The Niederfrank’s Story

Cars rolling out of Detroit have changed a lot since the late 1940s, just as styles of clothing have continually evolved. But ice cream is still made pretty much the same today as it was in 1948 when Elmer Niederfrank opened a streetfront ice cream parlor on A Avenue in National City.

For 25 years, Elmer ran a one-man business, making ice cream alone in the work room of his National City store simply called “Niederfrank’s.” Nowadays, people drive regularly from La Jolla, Spring Valley, and even Jamul for a cone or maybe a half gallon to take home.

A White Ice Cream Being Poured Into a Bucket
A Bowl of Pistachios
A Group of Ice Cream in Cups
A Group of Ice Cream Cones Stacked on Top of Each Other

What Sets Us Apart

“Ice Cream is no secret,” said Elmer, “but I sure have done a lot of experimenting with all the flavors. Sometimes one of the big chain stores will advertise a new flavor and I’ll just chuckle because I’ve been making that flavor for years.”

He developed most of the flavors, one at a time. As Niederfrank tells it, “People would come by the shop and request a flavor. Servicemen, in particular, might ask for something they’d had back home. So I’d work up a batch and let them taste it next time they came in”.

Taken from an Article in the Star News, Written by Emily Woodward

This is the granddaddy of ice cream in San Diego. The late Elmer Niederfrank’s 10-gallon batch freezer is still the mainstay of equipment in the business. If the part goes out on the 75-year-old machine, one must be fashioned from scratch.

Two young women who purchased the business in 1995, Patti Finnegan and Mary Ellen Faught, assiduously preserve Niederfrank’s rich heritage.

Everything is made on premises: the ice cream, their own recipe waffle cones, and the blend in flavors. When you taste Niederfrank’s Butter Rum Pecan ice cream or the Coffee Almond Fudge, the homemade Butter Rum or Chocolate Fudge melt in your mouth.