Blogs

  • News
  • |
  • Art
  • |
  • History
  • |
  • Food and Travel
  • |
  • Science
Food & Think

A heaping helping of food news, science and culture

Off the Road

The travel adventures of a nomad on the cheap


June 22, 2010

Maple Creemees

I think you’ve probably picked up on my maple madness by now, so this shouldn’t come as a surprise: my ideal summer treat is not a popsicle, a sundae or even an ordinary ice cream cone. It’s a maple creemee.

Courtesy Flickr user S_K_S/

Courtesy Flickr user S_K_S

Creemee may be a peculiarly Vermont term, or at least unique to New England, as I haven’t heard it since I moved away. Basically, it’s what other people call soft-serve ice cream, the kind that swirls beautifully into one of those torch-shaped cones. (The spelling is open to debate, but it’s pronounced just like the word “creamy.”)

Typically, you get these at a “creemee stand,” the kind of establishment with a walk-up window and a bunch of high-school kids getting their first taste of a summer job. You don’t bother taking more than a few steps before giving it a good licking. Maybe you make it as far as a sticky picnic table; maybe you just lean on the hood of your car. If you came with other people, you don’t talk much until your tongues have worked their way down to cone level, where there’s less risk of losing the precious stuff to meltdown. (Although if you drop it, they’ll probably give you another one for free. Meanwhile, your dog will be ecstatic. Not that I would know…)

Of course, creemees come in ordinary flavors, like vanilla and chocolate, and those are pleasant. But in Vermont you can also find creemees flavored with real maple syrup, which gives them a light golden hue and the sweet taste of, well, maple. Sorry. Words fail me. They’re that good.

Many people think the state’s best maple creemees are at Morse Farm in Montpelier, and after trying one this summer, I can see why—plenty of real syrup flavor, married with a rich, smooth texture that lives up to the name’s promise. Personally, I still prefer the creemees at the Vermont Maple Outlet between Jeffersonville and Cambridge, though I may be a bit biased because I grew up in that area.

If you think my creemee fanaticism is bad, I’d just like to point out that others have it worse: there’s a Creemee fan page on Facebook, with nearly 10,000 fans, and one Vermonter has an entire blog called I Dream of Creemee.

Have you heard of creemees? What’s your favorite kind of ice cream?



***

Sign up for our free email newsletter and receive the best stories from Smithsonian.com each week.

4 Comments »

  1. Bryn says:

    This has to be a northern Vermont thing. We did not have creemees in Rutland! We did have maple sugar cotton candy at the fair, though. Yum!

  2. Heather L. says:

    I still think of soft serve as creemees. I would love to taste a maple creemee — never had one.

    I can just see your mom making that picnic!!

  3. Tovar says:

    Hey Amanda – Well, living a bit east of Montpelier, I often end up at Bragg Farm Sugarhouse. Awfully good cremees! Might have to do a taste-test comparison with Morse Farm’s… :-)

  4. Shelly says:

    My ice cream preference is also “flavored” with regionalism. Having been born and raised in the South, I cannot resist pralines and cream. Mmmmm!

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.

Spam protection by WP Captcha-Free

Advertisement



Follow Us

Travel with Smithsonian






Advertisement