CORRECTION: A previous version of this story misspelled the last name of the Croley sisters. The mistake has been corrected. (Oct. 6, 2023)    

LEXINGTON, Ky. — A Lexington creamery is joining over a dozen Black-owned food businesses in the city. It opened earlier this year. 


What You Need To Know

  • A Lexington creamery is joining over a dozen Black-owned food businesses in the city

  • Jerrica and Jameshia Croley are not only co-owners; they’re also sisters

  • Jerrica and Jameshia Croley touted their creamery’s unlimited options

Never Too Much is a creamery near Lexington’s east end, off West 6th Street.

Jerrica and Jameshia Croley are not only co-owners; they’re also sisters. Their ice cream shop is next door to another Black-owned business: a barbershop, owned by their dad.

The sisters ice cream business includes support from family and is located next door to their father's barbershop. (Spectrum News 1/Sabriel Metcalf)

Jameshia said she and her sister wanted to bring affordable ice cream — and a new vibe — to the city.

“Me and my sister love to travel, and so going out of town, we would go to these high-end restaurants and we would have to pay like $70, $80 for these big, high-end milkshakes,” Jameshia said. “We didn’t have anything like that in our community. So, we wanted to bring something like that here, but not have to break people’s backs for it as well.”

The sisters said their ice cream is for everyone, and their ultimate goal is to make people smile. Their store is brightly colored and they welcome everyone to indulge.

They said they’ve developed new entrepreneurial skills since they opened their doors. The Croley sisters said they see this as their chance to pour love and economic growth back into their community.

“We literally grew up maybe two streets up the road,” Jerrica said. “We’ve just been here our entire life and we just wanted to bring it back to everyone here.”

They said they’ve kept family values at the forefront of their business, too.

“It’s been great to have the opportunity to do it with my sister. We kind of came into the ice cream business — to the business world as a whole — just jumping off a limb,” Jameshia said.

The creamery offers unlimited toppings. (Spectrum News 1/Sabriel Metcalf)

She said she’s seen them both grow together, and as individuals, now that they’re business owners. Jameshia said she’s grown even closer to Jerrica, too. The duo said they dream of expanding beyond their current location one day.

Regardless of where their ice cream shop takes them, their mom said she’s proud of the foundation her daughters are building.

“Like when I’m gone, I know that they will be taken care of. When they leave, I know that their babies will be taken care of. It’s just exciting,” said Quenora Croley.