Ghirardelli introduced a premium refrigerated cookie dough line in June 2026, according to PRNewswire. The move takes a chocolate brand known for baking chips and premium bars into the refrigerated case — a $1.3 billion category dominated by Pillsbury and Nestlé Toll House.
The play is packaging-led category extension. Ghirardelli's refrigerated dough arrives in a chilled tube, distributed through grocery refrigerated sections alongside eggs, dairy, and existing cookie dough. The brand is leveraging its name equity in chocolate to command a premium price point in a category where most products retail between $3 and $5 per tube. Ghirardelli positions this as "effortless enjoyment of a homemade cookie," framing convenience as craft.
The mechanism works because packaging location creates context. Refrigerated cookie dough lives in a different part of the store than baking chips. Shoppers making weeknight decisions in the refrigerated aisle see Ghirardelli as premium proof, not just another dough option. The brand carries chocolate credibility that transfers to a semi-homemade product — consumers assume better ingredients because the name signals quality. Ghirardelli also captures incremental shelf presence without cannibalizing its dry-goods baking section. A shopper buying Ghirardelli chips for scratch cookies on Saturday can still grab Ghirardelli dough for Thursday night without cognitive dissonance. The brand now owns two purchase occasions in two store zones.
The steal for a small physical-product brand: find the adjacent category where your core credential becomes the differentiator. If you sell spice blends in the dry-goods aisle, launch a refrigerated marinade or sauce that uses those same spices. If you make candles, introduce a room spray or drawer sachet that lives in a different store section but carries the same scent story. The key is matching your brand's proof point to a new package format that unlocks different retail real estate.
Start by auditing which product categories already trust your core attribute. Ghirardelli's attribute is "premium chocolate." Cookie dough is a chocolate-dependent product, so the transfer is clean. Next, map the packaging format that puts you in a new store section without requiring the retailer to rethink your assortment. Ghirardelli went from shelf-stable foil to refrigerated tube. You might go from jar to pouch, boxed to bottled, or ambient to chilled. Pitch the buyer with the argument that you are adding a new location, not replacing an old SKU. The line is: "This extends our brand into [new section] and gives your category a premium option with proven consumer trust." Budget for different packaging tooling and colder supply chain, but the marketing spend is minimal — your brand name does the work. If your core product has 500 online reviews and strong repeat rates, lead the pitch with that social proof and frame the new format as lower-risk line extension.
The broader pattern is that packaging format controls store placement, and store placement controls purchase context. Ghirardelli is now a refrigerated-case brand and a baking-aisle brand. Two zones, two moments, same equity.