Skip to content

Sweet Relief

Seattle’s ice cream game keeps it cool when the heat rolls in

By Sarah Stackhouse June 10, 2025

Four hands holding different flavors of ice cream in cones and cups, photographed from above, capture a moment of Sweet Relief on a warm day.
Photo courtesy of Frankie & Jo's Ice Cream

Last summer, I romped around New England playing the sweaty tourist. Somewhere in Vermont, my family discovered maple creemees — those impossibly smooth soft-serve cones made with maple syrup and finished with rainbow sprinkles. We had one every day. Washington doesn’t do creemees, but the local ice cream scene more than makes up for it. From creamy vegan scoops to Japanese soft serve, here are six cool stops you’ll want to chase on hot afternoons.

Baiten Bakery

Capitol Hill

A soft serve parfait with red and white swirl, green matcha cookie, heart-shaped meringue, and two Pocky sticks in a glass cup on a wooden table.

This Japanese sweets shop is attached to Tamari Bar, a Japanese pub (izakaya), and the cold treats are absolutely worth a separate stop — or a visit after dinner. The soft serve comes in vanilla with syrup options like roasted green tea, yuzu, or black sesame. Go all in with a special sundae layered with matcha custard, Pocky sticks, hojicha jelly, kinako mochi, sweet red beans, and a meringue topping. There’s also decadent frozen cookie sandwiches and fresh fruit sandwiches layered with whipped cream. Baiten is always crafting new sundaes and offering limited-edition specials, so it’s worth checking back often. It’s one of the sweetest summer escapes in the city — no passport required.

Sweet Alchemy Ice Creamery

University District, Capitol Hill, Bellevue, Ballard

A cup of cookies and cream ice cream topped with a waffle piece coated in chocolate and sprinkles, on a wooden table.

Owner Lois Ko, a former UW art student, opened the shop in 2016 and sources organic dairy from Fresh Breeze in Lynden, with milk often going from pasture to cone in just a week. Flavors include Aztec chocolate, blueberry lavender, Thai iced tea, Persian rose, and cookies and cold brew — all made with house-crafted bases, sauces, and cones. This summer, look for a collaboration with Rainbrew that turns makgeolli (fermented rice wine) into a rich, milky, slightly yeasty ice cream that’s deep, delicious, and unlike anything else in town.

Spice Waala

Capitol Hill, Ballard, Columbia City

A hand holds a cup of yellow soft-serve ice cream against a blurred background with green foliage.

Everyone knows Spice Waala for the Indian street food and community focus, but the soft serve deserves attention too. Flavors like sweet milk, chai, mango, and rose cardamom (the one that started it all back in 2021) rotate through. It’s ridiculously good and way more interesting than your standard vanilla swirl. You can call ahead to find out which flavor is being served each week.

Hellenika Cultured Creamery

Pike Place Market; West Seattle, U-District, Queen Anne farmers markets

Two hands holding cups of purple and pink gelato in front of a white tiled wall with a blue "HELLENIKA" sign in the background.

Run by an Ellenos Greek Yogurt co-founder and his siblings, this shop serves what it calls cultured gelato — sweet, tangy, probiotic-packed, and super creamy. Flavors include ube coconut, honey macadamia, and vanilla malt. A reusable canteen is also available, knocking the price of a pint from $23 to $13. It’s easy to refill whenever you’re headed downtown. You can also find pints at PCC, Metropolitan Market, and other stores around the region. You won’t find anything quite like it. I’ve tried.

Frankie & Jo’s Ice Cream

Capitol Hill, Ballard, University Village

A hand holds a triple-scoop ice cream cone in front of a peach-colored storefront with the sign "FRANKIE & JO'S.

Seattle’s go-to vegan scoop shop always has unexpected ice cream flavors in the case, such as brown sugar vanilla, date shake, carrot cake, tahini snickerdoodle cookie, or salty caramel ash. There are also bright, fruity sorbets. Co-founders Autumn Martin and Kari Brunson Wright launched the company in 2016, and it’s now B Corp certified, meeting high standards for sustainability and sourcing. Everything is vegan, gluten-free, soy-free, and non-GMO — and still creamy and delicious.

Molly Moon’s Handmade Ice Cream

Various locations

A person holds a cup of ice cream topped with berry sauce, whipped cream, crumbled cookie, and a cherry. The cup reads "molly moons.

The new waterfront shop is reason enough to stop by, but the summer flavors seal the deal. Orange creamsicle delivers a hit of nostalgia and is especially refreshing with a drizzle of hot fudge. The dreamy strawberry rhubarb sorbet is dairy-free and best on a waffle cone. This is the company’s 10th location, opened in May at the new Waterfront Park. Like its other shops, it sources 90 percent of ingredients from around the Pacific Northwest. No better excuse for a walk along the water.

Follow Us

Palace Kitchen Celebrates 30 Years

Palace Kitchen Celebrates 30 Years

The Belltown staple still feeds the city after 10 p.m.

After the last tickets come off the rail, floor mats are hauled out to be hosed down, oven hoods are scrubbed, aprons come untied, and someone counts the drawer. It’s a familiar ritual in restaurant cities everywhere. When the shift ends, cooks and servers go looking for a drink and something to eat. For three…

Protein Without the Pressure

Protein Without the Pressure

In her new cookbook, Seattle author and dietitian Rachael DeVaux keeps healthy eating grounded in real life.

Rachael DeVaux is not afraid of beef. That might sound obvious, but in a wellness culture still haunted by plain chicken breast and low-fat everything, her enthusiasm for grass-fed ground beef feels almost radical. The Seattle-based New York Times bestselling author, personal trainer, and founder of Rachael’s Good Eats has built a following of more than 3.5…

Restaurant Roundup: Nordic Cuisine and a Brazilian Brick-and-Mortar

Restaurant Roundup: Nordic Cuisine and a Brazilian Brick-and-Mortar

Here’s what was served up recently in the Emerald City.

Monday nights are worth celebrating—you made it through the first day of the week, so why not treat yourself to a delicious meal? Unfortunately, but understandably, plenty of restaurants are closed. But at these spots, not only are the kitchens still serving, the quality doesn’t drop off post-weekend, providing a perfect opportunity for a surprise…

Whisky in the Wild

Whisky in the Wild

Good spirits.

Over the summer, Westland Distillery announced a new offering, inspired by Washington State. Made in Seattle and taking cues from the Northwest outdoor lifestyle, Watchspot Whiskey blends eight-year-old Westland American Single Malt with grain whiskey from America’s heartland, resulting in a pour that has notes of toasted grain, milk chocolate, biscuit, apricot, and cherry pie….