www.dailywire.com
The Ranch Craze Just Took A Strange Turn — And People Can’t Look Away
This article is part of Upstream, The Daily Wire’s new home for culture and lifestyle. Real human insight and human stories — from our featured writers to you.
***
Welcome to the salad dressing circle of trust. Here, there’s no shame in sparing yourself the torture of dry pizza crust, flavorless cauliflower crudité, and plain nuggets when you’ve got a perfectly good bottle of ranch in the fridge just waiting for its time to shine. As ranch dressing’s tangy little star continues to rise (suck it, runner-up ketchup!), everything’s getting a ranch-over, from the new ranch-flavored Takis dupe at Trader Joe’s to Hidden Valley Ranch Club cracker minis and Goldfish zesty ranch.
But for the ranch fans willing to take their unbridled passion where no dip has gone before, feast your eyes upon the ranchzilla dessert of 2026: the ranch milkshake.
Riffing on a sweet base of vanilla ice cream, topped with what appears to be a mind-bending combo of chicken nuggets, raw veggies, whipped cream, dried herbs, and a salted lime rim, this milkshake is like nothing you’ve seen before. Great Wolf Lodge plans to offer its “creamy, dreamy, and totally unexpected” limited edition ranch milkshake at locations nationwide from March 5 to April 26. There’s no word on whether the resort chain is feeling a little extra in anticipation of National Ranch Day on March 10, but you can snag this shake for just over $3 and celebrate the reason for the season.
Fans of the savory garlic, onion, and dill-boosted dressing were quick to praise the bold plunge into the dessert category, with Instagram commenters posting, “I literally drink ranch as it is now, so I’m 100% here for this,” and “just what ranch baby always wanted.” Others were disgusted. As one user noted on Reddit, “I live, laugh, love ranch. But I wouldn’t touch this.” Someone else threw back to the “Milkshake” earworm of 2003, adding, “This does not bring the boys to my yard.”
Ranch isn’t just associated with Americans; it’s as red-blooded American as a condiment could ever be, conjuring visions of a tasteless wilderness where one blue-collar worker answered the cries of a people in search of something to go with tots. Ever since it was invented by Steve Henson back in 1949 as a way to zhuzh up chow for work crews hustling in the Alaskan bush, ranch dressing — and the dried seasoning and sauces it inspired — has seen an upward climb that’s expected to top $84 billion worldwide by 2032.
Henson’s then-brandless dressing was dubbed Hidden Valley in 1954, and the fledgling party dip company was acquired by Clorox in 1972. Shelf-stable bottled Hidden Valley became a nationwide sensation in the ’80s, and there was no turning back after the launch of Cool Ranch Doritos in ’86. Across the pond, the iconic seasoning was described as “American,” with cool American Doritos hitting shelves in Europe. You can even continue the theme by picking up a six-pack of Lester’s Fixins ranch soda to go with a fresh bag of newly launched Dinamita spicy cool ranch Doritos. And don’t miss the latest drop of Hidden Valley merch.
Proving its cultural significance, baby Maggie went through a “ranch dressing phase” on “The Simpsons,” and a one-day Hidden Valley Ranch restaurant pop-up in New York City last year served social media-worthy snacks. And if you haven’t seen Melissa McCarthy’s star turn as a Hidden Valley Ranch taste-tester on “Saturday Night Live,” you’re tragically missing out on a piece of cinematic history from ranch’s unofficial patron saint. “It’s good to the last drop,” McCarthy says, while scooping up spilled dressing from the front of her sweatshirt and draining the rest of the bottle into her mouth. “This is awesome, man.”
Despite its selfless service as a universal flavoring agent for everything from spaghetti to Oreos (dip it to believe it), high-profile ranch-bashers abound. While professional chefs praise the herby, buttermilk energy of store-bought Hidden Valley, celebrity food expert and TV host Padma Lakshmi took a swipe at Vice President JD Vance for admitting on Fox News that he once served ranch to his vegetarian wife, Usha, the first time he cooked for her.
About the oven-baked Pillsbury Crescent Roll desperation “pizza” JD topped with veggies and ranch dressing, Lakshmi sneered, “Who bakes ranch dressing … I mean, maybe he knows what she likes because she doesn’t really have good taste.”
For her part, Usha-with-the-good-taste had already agreed it wasn’t her husband’s best work. “It was disgusting,” JD said. “It was actually inedible.” (He was probably just too new to cooking to know you bake the seasoning, not the sauce.)
Still, no amount of hate can slow down the ranch train. “It’s delicious and it goes with everything. No, I am not accepting feedback at this time,” posted one Redditor, clearly speaking on our collective behalf. If ranch is your love language, consider this a delicious promposal to accept a slow dance with America’s favorite dressing.
***
The views expressed in this piece are those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The Daily Wire.