From Farmer’s Market to Community Staple: The Ice Cream Barn’s Sweet Success Story

Step behind the counter at The Ice Cream Barn as they bring us inside their family-owned business

Share
From Farmer’s Market to Community Staple: The Ice Cream Barn’s Sweet Success Story
Copy

The buzz is palpable when you enter the Barn. The sound of cows mooing from across the street. The feel of that lukewarm spring air. The fresh scent of fresh waffle cones baking just inches away. It’s an inviting sensory overload when you first arrive at the Ice Cream Barn in Swansea, MA.

An early spring morning at the Ice Cream Barn on Baker Farm in Swansea, MA
An early spring morning at the Ice Cream Barn on Baker Farm in Swansea, MA
Dewey Raposo

Thomas and Jocelyn Seiter had been lugging their “Rhode Ilin Ice Cream” cart to farmer’s markets all over southern New England when they met Kenny Baker, the sixth-generation owner of Baker Farm in the historic Hortonville district of Swansea. After some conversation at the Hope St. Farmer’s Market, a natural partnership was formed. The rest, as they say, is history. The three would go on to open The Ice Cream Barn in 2012.

You would think after over a decade of working together there might be some fatigue, but that’s hardly the case. “I think our love for making ice cream comes from the process,” Tom explained. “We started off with no knowledge and here we are with this thriving business. How could you not fall in love with that process if it’s gone the way it has?”

Close
The Ice Cream Barn on Baker Farm in Swansea, Massachusetts
Dewey Raposo

Beyond ice cream, Jocelyn notes the relationships the two have formed with their young employees and their community. “A lot of kids, it’s their first job. They’ve worked here, gone on to be supervisors, they’ve gone off into the real world and are now successful with ‘big people jobs.’ We’ve known some of our customers for 12 years. They started coming here when they didn’t have kids, and now their child is in 6th grade.” The Barn has become a staple for many folks in Swansea and the surrounding areas. “The connections you make with the people and their families and friends – it’s a special place for so many people, as well as us. We’ve even had a couple get married here because it was their first date here.”

A fresh waffle bowl with Apple Crisp ice cream
A fresh waffle bowl with Apple Crisp ice cream
Dewey Raposo

Often times it’s not the flavor of the ice cream, but the texture after mixing the ingredients that can be the most challenging. The Seiters were able to perfect their base vanilla ice cream almost immediately. Other flavors have taken a little more time and research. “Our Pumpkin Patch ice cream probably took us three or four years to perfect,” Tom recalled. “We would make batches of it and we would keep extensive notes and we’d change little parts of the formula every time and we’d write down what would change.”

As much fun as it can be experimenting with different flavors, the Seiters have learned that ice cream making is as much a science as it is an art form. “Ice cream is basically a bunch of little ice crystals,” Jocelyn explains. “They’re naturally drawn to each other and you want them to not be drawn to each other. If you don’t freeze it fast enough, it’ll taste icy on your tongue and we don’t want that.” Tom is also very much enamored with the product and its complexities. “It’s amazing that it exists. There are some ice crystals, there’s a fat matrix with partially coalesced fat molecules in there. And it all needs to work perfectly in order to be lickable ice cream.”

Scooping a Cranberry Jubilee sundae at The Ice Cream Barn
Scooping a Cranberry Jubilee sundae at The Ice Cream Barn
Dewey Raposo

From vanilla and chocolate, all the way to “Cranberry Jubilee” and “Black Raspberry Oreo” – it’s become about more than just ice cream. “It’s a place where people come when they’re having a bad day, or it’s a place they come when they’re having the best day of their lives. The connections with the people…it all started with just a thought of making really good ice cream and it’s become so much more than that. That’s something I think we didn’t expect when we first started.”

Wide
The Ice Cream Barn on a busy weekday afternoon
Dewey Raposo

Drop in health and economic indicators drives decline in latest KIDS COUNT report, as advocates call for urgent investments in housing, jobs, and family supports
After years of advocacy, the General Assembly approved a measure to ban the sale and manufacture — but not possession — of assault-style weapons; McKee says he will sign it into law despite criticism and looming legal challenges
Despite new taxes and fees on drivers, property owners, and nicotine pouches, the fiscal 2026 budget passed with minimal opposition and includes boosts for health care and schools — but RIPTA funding still falls short
With more than 100 bridges rated in poor condition and urgent repairs lagging, new reporting by Rhode Island PBS and The Public’s Radio reveals the deeper infrastructure risks across the state — and the lack of clear accountability for fixing them
From Senate President Val Lawson’s dual roles to stalled ethics reforms and lobbying imbalances, Common Cause RI’s John Marion joins ‘Political Roundtable’ to assess where democracy stands—and how everyday Rhode Islanders can still make a difference
Every year, the James Beard Foundation recognizes exceptional restaurants and chefs throughout the country, one of the highest honors in the culinary field. Earlier this week, they announced this year’s winners. Sky Haneul Kim, the chef at Gift Horse in Providence, won ‘Best Chef Northeast’