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One's been around since 1982. The other is riding on the wave of the latest frozen yogurt craze. One's more traditional with serving customers by having employees serve customers. The other is making the customers serve themselves. One has rotating flavors. The other has all flavors presented at the same time.
And it's time for them to fight to the creamy death!
In this corner, we have Golden Spoon! Venerable, having been on the FIRST frozen yogurt wave back in the late 70's/early 80's, most people would find it a familiar sight as it serves the frozen treat in a traditional, employee-serves-the-customer way.
In the other corner, we have Yogurtland, a relatively new kid on the block, riding on the wave of the current frozen yogurt craze. Talk about recycling fads. They serve frozen yogurt in a non-traditional way, forcing having the customers serve themselves and then pay by the ounce at the register.
To comment on Yogurtland's self-serve approach, I like it. Because the whole cup is weighed and then priced (like self-serve candy stores you see in the mall), you can get as many different toppings and flavors of frozen yogurt you want without adding additional charges for each individual topping, which is Golden Spoon's way. It's a double-edged sword though; the more you get, the more you pay since the cup is priced by the ounce.
Down to the meat of things! How does the two compare when it comes to taste? For this one, I got the basic plain-jane vanilla from both for comparison. Hands, down Yogurtland wins in the vanilla department. While the Golden Spoon vanilla frozen yogurt tasted mild, not leaving much of an impression on me, the Yogurtland vanilla frozen yogurt tasted like a cup of premium Grade A vanilla ice cream. I wouldn't call the flavor overpowering, but the vanilla left a pleasant impression on my taste buds. Also, unlike Golden Spoon's vanilla frozen yogurt, Yogurtland's vanilla left on a clean note, not leaving a funky aftertaste on my taste buds.
On a side note, the Orange 50/50 from Golden Spoon tastes more like licorice than an orange creamsicle which left a bad impression on both me and Blue. On the other hand, Yogurtland's taro flavored frozen yogurt was peculiar and delicious! Blue and I came to the conclusion that it tasted like buttered popcorn or like Cap'n'Crunch. Also, Yogurtland, like many other new-age frozen yogurt places have tart frozen yogurts which taste like non-frozen yogurt you get at the market but in frozen form. Yogurt flavored frozen yogurt. Huh.
Decor-wise, Golden Spoon's is plain, but clean. It's not stylish, but when you just want frozen yogurt, who cares if the place looks stylish? Just grab it and go. On the other hand, if you can't tell from the picture, Yogurtland tries to appeal to the trendy and fashion-conscious consumer. It feels more like a place to hang out and be seen. Then again, the furniture looks like it's from some sort of Swedish discount furniture catalog, meaning it looks trendy, but flimsy and cheap (Criticism of today's iPod generation? Beats me, I'm part of it.).
So far, it seems Yogurtland has the upper advantage, but when it comes to price, the old-timer has a final trick up its sleeves. Yogurtland charges 30 cents per ounce which sounds cheap, but realistically speaking, that's about five bucks for a cup of frozen yogurt. For five bucks, I got the same cup of frozen yogurt and another one for both me and Blue. As a strapped-for-cash college student, Golden Spoon looks much more appealing to me if I just want a frozen treat.
So who wins this duel of the froyos? I have to say it's Yogurtland. Golden Spoon may be cheaper but I'd rather pay extra for the better flavor and customizability I can get at Yogurtland. You can take your date to Yogurtland as an after dinner treat since it looks much nicer than Golden Spoon. Although Yogurtland doesn't have a rotating cycle of flavors, it boasts much more interesting ones like the described taro and tart variations. Yogurtland wins this round.