Food History
The Forgotten Inventor of the Fluffernutter Sandwich
A history of the nostalgic treat, and my history with it.
Photo by @fitzpusky | Instagram
Join The Sandwich Universe co-hosts (and longtime BFFs) Molly Baz and Declan Bond as they dive deep into beloved, iconic sandwiches.
Listen NowPopular on Food52
59 Comments
Eva W.
May 10, 2020
I grew up in Western Massachusetts and we had marshmallow fluff on occasion as a treat. But in the Years since I have moved away, I have come to especially love it. And if you look at the sugar content, it actually has less sugar than most jams or jellies. It's my guilty pleasure and I don't feel bad eating it! I love to eat it with peanut butter on graham crackers with chocolate chips on top. It's always delicious as a fluffernutter sandwich. I have also discovered that it's amazing on top of the cheese cracker and peanut butter sandwiches that come in a packet.
Mavis
April 27, 2020
Though born in Costa Rica and raised in East L.A. --my 3 older brothers and I were introduced to these by our stepmother. However, she added one thing to amp up the nutrition---bananas. It is still my preferred way and lately, the addition also of Nutella takes it over the top. One brother adds whatever jam he has to that!! Open wide!
Julie K.
April 26, 2020
Three sisters, Brady Bunch, Danskins, Schoolhouse Rock generation. The little sister was a mikey - "she won't eat it, she doesn''t like anything." Captiain crunch with crunch berries, plain homemade hamburgers, spaghetti with butter, and fluffernutters made the cut.
Joanne C.
April 26, 2020
I grew up in 1960's western Massachusetts and it never occurred to me that there were people who didn't like Fluffernutters, only people who had never learned of them. I remember television ads with a jingle that told you how to make them. I still eat one on occasion.
Lorrieaa
April 26, 2020
Iâm from Oregon and when I was little we called them âBoston Cream Sandwichesâ. Now I know why!
jmurphy
April 26, 2020
Oh yes, Brigham's. The ice cream parlor that served hot fudge "marshmallow" sundaes, in a silverish dish with a paper napkin with chocolate sauce intentionally spilled over. I could kill for one of those right now.
Johonna C.
April 26, 2020
â That would gladden the heart of Sarah Dow, the bookkeeper to founder John Bailey. When he retired in 1900, she became the shopâs owner and took a gamble that made dessert history.
âłShe put 6 ounces of ice cream in a 5-ounce dish and poured one and a half ounces of hot fudge on top of it, and it dripped down onto the silver dish,âł Frank Wyman Jr., a former Baileyâs owner, said with reverence. âłBeautiful concept. Beautiful product.âł
Later, Baileyâs supplied mail-order chocolates to Theodore Roosevelt, Calvin Coolidge and John F. Kennedy. Joseph Kennedy Sr., the late presidentâs father, was among the many Boston brahmins who kept his candy preferences on record at the flagship store on Temple Place, at the edge of the Boston Common.â https://apnews.com/7b32edb3bd0c7e85f3e02de48a0c5b27
âłShe put 6 ounces of ice cream in a 5-ounce dish and poured one and a half ounces of hot fudge on top of it, and it dripped down onto the silver dish,âł Frank Wyman Jr., a former Baileyâs owner, said with reverence. âłBeautiful concept. Beautiful product.âł
Later, Baileyâs supplied mail-order chocolates to Theodore Roosevelt, Calvin Coolidge and John F. Kennedy. Joseph Kennedy Sr., the late presidentâs father, was among the many Boston brahmins who kept his candy preferences on record at the flagship store on Temple Place, at the edge of the Boston Common.â https://apnews.com/7b32edb3bd0c7e85f3e02de48a0c5b27
Kathy B.
April 26, 2020
Oh yes ! On the west coast Iâve not seen Flutternutter but I have a jar of JetPuffed Marshmellow Cream........secret pleasure is cracker with the cream and peanut butter.....suddenly everything is better , at least for a bit !
Kat
April 26, 2020
My NJ born mom introduced this delicacy to us as children. I, in turn, introduced it not only to my own two boys but to the other 9 children on our midwestern town street. Even now, at 56, it has not lost its charm...just had it for lunch today!
Mar
April 26, 2020
Marshmallow Creme was considered tacky in our household, bought only by outsiders who were not in the know!
And how about Jimmies? According to the story on the Brighamâs Restaurant menu (ps -Brighamâs is THE worldâs very best ice cream, especially the Mocha Chip):
When a little boy went to Brighamâs for his birthday ice cream with his family, his mom shaved a little of a chocolate bar on top to make his special. When his siblings asked for the same, his mom replied,, â No, those are Jimmyâs because it is his birthday. â.
Jimmies are chocolate, but that multi-color stuff is âsprinklesâ.
And how about Jimmies? According to the story on the Brighamâs Restaurant menu (ps -Brighamâs is THE worldâs very best ice cream, especially the Mocha Chip):
When a little boy went to Brighamâs for his birthday ice cream with his family, his mom shaved a little of a chocolate bar on top to make his special. When his siblings asked for the same, his mom replied,, â No, those are Jimmyâs because it is his birthday. â.
Jimmies are chocolate, but that multi-color stuff is âsprinklesâ.
Joanne G.
April 26, 2020
Thatâs a sweet story (no pun intended ). I didnât know that story
About jimmies. But of course all the kids liked jimmies in their sundaes (though I was more of a chocolate fudge sauce kind of girl!)
About jimmies. But of course all the kids liked jimmies in their sundaes (though I was more of a chocolate fudge sauce kind of girl!)
Joanne G.
April 26, 2020
And agree about the mocha chip! Itâs the whole coffee ice cream thing...! (Uh, Like frozen coffee milk!) Way before there was ever A Starbucks frappacino, there were coffee frappĂ©s atBeaupreâs drug store, back when drug stores had countersâ sometimes even a soda fountain. :-) Made with coffee ice cream. Milk & coffee syrup, and blended with the special machine... But thatâs an aside in the original Fluffernutter â Fluff has a different consistency from that of marshmallow creme.
Joanne G.
April 26, 2020
A walk down memory lane! I grew up in the 60âs in RI, on the Mass border. And âfluffanuttahsâ were definitely an element of my childhood. And yes, accompanied by cold milk but it was coffee milk In RI, not plain, thank you! (Were you an Eclipse or an Autocrat family?)
I would indulge in it only occasionally as I always preferred my PB sandwiches straight upâ no jelly or jam despite the Cellar full of home/made preserves that my grandmother always had on handâ those were best relished By the spoonful, straight out of the jar or on toast! But from time to time, you just HAD to have a Fluffernutter, usually As a snack after school. And for the holidays, my grandmother would use Fluff to make fudge. Iâd venture to guess that Fluffernutters (and that holiday fudge) were Definitely a part of many a New England childhoodâ tho back then, Fluff existed in only one formâ no raspberry or caramel flavors! And please note: âmarshmallow cremeâ Available in other parts of the country is definitely NOT Fluffâ thereâs only one original! :-)
I would indulge in it only occasionally as I always preferred my PB sandwiches straight upâ no jelly or jam despite the Cellar full of home/made preserves that my grandmother always had on handâ those were best relished By the spoonful, straight out of the jar or on toast! But from time to time, you just HAD to have a Fluffernutter, usually As a snack after school. And for the holidays, my grandmother would use Fluff to make fudge. Iâd venture to guess that Fluffernutters (and that holiday fudge) were Definitely a part of many a New England childhoodâ tho back then, Fluff existed in only one formâ no raspberry or caramel flavors! And please note: âmarshmallow cremeâ Available in other parts of the country is definitely NOT Fluffâ thereâs only one original! :-)
Carol C.
April 26, 2020
Try this version: toasted English muffin with butter, then spread peanut butter and fluff on each side. Put it back in toaster oven and broil until fluff turns golden - like a toasted marshmallow- and then eat! Takes it to new heights of tasty comfort food!
Cathy J.
April 26, 2020
Gosh! Our family of six kids grew up eating fluffernutter sandwichs all the time :) We especially enjoyed them any time we went to the beach! It's kinda funny, my sister and I still enjoy them to this day and sometimes she just gets a spoonful of peanut butter then scoops up some fluff and enjoys :) :)
jmurphy
April 26, 2020
I'm from Lynn Massachusetts, and guess what is made there? The good Marshmallow Fluff, we used to take school trips to the factory. Of course, Fluffernutters were part of our family tradition. I don't eat them any more. Did you know that they make raspberry fluff? I really loved that one. I don't know if they still make it. Someone commented on a caramel fluff (now that I have to break the diet and try). When I first moved to Washington DC, my parents would send me jars of the stuff. Now it's everywhere.
Mar
April 26, 2020
Iâm a Mass gal all the way and have taught many about the wonders of a fluffernutter! We grew up with very little junk food, but a fluffernutter made a wicked great dessert. Iâve seen it as a dessert in restaurant! Who also remembers the wonders of Junket for dessert? Itâs difficult to find now because it wonât set when made with modern ultra-pasteurized milk. đ
Diana G.
April 26, 2020
Is that why there is no Junket. I used to eat a raspberry whipped cream cake with it as a glaze.
Jenny
April 26, 2020
I loved Junket. I think there was maple, raspberry and chocolate. Mom often fixed it for me for weekend lunch dessert or an after school snack. Haven't seen it in years.
Kathy B.
April 26, 2020
My grandmother would make a vanilla cake and then serve a piece with less set raspberry junket over the piece - a wonderful yummy memory
MacGuffin
April 26, 2020
You can still get a few Junket ("Junket rennet custard, the growing up dessert . . . "). I used to love it when I was a kid but I'm vegetarian now and it isn't. I loved its weird texture.
Diana G.
April 26, 2020
I grew up in Western Mass and the Fluffernutter was a lunch staple all through school. Even ate the raspberry flavored! Anyone ever eat a peanut butter , fluff and jelly sandwich on white bread? Had to team it with tomato soup to cut the sweetness!
Lauren B.
April 26, 2020
Growing up in the South Bronx I never heard of this stuff. Plus I hated peanut butter until as a young adult I tasted natural crunchy PB. But we made our own version of Fluff, I think, by taking a marshmallow and repeatedly squishing it between the pointer and thumb of each hand Until it became a very sticky and slimy mess that you had to eat carefully lest it get stuck in your hair. I cannot say that I would relish the combination, though. Rather have PB with banana and marshmallow fluff...maybe as part of a skmore when you can't have a fire?
ctgal
April 26, 2020
I'm from Connecticut, and it was definitely around in my youth. My mother never bought it, I never had it at a friend's house, and so I never wanted it. I always wondered why people liked it. It always struck me as disgusting and probably really sweet. Now, peanut butter and jelly is still one of my favorite things, and I eat it with Wilkinson's raspberry jam.
Jenny
April 26, 2020
I have never been a fan of Fluffernutters. Fluff was junkfood to my parents, and they would not buy it. Mom's homemade jams and jellies (crabapple, currant, strawberry, raspberry) were so good, I did not mind. However, I devoured them at the neighbors. Forbidden fruit!
MacGuffin
April 26, 2020
Ditto on the Fluffernutter but there's usually Marshmallow fluff in my pantry because, combined with a few drops of water, it becomes *drumroll* marshmallow sauce for homemade marshmallow sundaes! In addition, because it's vegetarian (unlike most marshmallows), it's a great hot chocolate/cocoa (depending on my mood) topping for me. I remember seeing a similar Kraft product growing up in Detroit but I've never seen it in the NYC area.
Giny W.
April 26, 2020
I grew up eating these as a kid and loved them! Now, in my 60's and living in Norway for almost 10 yrs., I found not only Fluff here in Scandinavia, which I use in a favorite Christmas fudge, but Fluff's newer flavor I didn't know existed ... Caramel Fluff! Be still my heart! And yes - it elevates the Fluffernutter to new heights of deliciousness.
Giny W.
April 26, 2020
We are just over an hour from Sweden, so we do some of our shopping there as certain items are half the price there than here. That is where I found the Caramel flavor, but have since seen it several places. I'm sure it's Stateside, too. You might need to Google it. đ It's worth finding
MacGuffin
April 26, 2020
Thanks for the response!
Unfortunately, this seems to be something either discontinued in the States or manufactured only for the European market. However, in my quest for caramel, I found strawberry on the Durkee site. I figured it's worth trying, so I ordered a coupla jars at a decent price on Amazon.
Unfortunately, this seems to be something either discontinued in the States or manufactured only for the European market. However, in my quest for caramel, I found strawberry on the Durkee site. I figured it's worth trying, so I ordered a coupla jars at a decent price on Amazon.
Giny W.
April 26, 2020
We have that, too! It's almost embarrassing. I have my daughter shipping my favorite coffee & PB, etc., over the pond and we actually have the special flavors of Fluff!!! đ
Renee K.
April 26, 2020
Yes to the Fluffernutter! My daughter and I were just talking about this! Itâs the best on Saltine crackersâthe ultimate sweet/salty, smooth/crunchy combination. Also, here in Northeast PA, thereâs a candy company that makes âClub Sandwichesâ: peanut butter spread between saltines and coated in chocolate. Another awesome combination.
Join The Conversation