What Others Are Saying About Us
I Scream Fudge! Sundae
Ranked #3 on AOL Cityguide’s Top 11 Chocoholic Dishes in the U.S.
Frommer's Guide
New Orleans 2008
Locals were already justly fond of this local ice-cream parlor, where innovative flavors are made fresh every day, but when it reopened about 3 weeks after Katrina, in a neighborhood (and city) where little else was available commercially, it earned a near fanatic loyal following. Thick, luscious ice cream with a rotating list of flavors from lavender-honey to red velvet cake, with stops at tiramisu, pepper, and more along the way. Completely refreshing, maybe even mandatory on a hot day with late enough hours to make it an option for a snack on the way to or from a club or bar uptown.
Gambit Weekly
June 1, 2004
Creole Creamery, another 1950s-style ice cream parlor, opened in the historic McKenzie's Bakery space earlier this spring. It joins Vaqueros, La Crepe Nanou, Upperline and Kyoto in this secreted Uptown food pocket and is always hopping. Developer Jim MacPhaille purchased and restored the entire McKenzie's building (there are apartments upstairs) after a fast-food restaurant threatened to move into the neighborhood. The flavors here are exciting -- Creole cream cheese, plum-walnut, bananas Foster... I've heard other customers oohing over its 'creaminess,' so taste for yourself.
Offbeat Magazine
July 2004
"At the Creole Creamery patrons pore over the freezer cases... There is, after all, a lot to consider in the extensive menu of ice cream and sorbet, including an entire freezer case reserved for eight variations of chocolate. 'White Chocolate Butterscotch' was unique…my favorite was the over-the-top 'I Scream Fudge.'"
The Times-Picayune
May 11, 2004
"The Creole Creamery offers the kind of spoon/or-straw required indulgences that people ordering on dates during the Truman administration, ideally in places that look a lot like the Creamery, where the floor is paved with black-and-white tiles and the mother sitting at the counter try in vein to talk their kids out of waffle cones they’ll never finish."
The Times-Picayune
September 3, 2004
"The Creole Creamery on Prytania [harks] back to the heyday of the neighborhood drugstore, where extravagant sundaes were a special treat and fizzy soft-drinks were still mixed by hand."
Gambit Weekly
January 18, 2005
A mad scientist of ice cream might be working at the Creole Creamery, where new flavors like peppermint, sweet cream Danish and buttermilk drop are constantly created. For those who prefer a traditional treat, this ice cream shop has revived the classic nectar soda.
Today's Falvors!
- VANILLA
- CHOCOLATE
- STRAWBERRY
- MINT CHOCOLATE CHIP
- COOKIES & CREAM
- CAFE au LAIT
- COTTON CANDY
- LHONEY - WILDFLOWER
- LEMON CREAMSICLE
- CARAMEL FUDGE BROWNIE
- BROWN SUGAR
- BUTTERSCOTCH ENGLISH TOFFEE
- CAKE BATTER
- SWEET POTATO SASSAFRAS PRALINE
- SPANISH GRAPEFRUIT
- BANANAS FOSTER
- RED VELVET CAKE
- WEDDING CAKE - CHAMPAGNE
- COOKIE MONSTER
- POP ROUGE
- CHOCOLATE CHIP
- CREOLE CREAM CHEESE
- VANILLA MALT
- COFFEE & SAMBUCA CHEESECAKE
- CHOCOLATE AMARETTO CHEESECAKE
- CARAMEL CHICORY CHOCOLATE
- WHITE CHOCOLATE RASPBERRY FLAN
- I SCREAM FUDGE!
- CHOCOLATE MALT CHIP
- S’MORES
- A CHOCWORK ORANGE
- BITTERSWEET CHOCOLATE
- SALTED CARAMEL GELATO
- WATERMELON ICE
- NECTAR SHERBET
- BLUEBERRY MOJITO SORBET
- SUGAR - FREE BUTTER PECAN
- SUGAR - FREE VANILLA