New England
New England Food Factory Tours | Cabot Cheese, Ben & Jerry’s, Cape Cod Potato Chips & More
Whether it’s the Cape Cod Chip Factory, the Cabot Cheese Factory, or the Budweiser Brewery, these food factory tours offer a unique and tasty experience.

Coffee By Design | Portland, Maine
Photo Credit : Katherine Keenan5 New England Food Factory Tours

Photo Credit : Courtesy of Ben & Jerry's
Ben & Jerry’s Factory Tour | Waterbury, VT
When the cowbell clangs, it’s time to “moo-ve on over” and meet your guide for a 30-minute tour that’s as permeated with cow puns as a pint of Chunky Monkey is loaded with fudge nuggets and walnuts. Open 362 days each year, the Ben & Jerry’s factory isn’t merely a place to witness the intricacies of ice cream production. By the time you reach the Flavo-Room, where the sample du jour might be a rare, not-sold-in-stores creation like Caramel Apple, you’ll appreciate each scoop’s deeply Vermont roots. Nearly 40 years after two junior-high buddies invested $5 in an ice-cream-making correspondence course, the global brand they launched from a Burlington gas station remains far-out, folksy, and socially committed. And every creamy morsel still begins with raw milk from Vermont co-op cows. 1281 Waterbury-Stowe Road. Waterbury, VT. benjerry.com/about-us/factory-tours
Photo Credit : Courtesy of Cabot Creamery
Cabot Creamery Tour | Cabot, VT
Chapter one of the cheesemaking process unfolds in the fields and farms along the rural roads you’ll drive to the Cabot Visitor Center. After all, it’s the farmers you’ll “meet” via the tour’s introductory video who supply the plant with one million pounds of milk every day. The 1,100 New England and New York farm families who own the Cabot co-op are justifiably proud of the “world’s best” awards their dairy products—from Vermont sharp cheddar to Greek yogurt—continually earn at international competitions. Through picture windows, you’ll observe enormous vats of curds being stirred and the “robo cow” packaging cultured products for market. What really excites visitors, though, is the invitation to taste practically every cheese Cabot makes. 2878 Main St. Cabot, VT. cabotcheese.coop/cabot-visitor-center-tours Note: As of January 2018, the Visitors Center in Cabot no longer offers tours, but remains open for cheese sampling and purchases. A video tour of the creamery is now available for visitors.
Photo Credit : Kim Knox Beckius
Anheuser-Busch Budweiser Brewery Tour | Merrimack, NH
Adolphus and Eberhard. The Budweiser Clydesdales. Beechwood aging. You’ll hear about the legendary founders, see the legendary horses, and touch the legendary wood chips on a tour of New England’s only Anheuser-Busch factory, where liquid refreshment is manufactured 24 hours a day, 365 days each year. When you hear the manic clinking of 1,200 bottles a minute being filled, you’re approaching the tasting room, where it’s not just America’s best-selling beer—Bud Light—being poured. Craft ales like Blue Point Honey Robber are also brewed here, and they’re among draft selections that are complimentary: just like the basic tour. Upgrade to a Day Fresh tour, and you’ll sip beer straight from the tank. Or buy Beermaster tour tickets for a true behind-the-scenes experience. 221 Daniel Webster Highway. Merrimack, NH. budweisertours.com/locations/merrimack-new-hampshire.html
Photo Credit : Kim Knox Beckius
Cape Cod Potato Chip Factory Tour | Hyannis, MA
What gives these Cape Cod-made chips their inimitable crunch? It’s the care that goes into every bag—including sample bags guests receive following free factory tours. First made in small batches in an 800-square-foot storefront more than 30 years ago, these all-natural munchables are now sold coast-to-coast in an enticing variety of flavors. On weekdays year-round, self-guided walkthroughs give salty snack fans a tantalizing view of the tender care farm-fresh potatoes receive, as they’re gently unloaded, washed, peeled, quality-inspected, sliced, kettle-cooked, drained, seasoned, and bagged. 100 Breed’s Hill Road. Hyannis, MA. capecodchips.com/about-us/factory-tour.html
Photo Credit : Kim Knox Beckius
Cabot was disappointing
I didn’t think so. It was free and I am embarrassed about how much cheese, crackers, and dip I ate there. Not like B&J where you pay too much of admission to just get a stinkin’ little 1/8 cup or so of ice cream. Then you have to go out to the Scoop Shop and pay an exorbitant amount of money for some ice cream.
What is the best airport to fly into to cover this tour? Suggestions on where to stay and route to take?
fly into Boston! cheaper and then drive!
Cabot stopped factory tours Dec 31, 2017. You see a video in the visitor center instead
You missed the Pez museum in Orange, Connecticut ,.
We loved that place. It had a lot of Pez memorabilia but it wasn’t really a factory tour.
Ben & Jerry’s skimpy, golf-ball-sized cones are a rip-off of the first order. B&J should take a page out of Kimball Farms play book…
My Wife and I visited the PEZ factory recently- great visitor center!
If Cabot is closed to tours then I’d recommend Grafton Cheese in southern Vermont – excellent cheese and good interactive store and facility in Brattleboro.
I agree B&J is to much money, I feel sorry for familys .