An NSDate doesn't have a time zone. It's a moment in time. A moment exists across all time zones. The string it gives from -description has to pick a time zone in order to represent the moment, because that's the way we write dates and times, but which it picks is arbitrary. The time zone used for the description in no way represents any fundamental fact about the nature of the NSDate object.
If you want to format a date into a string, don't use -description because it's not well-defined. (For example, which time zone it uses has changed before with the version of OS X and could change again.) Use an NSDateFormatter. You can configure an NSDateFormatter with a time zone by setting its timeZone property.
If you want to get information about the date, like month, day, hour, minute, etc., use NSCalendar and NSDateComponents.