Rhode Island Survival Kit gift box, open, with Autocrat coffee syrup, Del's lemonade mix, Kenyon's johnnycake meal, hot wiener sauce mix, a local snack, field guide, and gift note.

The homesick classic

Rhode Island Survival Kit

$69 shipping included, contiguous U.S.

Everything a displaced Rhode Islander misses and can't explain to their new neighbors, in one gift-ready box: the state drink, the summer slush, the wiener-joint flavor, the colonial griddle cake, and a snack from a local maker — with a field guide so the recipient's household finally understands them.

Deluxe edition — $99: everything below plus two additional local favorites and upgraded gift presentation. The popular choice for corporate and closing gifts — bulk inquiries welcome.

Packing slip, annotated

What's tucked inside — and why it matters.

Every item is factory-sealed, shelf-stable, and commercially packaged. Each one earns its place: it's either made in Rhode Island, made by a New England brand, or it's the shelf-stable key to a Rhode Island tradition you can't ship any other way.

Autocrat coffee syrup bottle in the Rhode Island Survival Kit.

Rhode Island Coffee Syrup

Made in Rhode Island

A sweetened coffee concentrate you stir into cold milk — two or three tablespoons per glass — to make coffee milk. Not iced coffee. Not a latte. Coffee milk.

The story

On July 29, 1993, the Rhode Island General Assembly named coffee milk the official state drink — narrowly defeating Del's frozen lemonade after loud, passionate debate, in possibly the most Rhode Island political contest ever held. The drink itself traces to the state's Italian immigrant communities and drugstore soda fountains of the late 1800s and early 1900s. Two names fought for Rhode Island's fridge doors for generations: Autocrat, founded in 1895 as the Brownell & Field coffee company ("A Swallow Will Tell You"), and Eclipse, founded in 1914, which put syrup on store shelves in 1938. Autocrat acquired Eclipse in 1991 — briefly making one Lincoln, RI factory essentially the entire American coffee-syrup industry — and still bottles both labels, because Rhode Islanders inherited their brand loyalty and refuse to switch. You'll find it in the milk aisle of every supermarket in the state, shelved like it's normal.

Del's-style frozen lemonade mix in the Rhode Island Survival Kit.

Del's-Style Lemonade Mix

Rhode Island tradition

A shelf-stable take-home version of the frozen lemonade that defines a Rhode Island summer. Mix, freeze, scrape, repeat.

The story

The recipe begins in 1840 in Naples, Italy, where the DeLucia family mixed winter snow with lemon juice and sugar. Franco DeLucia carried the recipe to America at the turn of the century; his son Angelo spent years engineering a machine to make the slush commercially, and in 1948 the first Del's stand opened in Cranston. Angelo's fleet of Del's trucks then spread the green-and-yellow cup across the state, where it remains the official uniform of a Rhode Island summer — stands and carts appear at every beach, ballfield, and festival from Memorial Day on. House rules, which the enclosed card explains: no straw. You squeeze the cup, drink from the rim, and there is a correct rhythm to it. In the 1993 state-drink vote, Del's was the runner-up — this box diplomatically contains both sides of that ballot.

Hot wiener sauce spice mix in the Rhode Island Survival Kit.

Hot Wiener Seasoning

Rhode Island tradition

The spice blend for the meat sauce that makes a "New York System" wiener — enough to recreate wiener-joint night in any kitchen in America.

The story

Greek immigrant families built this tradition: the Pappas family opened the Original New York System on Smith Street in 1927, a short walk from the State House, borrowing Coney Island's glamour for a style that exists nowhere in New York. In 1946, cousins who'd been running a similar counter in Brooklyn — the Stavrianakos family, later Stevens — opened Olneyville New York System, which went on to win the James Beard Foundation's America's Classics Award in 2014 and has been featured on Man v. Food, Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern, and The Best Thing I Ever Ate. The order is "all the way": meat sauce, yellow mustard, chopped raw onion, and a snowfall of celery salt on a small wiener in a steamed bun. Countermen famously lined finished wieners up a bare forearm to dress them in batches — folklore now, but true. This box can't ship the counter at 2 a.m., but it ships the flavor.

Kenyon's johnnycake meal in the Rhode Island Survival Kit.

Johnnycake Mix

Rhode Island tradition

Stone-ground cornmeal for the griddle cakes Rhode Islanders have been making since before there was a Rhode Island.

The story

Johnnycakes begin with the Narragansett people, who ground the region's whitecap flint corn centuries before colonists arrived and adopted the recipe wholesale — the name may come from "journey cakes," because they traveled well. The gold standard is stone-ground meal from Kenyon's Grist Mill in Usquepaugh, where corn has been ground on the same Queen's River site since 1696 — Rhode Island's oldest manufacturer, still working out of its 1886 mill building, and host of a beloved Johnny Cake Festival for four decades. Know this before serving: Rhode Island maintains a genuine west-of-the-bay vs. east-of-the-bay johnnycake dispute — thin and lacy versus thick and cakey — and families do not switch sides. The included card presents both methods without taking a position, which is the only safe editorial stance.

Local snack in the Rhode Island Survival Kit.

A Local Snack (Rotating)

New England maker

One factory-sealed treat from a small Rhode Island or southeastern New England producer — granola, kettle corn, candy, or whatever's best that month.

The story

Rhode Island punches absurdly above its weight in small food makers, thanks in part to a food-business incubator in Warren that has launched hundreds of tiny producers. This slot is our rotating tribute to that scene — each box names the maker and where to find more of their work.

Little Rhody field guide in the Rhode Island Survival Kit.

The Rhode Island Field Guide + Gift Note

Printed by us

Our printed guide to Rhode Island English and customs, plus your personal gift note, handwritten-style, on a postcard.

The story

What's a bubbler? Why is a milkshake with ice cream called a cabinet? What exactly is a quahog, and how many ways can it become dinner? Why do directions reference landmarks that closed in 1994? The field guide covers the essential vocabulary so the recipient's household can finally translate — or so a new Rhode Islander can pass.

Exactness promise: the specific brands and sizes in the current box are listed at purchase, every item ships in its original factory-sealed packaging with its manufacturer's label and allergen information intact, and we never substitute without contacting you first. See our substitution policy and allergen information.

Who this box is for

  • The Rhode Islander who moved away and won't stop talking about it
  • College students from RI — or stationed in RI and now converted
  • New residents who need orientation materials
  • Anyone who has ever had to explain what a cabinet is
  • Realtor closing gifts and client thank-yous with actual personality

How it arrives

Packed by hand in small batches in southeastern Massachusetts, in gift-ready packaging — tissue, crinkle, insert cards, and your note. No prices inside, ever. Ships within 2–4 business days with tracking, anywhere in the contiguous U.S. Full shipping details.