creamery : noun Shop where one sells of dairy products, eggs.
Change creamery: leave one bar or cafe to go to another.
Go to the creamery: practice cunnilingus.
The expression "Change dairy":
- Leaving one place (store, bar, restaurant, etc.) for another.
- Change employer, employee ...
In the XNUMXth century, we designated by dairy a place of restoration offering much more than dairy products, place where, sometimes, debauchery was in full swing, the spirits being heated by the alcohol which flowed freely.
Moreover, in the Large universal dictionary published by Larousse in 1863, we find this definition: "For some years now, certain establishments have been designated under the name of creameries, standing in the middle between the restaurant and the café, and where everything is sold, except cream, kind of tavern with a particular aspect, where rice pudding, coffee with cream, chocolate, chops and fried eggs reign almost supreme. "
We can then imagine a few merry fellows a little tipsy, deciding, just to continue the evening, to change dairy regularly.
It is by extension that the word dairy ended up designating an establishment, then a supplier or any collaborator.
– Quote from the American writer John Fante (1909-1983): “The room was crawling with mice at the end, so I stopped the cheese and only gave them bread. They didn't like bread. Result, they all changed creameries” in the novel Ask the dust (1939)