Handel’s Ice Cream:
The “Homemade” Lie
A class action exposes how a brand built on nostalgia sold you petroleum dye and propylene glycol wrapped in a 1945 origin story.
What You Actually Paid For When You Trusted Them
You drove past a Handel’s. Maybe you saw the sign. “Homemade Ice Cream Since 1945.” Maybe you thought about Alice Handel, a woman who started something in Youngstown, Ohio, in the summer after World War II ended. The story is right there on the wall inside the store. Alice’s dedication to quality. Her original methods. Her recipes. The sign outside says it’s been the same for over 75 years. You read “the finest ingredients” and you believe it, because why would they lie about something that simple?
You might be a parent. You brought your kid. You’ve been avoiding Red 40 because you read about it. You know what hyperactivity looks like in your house after your child eats the wrong thing, and you’ve been careful. You specifically went somewhere that promised traditional, quality ingredients because you were trying to do right by your family. You paid the premium price. You handed over the money with confidence.
What you got, according to a federal lawsuit, was ice cream containing Red 40 and Blue 1. Red 40 is a synthetic dye that didn’t exist until 1971, twenty-six years after the “original recipe” Handel’s claims to have never changed. Blue 1 is made from petroleum through a process involving chemical synthesis with sulphonic or carboxyl groups added to dye molecules. You also got propylene glycol, a substance used in antifreeze and as a solvent in pharmaceuticals. You got BHA, a preservative so controversial it’s been banned entirely by the European Union. You got carrageenan, a thickener linked to digestive inflammation. None of this was on a label you could read. There was no label. There was no ingredients list anywhere in the store or on the website.
The betrayal documented in this lawsuit is quiet and specific. It targets the exact moment when a parent makes a careful decision. It exploits the mental shortcut that all of us use: if a company says its product is “homemade” and “the finest,” we believe the words because we were taught to believe that businesses tell the truth about what they’re selling us. Handel’s knew this. The complaint explicitly states that the company “intentionally and recklessly” made these representations to induce purchases, and that it “knew that consumers purchased the Products as a result of the Quality Representations.” This was a calculated marketing strategy built on a story that, if the lawsuit is correct, stopped being true a long time ago.
The plaintiff, Chelsi Hendrix of Sacramento, California, bought Handel’s ice cream on multiple occasions in 2024 from stores near her home, including the Rancho Cordova location. She trusted the brand. She says she would not have purchased the products at all had she known what was in them. She would still buy from Handel’s if they fixed the problem. That detail matters: this is not a vendetta. It is a person who wanted to trust a brand and found out she couldn’t.
There are tens of thousands of people in the same position as Chelsi Hendrix. Most of them don’t know it yet. They walked into a Handel’s, saw the nostalgia, read the promise of quality, paid premium prices, and left with products that the company never disclosed the contents of. The lawsuit is trying to change that. But the damage to trust, to the belief that a brand’s story means something, doesn’t get fixed in a settlement. That’s a different kind of loss.
Verbatim From The Complaint: The Proof In Their Own Words
Every quote below is taken directly from Case No. 2:25-at-00645, Document 1, filed May 21, 2025. These are either Handel’s own marketing statements or the lawsuit’s direct factual allegations. Nothing has been paraphrased.
“Handel’s claims that it ‘upholds the traditions that Alice started all those years ago. From making each batch fresh daily to using her original methods and recipes.’ Inside the stores, Handel’s recounts Alice’s ‘Story’ explicitly claiming that ‘Today, over 75 years later, Alice’s dedication to quality and service has remained the same’ while citing the use of ‘the finest’ and ‘the best’ ‘ingredients.'”
Complaint ΒΆ19, Case No. 2:25-at-00645
- This is Handel’s own marketing language, captured from in-store signage and reproduced in the complaint. It establishes the specific promises the company made to every customer who walked through the door.
- The phrase “original methods and recipes” is the anchor claim. The lawsuit directly contradicts it by showing the products contain ingredients that were physically impossible to include in a 1945 recipe because they had not been invented yet.
“Defendant further claims to have ‘never strayed from the original recipe, because sometimes, the classics are simply unbeatable.'”
Complaint ΒΆ20, Case No. 2:25-at-00645
- This is a direct falsifiability test. Either the recipe has not changed since 1945, or it contains Red 40, which was invented in 1971. Both cannot be true simultaneously. The complaint argues they chose to keep the marketing claim and change the recipe.
- The phrase “the classics are simply unbeatable” functions as an emotional appeal to nostalgia. In the context of the lawsuit, it reads as the mechanism through which consumers were manipulated into paying a premium.
“INGREDIENTS: Ice Cream Mix Milk, Cream, Sugar, Corn Syrup, Nonfat Dry Milk, Guar Gum, Mono and Diglycerides, Cellulose Gum, and Carrageenan., Strawberries Strawberries [sic], Sugar, Strawberry Flavor Water, Propylene Glycol, Ethyl Alcohol, Xanthan Gum, Beet Juice Extract, FD&C #40, FD&C #1, Triacetin, Citric Acid, Vanilla Flavor Water, Alcohol, Natural Flavor, Vanilla, Vanillin, and Caramel Color, Fruit Acid Water, Citric Acid.”
Complaint ΒΆ7 β Handel’s Strawberry Ice Cream ingredient list, Case No. 2:25-at-00645
- This is the actual ingredient list for the Strawberry flavor, obtained by the plaintiff’s legal team. It contains propylene glycol, two synthetic petroleum-based dyes (FD&C #40 and FD&C #1), carrageenan, triacetin, citric acid, ethyl alcohol, xanthan gum, and caramel color.
- Propylene glycol is a synthetic liquid substance used in the manufacturing of plastics, antifreeze, and as a pharmaceutical solvent. Its presence in a product marketed as “homemade” and “the finest ingredients” is the foundation of the deception claim.
- The “[sic]” notation in the complaint flags a grammatical error in Handel’s own ingredient documentation, suggesting the list was not subjected to careful review before it reached the plaintiff’s counsel.
- Neither FD&C #40 nor FD&C #1 appears in any 1945 recipe. FD&C #40 was not invented until 1971, per Wikipedia’s entry on Allura Red AC, which the complaint cites directly. This single data point is the lawsuit’s most direct proof that the “original recipe” claim is false.
“Handel’s does not list or disclose its ingredients anywhere. This includes its stores and website. Thus, a consumer cannot see or read the ingredients list before purchasing ice cream. This is contrary to most ice cream chains which do disclose their ingredients to their customers.”
Complaint ΒΆ9, Case No. 2:25-at-00645
- This is the concealment allegation. The failure to disclose is framed as deliberate. The complaint cites McConnell’s, Cold Stone Creamery, Baskin-Robbins, HΓ€agen-Dazs, and Ben & Jerry’s as competitors who all provide ingredient information, establishing that disclosure is an industry standard Handel’s specifically chose not to follow.
- Without an ingredient list available at point of sale, a consumer has no practical means of informed consent. The premium price is paid under conditions of manufactured ignorance.
“Following receipt of Plaintiff’s CLRA letter (discussed infra, ΒΆ 59), Handel’s modified some of the language contained in the Quality Representations.”
Complaint ΒΆ11, Footnote 5, Case No. 2:25-at-00645
- This footnote is significant. When confronted with a legal demand letter, Handel’s changed its marketing language rather than its ingredients. This pattern, changing the words while keeping the deceptive product, is the definition of cosmetic compliance.
- The company received the CLRA demand letter on October 3, 2024. It had 30 days to fully rectify the misconduct. It did not. The class action complaint was filed on May 21, 2025, seven months later.
Who Gets Hurt and How
Public Health
The ingredients at the center of this lawsuit are linked to documented health harms, particularly in children. The complaint lays out the science, and it is worth taking seriously.
- Red 40 (FD&C #40) is one of the most widely used and most controversial synthetic food dyes in the US food supply. Multiple studies link it to allergies, migraines, and mental health disorders in children. Studies have also found behavior and attention improvements in children after eliminating artificial dyes from their diet.
- Red 40 and Blue 1 are two of the seven most widely used synthetic food dyes identified by the Center for Science in the Public Interest as capable of causing or exacerbating neurobehavioral problems, including hyperactivity, inattentiveness, and restlessness, in some children.
- Blue 1 (FD&C #1) is a petroleum-derived chemical created through synthesis involving sulphonic or carboxyl groups. It has been linked to neurotoxicity, hyperactivity in children, allergies, cancer risk, organ damage, fertility issues, and genetic defects, according to sources cited by Rupa Health and referenced in the complaint.
- BHA (Butylated Hydroxyanisole) is a preservative found in Handel’s products. The European Union has banned it outright. Its continued use and non-disclosure in US markets exposes consumers who believe they are choosing a “cleaner” product to a substance that major regulatory bodies elsewhere have determined too risky for commercial food use.
- Carrageenan, used as a stabilizer in the ice cream mix, is associated with gastrointestinal inflammation in some research, though it remains permitted in US food products. Consumers who specifically avoid it cannot exercise that choice at Handel’s because no ingredient list exists at the point of sale.
- Parents are specifically named in the complaint as a vulnerable population: they are described as “hyperconscious about what they allow their children to eat, and are thus drawn to foods and stores that promise high quality ingredients.” The marketing directly targeted this group, who then fed the products to their children without knowing what was in them.
- California’s School Food Safety Act, signed in 2024, will ban FD&C #40 and FD&C #1 from being served in public schools starting in 2027. These are the same dyes found in Handel’s products. California’s own legislature has determined they are unsuitable for children in a school setting.
Economic Inequality
The financial harm of this case follows a familiar pattern: a company charges premium prices for a product it represents as premium, while delivering something cheaper. The people who pay the price are those who trusted the brand.
- Consumers paid a premium for Handel’s products specifically because the “homemade,” “finest ingredients,” and “original recipe” marketing created the expectation of a higher-quality product. The complaint is explicit: “Defendant promises premium products, but provides consumers with a cheaper, less premium product filled with undesirable ingredients.”
- The amount in controversy exceeds $5,000,000, indicating that the aggregate overcharge extracted from consumers across California and 12 other states is legally estimated at over five million dollars. This is money that flowed from consumers to Handel’s based on representations that the lawsuit says are false.
- Individual consumers are unlikely to sue on their own, because the cost of litigation is far greater than the price difference they overpaid for a scoop of ice cream. Class action is the only mechanism that makes accountability economically viable for ordinary people in this situation. The complaint acknowledges this directly: “damages suffered by any individual Class member may be relatively modest in relation to the cost of litigation.”
- Consumers who specifically seek out additive-free or higher-quality food products often do so as a health decision. Lower-income consumers who are willing to pay the Handel’s premium for what they believe is a cleaner product are making a sacrifice. When that sacrifice is made on the basis of false advertising, they have lost both the money and the health benefit they were trying to purchase.
- Handel’s operates approximately 150 locations across 13 states. A company of this size has the resources and legal teams to craft specific marketing language and to know what is in its own product. The information asymmetry is complete: the company has all the facts, the consumer has none, and the company charged accordingly.
- The market-distortion effect extends beyond individual purchases. Research cited in the complaint shows that consumers value traditionally made and artisanal products and are willing to pay more for them. By falsely claiming to be that kind of product, Handel’s captured market share and revenue that would otherwise have gone to companies actually making cleaner, simpler ice cream. That is a structural harm to honest competitors in the premium ice cream market.
What $5,000,000 Means in Human Terms
The Watchlist and What You Can Do
The lawsuit is active. Nothing is settled. Here is who holds power over the outcome and what you can actually do about it.
Key Parties in This Case
- Plaintiff: Chelsi Hendrix, Sacramento, CA. Represented by Robert Abiri, Abiri Law PC, Rancho Santa Margarita, CA (SBN 238681).
- Defendant: Handel’s Enterprises, LLC. Delaware corporation, principal place of business in Canfield, Ohio. Operates ~150 locations in 13 states.
- Court: United States District Court, Eastern District of California. Case No. 2:25-at-00645, filed May 21, 2025.
- Legal claims filed: CLRA violation, False Advertising Law, Unfair Competition Law, breach of express warranty, breach of implied warranty, unjust enrichment, common law fraud. All seven claims demand class certification, injunctive relief, restitution, and disgorgement of profits.
Regulatory Watchlist
- FTC (Federal Trade Commission): Jurisdiction over deceptive advertising and marketing claims. The “homemade,” “finest ingredients,” and “original recipe” representations fall squarely within the FTC’s deceptive practices mandate.
- FDA (Food and Drug Administration): Regulates food additives, labeling, and ingredient disclosure. The FDA’s ongoing review of synthetic food dyes (including Red 40) is directly relevant to this case. The Biden-era FDA began flagging Red 40 before the 2025 change in administration.
- California Department of Public Health: Enforces the California School Food Safety Act (2024), which bans Red 40 and Blue 1 from school food starting in 2027. The same law that recognizes these dyes are inappropriate for children in schools governs a state where Handel’s actively sells products containing them.
- California Attorney General’s Office: Has independent authority to enforce the False Advertising Law (Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code Β§ 17500) and the UCL (Β§ 17200) beyond what a private class action achieves. Public pressure can activate AG investigation.
- CFPB (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau): Less directly applicable here, but relevant if deceptive pricing practices in retail food become a broader consumer finance enforcement priority.
What You Can Do Right Now
- If you purchased Handel’s ice cream in California: You may be a class member. Contact Abiri Law PC directly at rabiri@abirilaw.com or 949.459.2133 to inquire about participating in the class action. Do not assume you will automatically be included; contact the attorneys.
- Demand ingredient transparency from every ice cream retailer you visit: Ask for the full ingredient list before purchasing. If they cannot provide one, walk out and tell them why. This is your legal right as a consumer and your most powerful individual lever.
- File a complaint with the FTC: Go to reportfraud.ftc.gov. Document the specific marketing claim (“Homemade Since 1945,” “finest ingredients”) and the fact that no ingredient list is available in stores. Volume of complaints creates investigative priority.
- File a complaint with the California Attorney General: At oag.ca.gov/consumers/general/complaints. Reference the California False Advertising Law, Business & Professions Code Β§ 17500, and Case No. 2:25-at-00645.
- Talk to your community about food dyes and label transparency: Local mutual aid networks, parent groups, school boards, and neighborhood associations are where the California School Food Safety Act’s momentum started. The same energy that got Red 40 banned from school lunches can be applied to retail food accountability.
- Support transparency-first food producers: The complaint itself lists McConnell’s, Cold Stone, Baskin-Robbins, HΓ€agen-Dazs, and Ben & Jerry’s as examples of companies that do publish ingredient lists. Directing your spending toward companies with disclosed ingredients sends a market signal that matters.
- Share this case with parents and caregivers in your network: The specific harm in this lawsuit targets people who were trying to make careful food choices for their children. They deserve to know.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
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