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Happy National Ice Cream Month!

While these hot summer days are making us all scream for ice cream, why settle for chasing down the local ice cream truck (who can really tell which direction that music is coming from, anyway?) when you can enjoy a bowl of your favorite flavors right in your hotel room?

San Francisco’s Hotel Triton is taking its celebration for the frozen treat to a whole new level with its new Häagen-Dazs Sweet Dreams package. Through September 3, the playful boutique hotel is offering deluxe accommodations for two and nightly Häagen-Dazs delivered right to your door, plus a personal ice cream scoop and Triton signature rubber ducky to take home with you. Let’s see your local ice cream truck top that.

Rates for the Sweet Dreams package start at $174, but if you can’t make it this summer, not to worry: You can actually curl up in bed with a bowl of ice cream all year round, thanks to the recently refreshed Häagen-Dazs “Sweet Suite.” The vanilla- and caramel-colored suite is decked out in all sorts of ice cream details, including a waffle-textured bed throw, candles (appropriately scented with chocolate, vanilla and dulce de leche) and a headboard shaped like the Häagen-Dazs logo. Did we mention you get all-you-can-eat ice cream from the in-room “Sweet Spot” ice cream cabinet? It’s stocked with classic flavors for traditionalists and new flavor releases for those who like to live on the wild side. The Sweet Spot is also loaded with spoons, bowls and scoopers, so all you need to do is kick back in your plush Häagen-Dazs robe with a bowl (or three) of your favorite flavors.

Plus, booking the Sweet Suite means a portion of your tab goes toward Häagen-Dazs’ Delancey Street Foundation. Now that’s really a sweet stay we can sink our teeth into.

(Main image: rarye)

About the author

Marissa WillmanMarissa Willman earned a bachelor's degree in journalism before downsizing her life into two suitcases for a teaching gig in South Korea. Seoul was her home base for two years of wanderlusting throughout six countries in Asia. In 2011, Marissa swapped teaching for travel writing and now calls Southern California home.

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