If you have any pictures or additional information on Gruning's, please send them to BGriswold @Griswold.com.
Gruning's was a family-owned chain of stores in New Jersey that sold food, ice cream, and chocolates. It was started by William August "Bill" Gruning in 1907 and eventually taken over by his son Herman Gruning (1917-2017). Herman's son James Gruning briefly got involved in the business from 1975-1982, but did not remain involved for long.
There was originally a single store in Newark. That store was sold in 1970-71 and the name was changed to Brunin's. The store had no connection to Gruning's and did not sell Gruning's ice cream or candy.
At its height, there were six stores:
South Orange Avenue, South Orange
South Orange Avenue (the "Top"), Maplewood
Bloomfield Avenue, Montclair
248 Bloomfield Avenue, Caldwell 201-226-0864
205 E. Fifth Street, Plainfield
Millburn
Everything was sold in November of 1983 - the stores, the brand, everything. Shortly thereafter, a store in Denville, NJ briefly opened up - not under Gruning's ownership but using the Gruning's name.
Visit Gruning's Ice Cream on Facebook!
You can buy Gruning's Hot Fudge at http://original1910fudgesauce.com/
Still looking for the Hot
Fudge recipe? This is close: My best guess at duplication in small batch
for Hot Fudge Sauce. We sold the business in 1982 and the actual recipe
is their property. The ingredients we used are all available with the
exception of the cocoa powder. We used a cocoa called Rona, from Van
Houten, the originator of the Dutch cocoa process. The cocoa will be the
most difficult and important ingredient. We used to buy tons of Rona
Cocoa for Hot Posted by Jim Gruning on Facebook on October 23, 2012 at 1:50pm |
The Best Vanilla Ice Cream I Ever Had
by Bill Shaw (ShawW@wpunj.edu)
Gruning's Memories
by Karen Sirois (pikerkar@msn.com)
After discussing our childhoods with a neighbor,
and the subject of Gruning's being part of the conversation, nostalgia made me
look up Gruning's on the computer. I was amazed that people were still
discussing Gruning's!
My grandfather was part owner of the Gruning's
stores in Plainfield and Newark in the early days. My father managed the
Newark store, and my parents and my grandparents each had apartments over the
Newark store prior to 1954. Around that time we moved to Livingston, NJ
and my father continued to manage the Newark store until 1963 when we moved to
South Plainfield with the intent of my father managing the Plainfield store.
Since I was a child then, I don't know the details; however, Elmer Barto was
left on as manager of the Plainfield store and my father moved on to a different
job.
I remember playing in the alley behind the Newark
Gruning's, helping fill the candy trays, watching my grandmother make the most
beautiful Easter baskets in the Gruning's basement (there have never since been
baskets of that quality), and playing with the children of a Gruning's waitress
in their apartment above the Gruning's store. After we moved to
Livingston, I would still go to "work" with my father and always loved
"working/playing" in and around Gruning's.
When we moved to South Plainfield in the early
'60's, my mother would take my brother and me to Gruning's in Plainfield once a
week (as if going there wasn't treat enough, it was especially nice since we
still were part owners and didn't have to pay).
At some point (details are hazy), my grandfather
died and my father became part owner but sold his shares of the stores and that
ended our dealings with the stores. But, in the early days, Grunings was a
huge and happy part of my life.
Someone mentioned there was a Gruning's shore house
in Lavallette. AMAZING!! I have
pictures of my mom, dad, and me as a baby at that house. This is surreal!
See a Gruning's billboard that says "I Scream for Gruning's"
This is a painting done by my grandfather, Alexander Collani. It is about 5� by 24� and is a scale �model� of billboard art he painted in the NJ area. Between 1920 and 1944
I may have other B+W photos of billboard art from my grandfather�s portfolio. Most are 1x3 inch cropped pictures. This on was hand painted as demonstration art, He only kept the ones he particularly liked when he retired
Tom Cabelus
tcabelus@pacbell.net
See a Gruning's menu from 1983
A man who misses Gruning's
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=travel&res=980CEFDF1F3CF93BA35751C1A960958260
Who owns the Gruning's brand now?
http://www.findownersearch.com/brand/159063/
1970 advertisement in the
http://www.thejointlibrary.org/archives/TheTimes/1970/1970-08-27/pg_0002.pdf
Various people's memories of Gruning's
http://www.network54.com/Forum/178174/thread/1093696696/last-1131841495/Roseville+Scrapbook
"Gruning's Ice Cream" - a Facebook group
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=35671139680
Wet Walnuts! That was the key! Memories from the
personal website of Steve Weintraub.
http://www.dalahus.com/2008/07/05/grunings/
Last night I was sitting at my dining room table up here north of Boston, eating one solitary spoonful of Ben & Jerry's chocolate chocolate chip ice cream and saying to my husband, as I often do, "good -- but not as good as Gruning's" -- and it occurred to me to google Gruning's, and your fine web page popped up. A delightful evening resulted and I just wanted to thank you. The menu is an especially nice touch! I grew up in Fanwood in the 50s/60s/70s and all I can say is all the various cars we had over the years knew the way to Gruning's in Plainfield by heart.
ME: chocolate chip, coffee chip, peach. Chunks of chocolate look good in ice cream but they never match the flavor of the zillions of tiny flecks that Gruning's put in theirs. Also, I loved the twirly stools.
POP: chocolate chip, vanilla, almond crunch (that's what the '83 menu says, but I think they may have called it buttercrunch in ye olde days).
MOM: Black raspberry, mint chip. Or, a handpacked pint, half chocolate, half lemon.
Our cat was particularly fond of peach. Don't get me started on the hot fudge and wet walnuts. Gruning's was also our source for tiny and delicious licorice jelly beans. Thanks, this made my evening --
Ann Smith
Hamilton, MA
sandasmith1@verizon.net
Lori Kenny & Sally Dunn - Late '70s