In a city full of frozen treats, The Local Scoop stands out with local ingredients

By Tristan Graziano and Jamie Graziano
April 3, 2026 7:00 AM
I’ve spent the past year or two finding the best pizza in Charlotte with my dad. Now, I’m on the hunt for dessert. This spring and summer, I’m setting out to explore Charlotte’s best ice cream spots in a new weekly series I’m calling “Tristan Scoops Charlotte.” (Readers, if you have a better name, send it my way. I am all ears.)
For the first stop, I had high expectations. I’m starting with my go-to neighborhood favorite: The Local Scoop. You know that moment when you walk into an ice cream shop and the smell of fresh waffle cones hits you instantly? That is The Local Scoop experience in a nutshell. The scent alone is enough to put you in a good mood before you even reach the counter.
I visited the original Promenade on Providence location and met with owner Ralph Parkman. The Local Scoop has two other spots, including a small stand in Matthews next to Matthews Social House, making it dangerously easy to justify “just one scoop” (which is never just one scoop). So what makes The Local Scoop’s ice cream so creamy? Ralph broke it down for us. The shop uses a higher butterfat content, churns its ice cream in-house and freezes it immediately after churning. That quick freeze keeps ice crystals tiny, which means a smoother, richer texture. They are also serious about local sourcing. They partner with nearby farms, shop at farmers markets, and support community events and youth sports. In short, they scoop local.
A quick (fun) ice cream lesson Ice cream is not just frozen milk with flavoring. It is a delicate balance of fat, sugar, flavor and air. More fat equals richer, smoother ice cream. Sugar lowers the freezing point so it stays scoopable instead of rock solid. Air gets whipped in during churning. More air makes it lighter and fluffier, while less air makes it dense and decadent. Great ice cream is part science experiment and part dessert magic trick. The Local Scoop: What we ordered I stuck with my usual: Peanut butter cup ice cream in a waffle cone sundae with hot fudge and whipped cream. Imagine biting into a peanut butter cup, then imagine that feeling in every scoop. It’s a flavor overload in the best way possible. It is creamy, smooth and dangerously easy to eat too fast. My dad went with a chocolate-dipped cone topped with chocolate chip cookie dough. He was thrilled to find legit chunks of cookie dough in nearly every bite, a crucial detail for any cookie dough purist. Ralph told us his personal favorite is also the peanut butter cup, but he loves experimenting with seasonal flavors. We sampled cinnamon roll and red velvet, both of which felt like dessert on top of dessert, in a good way.




