Sugar House Ice Cream

2003 Victory Boulevard, Staten Island, NY 10314
Jewish / Kosher
Last inspected: Apr 22, 2025
64
Score
Medium Risk NYC Grade: Pending

With just one inspection in the record, there isn't enough history to establish a clear pattern. The most recent report on file is from Apr 22, 2025. Medium risk typically reflects a handful of issues that inspectors wrote up but didn't deem critical.

The pattern that stands out is sanitized equipment or utensil, which has been cited one time.

That's lower than the typical Staten Island restaurant, which scores around 75. The full record sits in fairly typical territory for a working restaurant.

1
Inspections
3
Critical latest
0
Major latest
0
Minor latest
Inspection History
Apr 22, 2025
Pre-permit (Operational) / Initial Inspection
3 critical violations.
View 3 violations
Sanitized equipment or utensil, including in-use food dispensing utensil, improperly used or stored.
06E
Food protection certificate (fpc) not held by manager or supervisor of food operations.
04A
Food, supplies, or equipment not protected from potential source of contamination during storage, preparation, transportation, display, service or from customer’s refillable, reusable container. condiments not in single-service containers or dispensed directly by the vendor.
06C
64

Frequently Asked Questions

When was Sugar House Ice Cream last inspected?

The most recent health inspection at Sugar House Ice Cream on file is from Apr 22, 2025. The public record contains one inspection in total.

What is the most common violation at Sugar House Ice Cream?

Across the inspection record, sanitized equipment or utensil has been cited one time, more than any other issue at Sugar House Ice Cream.

How does Sugar House Ice Cream compare to other restaurants in Staten Island?

Sugar House Ice Cream most recently scored 64 out of 100, which is lower than the Staten Island average of 75.

What does a medium risk rating mean?

A medium risk rating at Sugar House Ice Cream means the most recent inspection turned up a handful of issues that the health department wrote up but did not classify as critical.