,
cutting down the risk of ice crystals in the process. They had also hoped to buy an ice
cream tricycle for selling ice cream on the go and a shed that would enable them to store
the cart at Healthy Pet (also home to the gloriously tasty Party Cart) instead of taking it
home every night.
No worries, though, ice cream fans. Since they weren’t counting on the Kickstarter
money, Phillips says Red Wagon will use other methods of creative fundraising to continue
to grow. The latest news is that the custom-designed trike (made by Springfield company
Wheelburro) is in the works and will debut in late May.
The Phillipses are devising a way to acquire the faster ice cream machinery, too. With
all the days they’ve sold out of ice cream this year, they’ll need it. Summer’s coming.
With all this talk of funding, there is the larger question: How can a small, artisan ice
cream cart survive the winter in Eugene’s rainy, not-exactly-ideal-for-ice-cream weather?
“This winter has been interesting,” Phillips says, as a gust of wind catches the fold-up
chair by her cart and starts to whisk it away.
Red Wagon experimented by relocating to Midtown for a bit, trying to stay warm and
dry, but when dinner service ceased, the Phillipses say they realized just how much ice
cream they sell at night and moved back to the Healthy Pet a little earlier than they
planned.
Phillips, a professional chef even before Red Wagon, says she thinks part of the reason
Red Wagon is a business that can thrive in the winter is that she makes everything from
scratch, even the ice cream base. “I think that makes a big difference in the quality of the
ice cream,” she says.
This summer they’ll diversify their locales by adding Kesey Plaza and Willamalane to
the mix, along with the Healthy Pet. Plus, they just confirmed a spot at the Lane County
Farmers Market on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
For those Red Wagon fans who can’t get by on a scoop alone, the cart sells pints, and
pints are also available at eugenelocalfoods.com. They deliver, too. ■
chow.eugeneweekly.com
CHOW! Spring 2012 3