Farm to Slope – The Whole Animal Project at Okemo Mountain Resort

Throughout Executive Chef Scot Emerson’s career, he has been working towards a more ethical and sustainable approach to food. To combat food waste, serve hormone-free product raised humanely, and sustain his farm partners, Chef Scot is committed to bringing whole animals into his kitchen at Okemo Mountain Resort

Running a culinary program at a ski area means appealing to a wide segment of guests, many of whom aren’t focused on a farm-to-table concept. However, the corporate nature of the resort has actually proven to be an asset for this project – Chef Scot closely assigns value to each cut of the animal and makes sure to utilize and distribute product throughout Okemo’s many restaurants. So far 24 pigs, a Wagyu beef cow from Spring-Rock Farm and chickens have come whole to Okemo. Chef Scot’s preference for whole animals has proven invaluable to his farm partners.

Chef Scot met poultry farmers Clark Parmelee and Tori Managan of Parmelee Farm at the Vermont Food Matchmaker (VFN coordinates) last winter. Already impressed with their chicken quality and ethical growing practices, his first question to the young farmers was about their goals. Clark and Tori had just received their USDA approval for a slaughtering facility and they were looking to increase their flock. Scot signed on to purchase 25-30% of their birds, amounting to 1,000 throughout the summer. Together, Scot, Clark and Tori planned and experimented with size and timing, so they could deliver consistent birds on a schedule that would allow the Okemo team to process them regularly and would also give Parmelee farm the ability to add other accounts into their cycle – they would never be producing exclusively for Okemo. “It’s important for me to not be too much of a farmer’s business plan,” Chef Scot explained, “that way, if anything changes on either side, the farmer will not fall flat.” Chef Scot aims for slow, controlled growth in his partnerships, making the relationship stronger and more reliable for both the farmer and chef.

Processing whole animals on-site has been an exciting endeavor for the team at Okemo – a strong team that includes all former executive chefs at stand-alone restaurants, like Chef Jason Tostrup, that were seeking more consistency in their work-life. Butchering, preparing charcuterie and utilizing bones, gizzards and other bits comes as a welcome and familiar challenge to them, but Chef Scot is forging new territory in the ski industry. The system that Chef Scot is developing with his team will lay the groundwork for others looking to move into sourcing whole animals, especially on a large scale– and he is excited to share his work.

We will continue to follow Chef Scot Emerson’s whole animal project and Okemo’s growing farm-to-slope movement. Stay tuned!  

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Thanksgiving Farmers’ Markets

It’s the time of year to celebrate all that we’re thankful for…and that includes local food! It may be getting colder, but farmers’ markets across the state are still going strong. This weekend, many markets are featuring pre-Thanksgiving specials, inviting foodies to stop by and pick up all the fixin’s for a locavore Thanksgiving. Take a look at the list below to find a market near you!

Thanksgiving Farmers’ Markets

Thursday, November 19th
Feast & Field Market
5-7:30pm/Barnard Town Hall

Jericho Farmers’ Market
4-7:30pm/Mt. Mansfield UU Barn

 
Friday, November 20th
Bellows Falls Farmers’ Market 
4-7pm/33 Bridge Street

Hartland Farmers’ Market
4-7pm/Damon Hall

 
Saturday, November 21st 
Bennington Farmers’ Market 
10am-2pm/First Baptist Church

Burlington Farmers’ Market
10am-2pm/Memorial Auditorium

Brattleboro Winter Market
10am-2pm/Robert H. Gibson River Garden

Caledonia Winter Market
10am-1pm/St. Johnsbury Welcome Center

Capital City Farmers’ Market 
10am-2pm/Montpelier High School  

Champlain Islands Winter Market
10am-2pm/South Hero Congregational Church

Thanksgiving Farmers’ Markets

(Saturday Markets Continued)
10am-2pm/75 Maple Street, Essex JCT

Groton Growers Market
10am-1pm/Groton Community Building

 
Norwich Farmers’ Market
10am-1pm/Tracy Hall

Rutland Winter Farmers Market
10am-2pm/VT Farmers Food Center 

West River Farmers’ Market
10am-1pm/Flood Brook Union School

Windsor Farmers’ Market
11am-2pm/Windsor Welcome Center

 
Sunday, November 22
Dorset Winter Market
10am-2pm/JK Adams

Inn at the Round Barn’s Thanksgiving Market
10am-2pm/Waitsfield

Northfield Farmers’ Market
11am-2pm/Norwich University

Putney Farmers’ Market
11am-2pm/Green Mountain Orchards

South Burlington Farmers’ Market
11am-3pm/University Mall

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Fall Cocktails with Vermont Spirits!

Vermont Spirits Distilling Company of Quechee is aptly named. Steve Johnson, President and CEO, uses Vermont grown corn, juniper berries, apples and maple syrup in his products. He credits much of the distillery’s success to the high quality of local ingredients. Even their product names are inspirited by Vermont; Copper’s Gin is named after Vermont’s first currency and No. 14 refers to Vermont joining the union as the 14th state.

What is Vermont Spirits’ whiskey distiller Joe Buswell excited about? Whiskey, of course!

Joe loves his job as the whiskey man at Vermont Spirits. Senior distiller Harry Gorman oversees the production of their higher volume vodkas, while Joe gets to experiment with smaller batches, “with lots of room to work and explore!” says Joe. No. 14 Bourbon Whiskey with Maple has created a buzz. After a limited summer launch sparked demand, they have increased production to meet the growing interest. Starting with five year aged bourbon, Joe filters the liquor through charcoal and finishes No. 14 with a touch of maple. The result is a complex, distinguished liquor with a mellowed, faintly sweet edge. The drinking ease and versatility of No. 14 makes it one of Joe’s new favorites!

Vermont Spirits features No. 14 in these two plays on classic cocktails!

No. 14 Old Fashioned

3oz No. 14 Bourbon
2tsp Simple Syrup
2 dashes Angostura Bitters
3 dashes Fee Brothers Orange Bitters

 

No. 14 Side Car
2oz No. 14 Bourbon
1oz Dekuyper Orange Curacao Liquer
2oz Fresh Lemon Juice
Garnish with a Fresh Orange Slice

CURACAO LIQUEUR

Or enjoy these two fall cocktails featuring Vermont Spirits Vodka-perfect for your next party!

Baked Golden Apple

3/4 oz Vermont Gold Vodka
1 oz Eden Ice Cider
1/4 oz Goldschläger® (just for sparkle)
3/4 oz sparkling apple cider
Serve on the rocks with an apple slice garnish.

Liberation Libation

2 oz Vermont Gold Vodka
1/2 oz Vermont maple syrup
1 1/2 oz non-alcoholic sparkling apple cider
Chill over ice, strain and serve in a cinnamon-sugar rimmed martini glass.

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Vermont Thanksgiving- Recipes from the Farm

What are we thankful for, here at Vermont Fresh Network?

We are thankful for our thriving farms overflowing with delectable and nutritious, late-season harvests and we’re thankful for our creative and inspiring chefs for serving up this delicious produce in in exciting, innovative ways.  In fact, some of our beloved farmers and chefs took the time to share their favorite Thanksgiving recipes and advice with us so we can all enjoy a fresh and local holiday! Here are two delicious recipes from our farm partners at Foote Brook Farm and Earth Sky Time Farm.

Beets with Caramelized Onions and Feta from Foote Brook Farm– Johnson, VT

This is really simple, but a favorite. Serves 4-6.

4 large beets
1/2 cup feta cheese
2 sweet onions (or yellow)
2 tablespoon butter.
1 cup toasted walnuts

Place beets in a large stock pot add water and boil for about an hour.
Place walnuts on a cookie sheet and roast in oven at 350 for about 6-8 minutes
Slice onions and saute’ in butter for about 40 minutes on low heat until golden brown.
Once beets have boiled for about an hour (maybe 45 minutes for smaller beets) run under cold water and peels should just slide right off.
Cut into slices and place in a 13X9X2 baking dish.
Place onions and feta cheese on top, roast for another 10 minutes.
Sprinkle walnuts and serve!

MoCheesey Bread from Earth Sky Time Community Farm– Manchester, VT

As we have gone from just being a farm into becoming a bakery too. We have especially enjoyed finding ways to use our own produce in the breads we make and sell. This one has become a favorite at all of our farmers markets. It is named after one of our farm interns from last Spring.

Follow any whole wheat bread dough recipe, (we make ours with our 100% whole wheat sourdough levain)
Scale out a 2 lb piece of dough and stretch it into a vaguely rectangular shape, the thickness could be anywhere between a quarter and a half inch. Rub pureed garlic all over the stretched dough, then add plenty of coarsely chopped raw kale (or any other kinds of greens) and some chopped onions or leeks.

Sprinkle on lots of shredded cheese, we use Cabot cheddar and mozzarella.

Spread the toppings all over the stretched out dough, then roll it up creating a spiral of dough and fillings.

When it is all rolled up, tuck the ends in and set the loaf in a bowl. Let it rise until it is about 50% bigger- then remove or flip the loaf out of the bowl and set it onto a  cornmeal dusted sheet pan or pizza stone.

Make a few slashes on the top of the loaf with a sharp knife (this lets the gooey melted cheese ooze out!

Sprinkle on poppy seeds and bake at 420 until the crust is dark and the dough is cooked through.

That’s MOCHEESEY, but if that sounds like too much work, come find us at the Dorset winter farmers market every Sunday from 10-2 at JK Adams store. We always have samples of all our breads. And we sell our certified organic cold hardy salad greens all winter long! Happy Thanksgiving!

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Vermont Ice Cider- a How-To Guide

Eleanor Leger of Eden Ice Cider (now Eden Specialty Ciders) gave us the 411 on this unique Vermont beverage…

Ice cider is a delicious sweet-tart apple dessert wine that is a pure reflection of Vermont terroir. 

How it’s made: Vermont apples are pressed and the fresh cider is put outside to freeze in the cold Vermont winter air. Once frozen the cider blocks are brought inside to thaw; the first 10% of juice that melts off is highly concentrated in sugar and flavor, and only this concentrate is used to ferment into ice cider. It takes over 8 lbs. of apples to create one beautiful 375ml bottle of ice cider!

Serve chilled to about 46 degrees, this can be done by putting it into the fridge 30 minutes before serving.
Pour in small port glass, 2 to 3 oz is appropriate for such a flavorful and sweet drink.
Pair with cured meats, Vermont artisanal cheeses (blue cheese or clothbound cheddar are a fantastic choice), autumn and winter desserts, or just as dessert on its own.

Enjoy this wonderful taste of Vermont!

Pick up one of these exceptional varieties from your local, specialty grocer or wine shop to add instant panache to your holiday table.

Boyden Ice Cider– They use Vermont grown Northern Spy, Macintosh, and Empire apples to create a truly extraordinary cider. Aged in French oak barrels, the final product is a sweet, but complex combination concentrated apple flavors and light, toasted oak that goes perfectly with any number of desserts also, it’s a real treat just on its own.

Champlain Orchards Honeycrisp – This light and elegant ice cider is made 100% from Honeycrisp apples grown by Champlain Orchards in Shoreham, Vermont.  It has a wonderful pure apple flavor with the characteristic sweet tang of the sought-after Honeycrisp apple. Perfect for apple season, it pairs well with washed rind cheeses, fall fruit desserts and cheesecake.

Eden Ice Cider:
Heirloom Blend– Their flagship variety features, in addition to MacIntosh and Empire, Russets providing full-bodied sweetness, Calville Blanc and Esopus Spitzenburg provide acidity and citrus notes for balance, and Ashmead’s Kernel provides natural tannins for structure. Serve it with artisanal cheeses, game or dessert.
Northern Spy– This single-varietal ice cider is aged in French oak barrels, imparting structure and delicate spice. Northern Spy is an antique variety of apple that was one of the three most popular in America at the end of the 19th century. It has a sweetly tart flavor that is superbly enhanced by the oak. Enjoy this rich treat on its own after dinner, with a creamy blue cheese, or even a cigar!

Windfall Orchard – This smooth, rich ice cider is made 100% from apples grown by Brad Koehler of Windfall Orchard in Cornwall, Vermont and features more than 30 apple varieties. It tastes of fresh apple, pear and peach, and is full-bodied and well balanced. Perfect for serving with desserts and cheeses all year round.  

 

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Thanksgiving Recipes from Vermont Farms and Kitchens

We asked Vermont farmers and chefs for their favorite Thanksgiving recipes featuring Vermont-grown food. Here are their delicious responses. Happy Thanksgiving!

 

Readmore Apple Cider Caramelized Onion Tart 

“This is one of our special brunch dishes! The caramelized onions are a wonderful side dish on their own but make a beautiful side when placed in a tart shell with cheddar cheese and sliced apples. It is delicious to serve at a brunch, on the side, or as an appetizer, and tastes best, I think, even at room temperature. We love using all local and organic ingredients in it.” ~ Shared by Dorothy Read of Readmore Inn

Ingredients:

  • 1 tbsp. unsalted butter
  • 2 – 3 large sweet Vermont onions, sliced
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • 1/2 cup organic Vermont apple cider
  • 1 tart shell
  • 6 ounces grated Vermont cheddar, a little more for the top
  • 1 Cortland apple, sliced into 24 slices
  • 1 shot of Vermont maple liquor

For the caramelized onions:
Slice the onions thinly, you should have a heaping quart. Heat a sauté pan and melt butter. For this preparation, I use an enameled cast-iron pan or stainless steel. Avoid non-stick pans as these do not encourage the lovely browning.
Over medium heat, season and cook onions, stirring occasionally until they start to brown. Cover, and continue to cook, stirring every five minutes or so. Once nicely browned, keep stirring and add the cider, scraping up any brown from the bottom. Uncovered, continue cooking until the cider has been absorbed and the onions are an even more intense brown color.
You can stop right here and served this as a side dish or topping for crostini!

To make the tart:
Pre-bake a pie shell, but don’t let it brown. Slice the apples and pour the maple liquor over them, massaging it into the apples so they are evenly coated. You can also substitute Calvados in this step.
Line the shell with a cup of grated cheddar cheese, and arrange the apple slices in two concentric circles on top. Place the onions on top of this and spread evenly. Sprinkle a little more cheese on top, along with a couple of slices of apple for decoration, and pop back in the oven and bake another 15 minutes at 350, or just until the edges of the crust are browned and the cheese is starting to brown.

Fat Toad Farm Cajeta (goat’s milk caramel) with Baked Brie

Creamy Vermont Brie baked it in flaky puff pastry and drizzled with Fat Toad Farm Caramel for a quick and delicious holiday appetizer! ~ Shared by Judith Irving of Fat Toad Farm 

Ingredients:

  • 1 round or wedge of your favorite Brie or Camembert cheese (We reccomend Blue Ledge Farm Camembrie-VFN)
  • 1 sheet or 1/2 package thawed puff pastry
  • 4 oz of your favorite flavor of Fat Toad Farm Goat’s Milk Caramel (cajeta)
  • 1 egg, beaten
  •  Almonds (optional)

Directions:

Preheat oven to 425°F. Roll out puff pastry on a lightly greased baking sheet. Place cheese in the middle of puff pastry and create a small indent in top of the cheese with a spoon. Fill indent with caramel, then bundle puff pastry up and around cheese. Lightly brush pastry with egg mixture. Bake for 20-25 minutes. Let cool for 5 minutes before serving with your favorite crackers or French bread. Enjoy!

Cranberry Sauce

Kelly spends her holidays cooking up pies to-go for the Spears Store in East Charlotte, so this simple and delicious side is the perfect accompaniment to her Thanksgiving Spread. ~ Shared by Kelly Murphy of Lewis Creek Catering

Ingredients:

  • 1 bag Vermont cranberries
  • 2 oranges, peeled
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 Tbs fresh lemon juice

Process everything in a food processor. Refrigerate until ready to serve.

Chef Colin’s Oyster Stuffing

Both oysters and bacon make the cut for this scrumptious holiday side! ~ Shared by Chef de Cuisine Colin Arthur of Red Clover Inn and Restaurant

Ingredients:

  • 3 teaspoons garlic
  • 10 cups French bread cubed
  • 1 cup bacon lardons
  • 2 onions small dice
  • 8 celery stocks small dice
  • 1/2 lbs butter
  • 40 blue point oysters, reserve liquor
  • 1 cup chicken stock
  • ¼ cup sweet vermouth
  • Thyme (to taste)
  • Sage (to taste)
  • Salt (to taste)
  • Pepper (to taste)

Toast French bread cubes, set aside. Render bacon lardons Add butter and sweat onion, celery, garlic, Season with salt, pepper, and herbs. Deglaze with Vermouth. Add oysters, oyster liquor, toasted bread, vegetable mixture and place in greased pan. Bake for 30 minutes at 350*

Sausage-Sweet Potato Bake 

“I love this recipe! It’s a quick dish that is both sweet and savory. All of our girls enjoy it (although they could do without the onion layer …) Most of the year, we are able to make it with 100% local ingredients (minus the optional s&p and brown sugar)!” ~ Shared by Brooke Hughes-Muse of Laughing Child Farm

Brown in skillet:

1 lb bulk sausage
Break up large pieces and drain off excess fat.

Arrange in 2 qt casserole:

2 medium sweet potatoes, sliced and boiled until almost tender
3 medium apples, peeled and sliced
1 onion, sliced very thin
browned sausage
salt and pepper to taste, optional

Sprinkle over top:

2 T brown sugar, optional

Cover and bake at 350* for 30 – 40 minutes, or until apples are tender.

Bacon Roasted Brussels Sprouts

Lardons or thick cut bacon heighten the flavor of these easy, delicious and seasonal brussels sprouts. ~ Shared by Chris Bailey of Vermont Smoke and Cure

Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 cups bacon lardons (1/4 – 3/8” square by the height of the belly, from a mini slab; or thick cut bacon, 1/2”+ pieces
  • 2 large shallots, sliced
  • 1 1/2 lbs. Brussels sprouts, halved
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1 Tablespoon fresh thyme, chopped, or 1teaspoon dried
  • Salt and Pepper

Directions:

In a large saute pan, on medium heat, cook the bacon for three to five minutes to render out much of the fat.

Add sliced shallots and sauté slowly until completely soft. Add Brussels sprouts and saute on medium heat for three minutes. Add water to pan and then place in a preheated 350-degree oven for 10 minutes. Add salt, pepper and thyme. Serve immediately.

Roasted Butternut Squash and Apple Soup from “Cooking Close to Home: A Year of Seasonal Recipes” by Diane Imrie and Richard Jarmusz

This soup makes delicious use of late season produce. ~ Shared by Laura and Mari of Green Mountain Girl’s Farm

Ingredients:

  • 1 McIntosh apple, peeled, cored and cut in half
  • 1 butternut squash, sliced in half with seeds removed
  • 1 head fresh garlic
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • 1 cup apple cider
  • 2 cups vegetable stock
  • 1/8 teaspoon crushed red pepper
  • Salt and fresh ground black pepper, to taste

Garnish:

  • 1/4 cup nonfat sour cream
  • 1 teaspoon minced pickled jalapeno pepper
  • 2 tablespoons fresh parsley

(Note: We used plain yogurt and dill for our garnish; and ate it garnish-less, too)

Process: Preheat oven to 350 degrees Place the squash in a roasting pan, cut side facing up. Place half of the apple in each center of the squash halves. Cover and bake for 60 to 75 minutes, or until squash is soft all the way through. Remove from the oven and let cool slightly. While the squash is baking, wrap the head of garlic in aluminum foil and bake for 30 minutes, or until soft. Heat a soup pot over medium heat. Add the oil and onions and saute until soft, approximately 10 minutes. Remove the squash from its skin, and place the squash and apple in a food processor (I used a blender), including any pan juices. Remove 3 cloves from the baked garlic. Add the 3 garlic cloves and the sauteed onion to the squash and process until smooth. Add some of the cider if necessary to blend the squash (I added all the cider). Return the squash mixture to the soup pot. Add the cider, stock, crushed red pepper, salt and pepper and simmer for 15 minutes or until heated thoroughly. In a small bowl mix the jalapeno into the sour cream. Serve the soup with a dollop of sour cream and jalapeno mixture and sprinkle with parsley.

Pumpkin Custard as published in Tracy Medeiros’ “Vermont Farm Table Cookbook

“Using fresh baking pumpkins, milk and eggs from Vermont farms, of course, this is a creamier and gluten free descendant of the traditional pumpkin pie. A perfect wine accompaniment to this delicious custard is Newhall Farm Ice Cider, made from organic estate grown apples. Some liken it to apple pie in a glass. Perfect too if you can’t decide whether to choose pumpkin or apple, as now you can have your pie and drink one too!” ~ Shared by Linda Fondulas of Newhall Farm

Serves 6 (6 ounce ramekins) 

Ingredients:

  • Vegetable spray
  • 2 (3 pounds) baking pumpkins such as sugar pumpkin or baby pam
  • 1 quart half- and-half
  • 1 inch of cinnamon stick
  • 2 allspice berries
  • 1 inch vanilla bean, split
  • 1/4 orange rind, zested
  • 1/2 cup whole milk, or as needed
  • 4 eggs plus 3 egg yolks
  • 3/8 cup sugar (1/2 cup plus less 2 tablespoons)

 Method of Preparation

1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Spray 6 (6 ounce) ramekins with a thin layer of vegetable spray and set aside.

2. Cut pumpkin in half lengthwise and scoop out the seeds and strings and discard. Peel, cube, and with an electric juicer, juice the remaining solid flesh. Save pulp. Place juice in a medium saucepan and reduce to 1/2 cup over medium heat, about 5 minutes.

3. In a separate medium saucepan, heat half-and-half, spices, vanilla bean and rind over medium-high heat and bring to a simmer. Pour over juiced pulp and infuse for 20 minutes.

4. Strain cream twice through a fine mesh sieve into a 4 quart sauce pan. (Push hard to get as much pumpkin cream through as possible. It is important to remove the starch from the pumpkin, so strain twice before reducing. Do not boil any pumpkin matter.) Add enough whole milk to equal 3 cups.

5. Return pumpkin mixture to saucepan and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Remove from heat and allow to cool.

6. In a medium bowl, whisk together eggs, yolks and sugar in a medium bowl. Add the pumpkin cream a little at a time, whisking continually.

7. Ladle mixture into prepared ramekins. Place the ramekins in a small roasting pan and add enough water to the roasting pan to come halfway up the sides of the ramekins.

8. Bake in the oven until custards are set but still wiggling in the center, approximately 35 to 40 minutes. Remove ramekins from roasting pan and refrigerate over night.

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Apple Butter

It’s been a banner year for “wild” apples this year – the untended trees growing at field edges, along back roads and, luckily for me, in my backyard. I’ve gotten buckets of sweet, eating apples from a forgotten apple tree behind my house. I looked out the dining room window one morning, and the ground was blanketed with fruit!

There are a lot of things you can do with an abundance of apples, my favorite is making apple butter. I use this simple recipe from EatingWell, which is essentially to roast the apples with cider until they break apart, get thick, and the sugars caramelize. 

Apple butter has a lot of uses. Spread it on thick slices of bread (like, you know, butter), use it for jam in a PB & J sandwich, serve with cheese or on a charcuterie plate, add a little vinegar for a sort of chutney sauce on chicken or other meat, warm it with a splash of cider or rum to pour over vanilla ice cream. If you want to get fancy, try out these Apple Butter Candies that were my cooking project over the Labor Day Weekend. 

If you don’t have a backyard full of apples, there are plenty of pick your own orchards to visit. Just look at the Farmstands and U-Pick category in DigIn Search And be sure to pick up extra apples for pies. . . 


Read more of Helen’s writing at http://discoveringflavor.com/

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Framing Foliage in Farms, Food and Community

Whether you are looking for day trip ideas or a way to experience fall foliage in an off-the-beaten-path way, we invite you to our farms and community. We organized the Floating Bridge Food and Farms Cooperative to make our working landscape more accessible for folks to enjoy. Cooperative members host  farm toursapple picking and lattes on the hoof throughout the foliage season. And on October 11th we are hosting our annual Foliage Market and apple pie baking contest.

Brookfield’s Old Town Hall and the village itself, tucked between the hills and tiny Sunset Lake, is intimate and welcoming. Our new, yet historic, Floating Bridge, invites you onto Sunset Lake via foot or by car. The bridge grants perspective. Like our farms, the bridge and village help frame fall foliage within the visually rich architecture of rural Vermont. 

At the market on the 11th, Brookfield Bees will do hands-on cider pressing demos and samples. That is how we are, often we miss the politeness of farm-to-plate or farm-to-table and go straight from farm to mouth! There will be snack and meal options, gifts, pasture raised meats, and the season’s harvest will be on offer. The hall will be as colorful as the hills our products originate from. Flowers, herb-dyed scarves and the smells of Chef Lee and Ariels Restaurant’s Mexican Cantina lunch dishes will add to the stimulation. Fat Toad Farm will be there with their award winning caramel and ice cream to add to the pie when they become eligible for purchase by the slice! Proceeds will benefit the Floating Bridge Food and Farms Cooperative and the Randolph Area Food Shelf. 

So pie makers, start your ovens! Apple pickers, stop at nearby Liberty Orchard and let Ginny and Dwayne provide information on apple varieties and pick your own tips. Bring your questions on pie making to Chef Lee Duberman and our other judges and contestants who will gather in the Old Town Hall. Get more recipes and ideas for pairing and embellishing apples from the Fat Toad Farm team. Pick up lard for your Thanksgiving pies or feedback on pairing pastured pork and chicken with apples, sauces and chutneys,  from the Green Mountain Girls. Pick up lovely garlic to grace your dishes or ward off the sniffles from Spotted Dog farm. Get your late season fresh flowers or dried arrangements from Spruce Lane Flower and Third Branch Flower Farms. Pre-empt the stress and find gift certificates for tours from Pagoda Pond Farm. Come experience, eat and enjoy!

Whether you want to fill the pantry and fridge or entertain a multi-generational group, whether you are trying to frame the ultimate fall foliage photo or shift your frame of mind, we offer a learning-filled way to do so. We hope you join us!

Source: Dig in VT Trails