Ready, Set, Chop! Jr Iron Chef is Coming!

Ready, set, chop! On Saturday, March 21, 65 middle and high school teams will compete in the state’s eighth annual Junior Iron Chef VT. This local foods cooking challenge empowers youth to connect with where food comes from, healthy eating, and from-scratch cooking. Since its founding, the competition has more than doubled the number of participants with teams coming from every corner of the state. 
This year’s Jr Iron Chef VT is particularly timely. Since last year’s competition, First Lady Michelle Obama and the White House administration began conversations about how to introduce basic culinary skills in schools as a way to promote healthier eating. Yesterday, U.S. Senators Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) introduced the bipartisan Farm to School Act of 2015 to increase federal resources committed to bringing fresh, local foods to schools nationwide. 
One of the first youth culinary competitions to focus on local food and school meals, Jr Iron Chef VT is one example of the state’s groundbreaking farm to school efforts. Vermont has some of the longest-standing programs in the country. Today, eighty-nine percent of Vermont schools are involved with farm to school programming thanks to state policymakers, food service professionals, and nonprofit organizations, including the founders of Jr Iron Chef VT: Vermont Food Education Every Day (VT FEED, a partnership of NOFA-VT and Shelburne Farms) and the Burlington School Food Project.
The impact of Jr Iron Chef VT is broad and can last beyond graduation for many participants. Maraika Lumholdt, a South Burlington High School and Jr Iron Chef VT alumna is serving as a judge this year. “I know from personal experience that the process of competing is a real challenge, but it pays off,” Maraika said. “Jr Iron Chef VT inspired me to think about food in a new way – where food comes from to its preparation. While creating recipes, my teammates and I learned about the connection between farms, nutrition, and taste and how to cook well while working together.”  
Guided by coaches – local chefs, food service directors, and teachers – student teams create original recipes that incorporate local foods. Students work through real-life challenges similar to those food service face to create healthy, nutritious school lunches, including sourcing ingredients themselves. Teams have just 90 minutes to prepare their kid-tested, seasonal fare. Jr Iron Chef VT winning teams will have the opportunity to prepare their recipes for legislators in the Vermont Statehouse, and their dishes will also be featured on school lunch menus around the state.
A selection of the dishes on this year’s Jr Iron Chef VT menu: Vermont Root Vegetable Empanada with Maple Adobe Sauce; Ricotta Gnocchi with Butternut Basil Sauce in Kale Spinach Nest; and Sensational, Satisfying, Seasonal Soup. 
Some of the 20 Jr Iron Chef VT judges working under the guidance of Chef Jim Birmingham of the New England Culinary Institute include: Lake Champlain Chocolates Research and Development Specialist Lauren Deitsch, Hotel Vermont Executive Chef Doug Paine, and Twin Valley alum and Hermitage Club Chef Joel Gonzalez.
The 8th Annual Jr Iron Chef VT will take place Saturday, March 21 from 9:00am to 3:30pm at the Champlain Valley Expo Center in Essex Junction, VT. Cost for attendance is $3 for an individual, $5 for a family. Jr Iron Chef VT is sponsored by several local and state entities including Northfield Savings Bank; Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food, and Markets; and Blodgett. Its media sponsor is WCAX. For more information, please visit www.jrironchefvt.org.

Ready, set, chop! On Saturday, March 21, 65 middle and high school teams will compete in the state’s eighth annual Junior Iron Chef VT. This local foods cooking challenge empowers youth to connect with where food comes from, healthy eating, and from-scratch cooking. Since its founding, the competition has more than doubled the number of participants with teams coming from every corner of the state. 

This year’s Jr Iron Chef VT is particularly timely. Since last year’s competition, First Lady Michelle Obama and the White House administration began conversations about how to introduce basic culinary skills in schools as a way to promote healthier eating. Yesterday, U.S. Senators Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) introduced the bipartisan Farm to School Act of 2015 to increase federal resources committed to bringing fresh, local foods to schools nationwide. 

One of the first youth culinary competitions to focus on local food and school meals, Jr Iron Chef VT is one example of the state’s groundbreaking farm to school efforts. Vermont has some of the longest-standing programs in the country. Today, eighty-nine percent of Vermont schools are involved with farm to school programming thanks to state policymakers, food service professionals, and nonprofit organizations, including the founders of Jr Iron Chef VT: Vermont Food Education Every Day (VT FEED, a partnership of NOFA-VT and Shelburne Farms) and the Burlington School Food Project.

The impact of Jr Iron Chef VT is broad and can last beyond graduation for many participants. Maraika Lumholdt, a South Burlington High School and Jr Iron Chef VT alumna is serving as a judge this year. “I know from personal experience that the process of competing is a real challenge, but it pays off,” Maraika said. “Jr Iron Chef VT inspired me to think about food in a new way – where food comes from to its preparation. While creating recipes, my teammates and I learned about the connection between farms, nutrition, and taste and how to cook well while working together.”  

Guided by coaches – local chefs, food service directors, and teachers – student teams create original recipes that incorporate local foods. Students work through real-life challenges similar to those food service face to create healthy, nutritious school lunches, including sourcing ingredients themselves. Teams have just 90 minutes to prepare their kid-tested, seasonal fare. Jr Iron Chef VT winning teams will have the opportunity to prepare their recipes for legislators in the Vermont Statehouse, and their dishes will also be featured on school lunch menus around the state.

A selection of the dishes on this year’s Jr Iron Chef VT menu: Vermont Root Vegetable Empanada with Maple Adobe Sauce; Ricotta Gnocchi with Butternut Basil Sauce in Kale Spinach Nest; and Sensational, Satisfying, Seasonal Soup. 

Some of the 20 Jr Iron Chef VT judges working under the guidance of Chef Jim Birmingham of the New England Culinary Institute include: Lake Champlain Chocolates Research and Development Specialist Lauren Deitsch, Hotel Vermont Executive Chef Doug Paine, and Twin Valley alum and Hermitage Club Chef Joel Gonzalez.

The 8th Annual Jr Iron Chef VT will take place Saturday, March 21 from 9:00am to 3:30pm at the Champlain Valley Expo Center in Essex Junction, VT. Cost for attendance is $3 for an individual, $5 for a family. Jr Iron Chef VT is sponsored by several local and state entities including Northfield Savings Bank; Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food, and Markets; and Blodgett. Its media sponsor is WCAX. For more information, please visit www.jrironchefvt.org.

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Baking with Maple

Some recipes easily adapt to including maple syrup – with sauces, spreads, marinades, and glazes, for example, just replace other sweeteners with maple syrup and keep adding the syrup until you have the flavor you want (you may find that because maple adds flavor, not just sweetness, you want to increase the amount over something like sugar). Baking, though, can be intimidating. So, we asked Claire Fitts Georges of Butterfly Bakery, a wholesale bakery specializing in maple syrup based baked goods, to give us a quick introduction to the art:

Be unabashed about baking with maple syrup. I get frustrated (annoyed? perturbed?) when I see a “maple ” cookie recipe that is made with 1 cup of sugar and 2 tbs of maple syrup. Who has the taste buds to detect that? If you want to actually taste the maple in your baking, you have to jump in with both feet. Ditch the tropical sugar and go straight for the taste of the Green Mountains. 

If you’re looking for a simple conversion you can usually swap out 1:1 maple sugar for cane sugar, but that can get expensive fast. If you’ve got time to tweak the recipe, ease up on the maple sugar and bring maple syrup into the game. Layer cake is the easiest place to start (cake pans are great at containing the extra liquid). Sub in maple syrup at 3/4 the volume of sugar and reduce the other liquids in the recipe by about 1/3. If you don’t have any reducible liquids (like milk, water or even oil), just try the cake without the reduction and reduce your oven temperature by about 25°F (to avoid drying and reduce browning).  Sometimes it will work perfectly, sometimes it will be too dense. But then you have to eat that mapley goodness yourself to hide your shame. Poor you. Add ice cream.

When your recipe is having a harder time with the extra liquid (like cookies might) you can increase your flour by a little (start with 10%), and up your leaveners (baking soda, baking powder, also eggs) by a little more – 15-20% or so (baking powder is the easiest to adjust). You can also add (more) chunks. Dried fruit and nuts absorb a lot of extra liquid all on their own.

Or, of course, you can begin with recipes designed for maple syrup – like my  Carrot Cake with Maple Cream Cheese Frosting recipe below. I haven’t “officially” made this cake in over 10 years, but customers manage to keep hearing about it and requesting it for their special events. It’s a fragile cake to make, but uber tasty. Enjoy!

Carrot Cake

Cake:
1 cup oil
1.5 cups maple syrup
4 tbs arrowroot or corn starch dissolved in 4 tbs water
2 cup whole spelt flour or 1 cup whole wheat flour & 1 cup all purpose flour
2 tsp baking soda
2 tsp baking powder
2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp salt
4 cups shredded carrots
1 cup chopped nuts

Cream Cheese Frosting:
2 cups cream cheese (at room temp)
1 cup maple syrup
1 tbs vanilla

Chopped nuts (optional for decoration)

1) Preheat the oven to 350° F and grease two 9 inch cake pans
2) Whisk together the oil, maple syrup, and arrowroot mixture in a large bowl.
3) In another bowl mix together the spelt flour, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon and salt. Add the dry mixture to the wet mixture and whisk until smooth.
4) Add the carrots and nuts to the batter and mix thoroughly. Pour the batter into the prepared pans and bake for about an hour at 350° F or until the cake has pulled away from the sides of the pans.
5) In a food processor beat together the cream cheese, maple syrup and vanilla until smooth. Store in the fridge until the cake is ready for frosting.
6) When the cakes have cooled completely hold one pan at an angle and give them several nice hard taps against the counter to loosen the cake from the pan. Then invert the cake onto a plate. Frost the top and sides. Loosen the second cake and invert onto the first. Be careful here, as these cakes crumble easily, so don’t try to hold the cake in your hands. Frost the whole cake and cover the sides with nuts.

Serves 12

Claire Fitts Georges is a baker, recipe developer, farmers’ market vendor, and food writer living in Montpelier, VT. To get more maple-y recipes, check out the archives on her Good Grub Blog.



 

 

 

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Maple Conversion

Vermont is my adopted home. I have lived here full time for 12 years, but spent my childhood in upstate New York. I’ll admit I’ve been slow to accept real maple syrup into my culinary repertoire. My reluctance to embrace the culture and tradition of soaking one’s pancakes in true, local maple syrup can only be attributed to the breakfast tables of my youth; crowded with Aunt Jemima and Country Crock. Food memories can be powerful and often determine how one crafts meals and diets for a lifetime. But, sometimes patterns are meant to be broken, so in that spirit, last March I took a trip to one of my favorite natural areas: Shelburne Farms.

The maple open house weekend is an annual event that takes place at a number of venues throughout the state where families can gather and learn more about the process of making maple syrup. Last March, it was cold and a bit icy. I wore a hat and belted wool coat, but chose a pair of non-sensible chuck taylors for this adventure. (Note: bundle up! Activities take place outside!) Early afternoon, when I arrived, the hill behind the main Shelburne Farms barn was bustling with activity. Children ran through the wooded paths looking for tokens stashed near maple taps to cash in for prizes at the information table.

I stopped there first where I was treated to a blind maple syrup tasting. I always find these valuable, whether they involve wine, beer, or syrup. The tasting was to distinguish between real and fake syrup. When I was provided my first syrup sample, I knew immediately it belonged on Bisquick pancakes (this was the fake syrup). Light in body and color with a saccharine flavor, I recognized the distinctive way the taste vanishes from the palate almost instantly. Which, of course requires that a quarter of a bottle be used on even the most modest Sunday breakfast. Then, came the real stuff. Depth in aroma and shade characterized this sample. The flavor was rich and multi-layered; I couldn’t imagine drizzling more than a tablespoon over my stack of thick french toast.

I did well and was rewarded with a maple candy. What fascinated me the most, aside from viewing and hearing about the tapping process up close, was being able to enter the (toasty warm) sugar shack and see the maple syrup making process in action!

Up a steepish path, people sipped beverages around a small fire before heading further up the hill to meet the oldest resident owl of the farm.

On my ginger walk back toward the info table, I grabbed a few more maple candies for the road and left with a profound appreciation for the people who work so hard to produce this delicious resource from our environment. Now that the maple conversion is complete, maybe skiing will be next.

Corey Burdick is a freelance writer who has spent the last 10 years pursuing her passion for local, organic food and wine. She is a graduate of Mount Holyoke College and has her WSET Level II certification in wine and spirits from the Vermont Wine School. She has been published in The Burlington Free Press, Best of Burlington Magazine, and Edible Green Mountains.

Shelburne Farms Sugarhouse

Source: Dig in VT Trails

The VFN Top 10! A Local Gift Guide.

Keep it local and delicious this holiday season and give the gift of Vermont food. From tasty treats to memorable experiences for the whole family–we’ve got you covered. Without further ado…

The VFN Top 10! 

1. From creamy Green Mountain Blue, rich and nutty Eleven Brothers from Boston Post to classic sharp cheddar from Shelburne FarmsGrafton or Cabot–a gift of Vermont Cheese is always welcome.  

Search by type of cheese, milk or farm at the Vermont Cheese Council to find the perfect match for everyone on your list.  

2. Send your loved one to a Cooking Class at Healthy LivingThe Essex, City Market, Kitchen at the Store or the South End Kitchen; on a Culinary Retreat through Cafe Provence or the Inn at Weathersfield; or to a Farm-stay with the Green Mountain Girls or Liberty Hill Farm.

3. Spread holiday cheer with the gift of Vermont Mead, Spirits, Wine and Cider. Tell the story of the lost apple project with Shacksbury’s 1840 hard cider, thrill the spirit enthusiast with Caledonia Spirit’s barrel aged Tom Cat Gin or introduce aspiring sommeliers to the award winning wines of the Green Mountain State–try Shelburne Vineyard’s 2012 Marquette Reserve (this year’s 2014 International Cold Climate Wine Competition ‘Best in Show’ winner).  

Find a complete list of VFN meadspirit, wine and cider makers!

4. Best of VermontShelburne FarmsLake Champlain ChocolatesVermont Smoke and Cure and King Arthur Flour all offer fabulous Foodie Gift Baskets to send directly to those in need of a Vermont care package! 

5. Learn a new skill and gift your loved ones with Something Homemade! A foodie gift making class at Healthy Living Market and Cafe or South End Kitchen can help get you started! 

6. We’re positive the cook in your life would love a Winter CSAor fill their freezer with a Maple Wind Meat Share!

Search VFN for a CSA near you!

7. Support your favorite local restaurant and gift a memorable night out with a Restaurant Gift Card! (Throw in some free babysitting and it’s an extra special gift.)

Browse VFN’s Gold Barn Restaurants to find the perfect spot!

8. Vermont Specialty Foods are, of course, great gifts. Try Wood’s Cider Mill’s Boiled CiderBlake Hill PreservesHooker Mountain Farm Cured MeatFat Toad Farm Caramel or anything maple!   

9. Wrap up some tickets to a Vermont Food Event like the upcoming Mad 12, or one of the romantic alpine dinners at Stowe’s Cliff House Restaurant!

Check out DigInVT.com for a statewide listing of Vermont farm and food events.

10. For the athlete in your life, plan an Adventurous Winter Outing at the Strafford Organic CreameryBlueberry Hill Inn or Trapp Family Lodge for some nordic skiing and snowshoeing. 

Source: Dig in VT Trails

An Unlikely Vineyard

A good book, good wine, good food…sounds like a great weekend and some great gift ideas, just in case you were planning ahead!

Vermont is home to not just great food, but also great food writers. . . and sometimes growing food, writing about food, and offering a unique dining experience all come together, like with Deirdre Heekin’s new book An Unlikely Vineyard.
 
Here’s my favorite Sunday morning activity: a fresh cup of coffee, breakfast, and meandering my way through stacks of cookbooks and food articles, following whatever catches my fancy, whether it’s the history of Port or the evolution of the French macaron. My patience for sitting still lasts maybe an hour before I need to hop up and do something.
 
Deirdre Heekin’s new book An Unlikely Vineyard has the feel of those Sunday mornings. Including the hopping up and doing something part.
 
In her fourth book, Heekin writes about creating her small farm and vineyard, La Garagista,  within the hilly lands of Chateauguay No Town (a real Vermont place – it’s in the Barnard area, near Woodstock and was the site of an unsuccessful gold rush in the 1800’s). Heekin’s story is subtitled “The education of a farmer and her quest for terroir.” That’s a spot on description for a narrative with the eager forward momentum of a quest combined with side excursions into topics, like brewing plant teas or becoming a seed saver, that reflect the author’s appetite for learning new things.  
 
So, what does she learn about terroir — roughly translatable as the taste of place? Heekin writes:
 
. . . there is no other way to sum up the philosophy of the true farmer. . . it represents the six sides of the honeycomb: geology, variety, geography, climate, social culture and the human hand. Another winegrower I know says that what is poured into the glass is a liquid landscape painting of the 365 days of a certain year.
 
Capturing a portrait of the landscape through wine, food, and writing guides this story.
 
Here’s the best part about reading An Unlikely Vineyard: we don’t have to think theoretically about the terroir of the author’s farm. She’s in Vermont. The wine is for sale right here. We can taste it. In fact, Deirdre Heekin and her husband, Caleb Barber, have a restaurant in Woodstock Osteria Pane e Salute that demonstrates their approach to cuisine Thursday through Sunday. I asked Heekin, via e-mail, how I’d experience the terroir she describes if I visited her restaurant:  
 
“All of the wines on our list focus on landscape and the work the grower does in the field.  My criteria for the work in the cellar is that the grower do as little as possible, that he or she acts as a guide or companion to the wine rather than a manipulator.  For me the real craft of winegrowing, or winemaking is tending to the plants during the season and recognizing what the wine wants to become at harvest.”
 
Here’s where that 365 day portrait starts to emerge.
 
About the wines produced by La Garagista, she adds: “Of course, I think the concept of terroir is very stark in our own wine too, and each of our three parcels are unique; the wines issuing from them are distinct even though they may share some of the same varietals. The only constant in the terroir equation in our wines is me and those varietals. Other elements change and have different aspects, and it is amazing to me how things like altitude, length of season, situation, microclimate all have such a big effect on the wine in the bottle.”
 
Her approach of natural winemaking encourages the wild yeasts and the grapes to reveal their character, and with it the character of the place. Terroir doesn’t appear only in wine, though. In fact, An Unlikely Vineyard opens with a dinner scene:
 
. . . a hot and hearty soup made from the garden’s vegetables: a mixture of lovage, zucchini, tomatoes and pearl white beans. The white beans, grown on the tall trellis in the walled garden, came from a bag of heritage Badalucco bought in a shop in the mountains of Liguria, a bag sold for soup, tied with a pretty jute ribbon, which we brought home in our suitcase and planted in the ground.
 
Heekin and her husband seek out ingredients that reflect a  producer’s commitment to a place and working with its landscape. The restaurant menu sources ingredients from farms around Vermont, and of course their own farm, too, just like that soup that opens the book. Heekin explains in our conversation “For our own vegetables in particular, our recipes start with planting the seed in the ground and how those vegetables are shaped by our soil, microclimate, and us. I think Caleb is an excellent translator of these ingredients from our Vermont land; I think it is one of the things that makes his cooking special.”
 
She also notes how the landscape connection brings all of these flavors, the wine and the dinner, together:  “I think that the northern varietals that we grow here in Vermont are uniquely suited to both the produce and livestock grown and raised on our soils, in our terroir.  The flavors connect.  As our Vermont food culture grows, both in the field and in the kitchen, so will our own particular wine culture.  I think Vermont has great potential as a wine region.”  
 
If you want to explore more of Vermont’s evolving wine culture, there are several options. You can read the book, of course, An Unlikely Vineyard [http://www.chelseagreen.com/bookstore/item/an_unlikely_vineyard:hardcover] published by Chelsea Green. And visit Osteria Pane e Salute[http://www.diginvt.com/places/detail/osteria-pane-e-salute], which is part of the Vermont Fresh Network. Other locations serving Deirdre Heekin’s La Garagista wine include Daedalus, Hen of the Wood [http://www.diginvt.com/places/detail/hen-of-the-wood-waterbury], Prohibition Pig [http://www.diginvt.com/places/detail/prohibition-pig], Cork, Sotto Enoteca, Shelburne Farms [http://www.diginvt.com/places/detail/inn-at-shelburne-farms], Simon Pearce [http://www.diginvt.com/places/detail/simon-pearce-restaurant] and the Woodstock Farmers’ Market [http://www.diginvt.com/places/detail/woodstock-farmers-market]. You can find information about Vermont wineries that are open to visitors in the “Wineries and Distilleries” section of DigInVT http://www.diginvt.com/search-results/category/wineries-and-distilleries

Vermont is home to not just great food, but also great food writers. . . and sometimes growing food, writing about food, and offering a unique dining experience all come together, like with Deirdre Heekin’s new book An Unlikely Vineyard.

 

Photo Credit Deirdre Heekin

 Here’s my favorite Sunday morning activity: a fresh cup of coffee, breakfast, and meandering my way through stacks of cookbooks and food articles, following whatever catches my fancy, whether it’s the history of Port or the evolution of the French macaron. My patience for sitting still lasts maybe an hour before I need to hop up and do something.

 Deirdre Heekin’s new book An Unlikely Vineyard has the feel of those Sunday mornings. Including the hopping up and doing something part.

 In her fourth book, Heekin writes about creating her small farm and vineyard, La Garagista,  within the hilly lands of Chateauguay No Town (a real Vermont place – it’s in the Barnard area, near Woodstock and was the site of an unsuccessful gold rush in the 1800’s). Heekin’s story is subtitled “The education of a farmer and her quest for terroir.” That’s a spot on description for a narrative with the eager forward momentum of a quest combined with side excursions into topics, like brewing plant teas or becoming a seed saver, that reflect the author’s appetite for learning new things.  

 So, what does she learn about terroir — roughly translatable as the taste of place? Heekin writes:

 . . . there is no other way to sum up the philosophy of the true farmer. . . it represents the six sides of the honeycomb: geology, variety, geography, climate, social culture and the human hand. Another winegrower I know says that what is poured into the glass is a liquid landscape painting of the 365 days of a certain year.

 Capturing a portrait of the landscape through wine, food, and writing guides this story.

 Here’s the best part about reading An Unlikely Vineyard: we don’t have to think theoretically about the terroir of the author’s farm. She’s in Vermont. The wine is for sale right here. We can taste it. In fact, Deirdre Heekin and her husband, Caleb Barber, have a restaurant in Woodstock Osteria Pane e Salute that demonstrates their approach to cuisine Thursday through Sunday. I asked Heekin, via e-mail, how I’d experience the terroir she describes if I visited her restaurant:  

 “All of the wines on our list focus on landscape and the work the grower does in the field.  My criteria for the work in the cellar is that the grower do as little as possible, that he or she acts as a guide or companion to the wine rather than a manipulator.  For me the real craft of winegrowing, or winemaking is tending to the plants during the season and recognizing what the wine wants to become at harvest.”

 Here’s where that 365 day portrait starts to emerge.

 About the wines produced by La Garagista, she adds: “Of course, I think the concept of terroir is very stark in our own wine too, and each of our three parcels are unique; the wines issuing from them are distinct even though they may share some of the same varietals. The only constant in the terroir equation in our wines is me and those varietals. Other elements change and have different aspects, and it is amazing to me how things like altitude, length of season, situation, microclimate all have such a big effect on the wine in the bottle.”

 Her approach of natural winemaking encourages the wild yeasts and the grapes to reveal their character, and with it the character of the place. Terroir doesn’t appear only in wine, though. In fact, An Unlikely Vineyard opens with a dinner scene:

 . . . a hot and hearty soup made from the garden’s vegetables: a mixture of lovage, zucchini, tomatoes and pearl white beans. The white beans, grown on the tall trellis in the walled garden, came from a bag of heritage Badalucco bought in a shop in the mountains of Liguria, a bag sold for soup, tied with a pretty jute ribbon, which we brought home in our suitcase and planted in the ground.

 Heekin and her husband seek out ingredients that reflect a  producer’s commitment to a place and working with its landscape. The restaurant menu sources ingredients from farms around Vermont, and of course their own farm, too, just like that soup that opens the book. Heekin explains in our conversation “For our own vegetables in particular, our recipes start with planting the seed in the ground and how those vegetables are shaped by our soil, microclimate, and us. I think Caleb is an excellent translator of these ingredients from our Vermont land; I think it is one of the things that makes his cooking special.”

Photo Credit Deirdre Heekin

 

 

 She also notes how the landscape connection brings all of these flavors, the wine and the dinner, together:  “I think that the northern varietals that we grow here in Vermont are uniquely suited to both the produce and livestock grown and raised on our soils, in our terroir.  The flavors connect.  As our Vermont food culture grows, both in the field and in the kitchen, so will our own particular wine culture.  I think Vermont has great potential as a wine region.”  

 If you want to explore more of Vermont’s evolving wine culture, there are several options. You can read the book, of course, An Unlikely Vineyard published by Chelsea Green. And visit Osteria Pane e Salute which is part of the Vermont Fresh Network. Other locations serving Deirdre Heekin’s La Garagista wine include Daedalus, Hen of the WoodProhibition Pig, Cork, Sotto Enoteca, Shelburne Farms, Simon Pearce and the Woodstock Farmers’ Market. You can find information about Vermont wineries that are open to visitors in the “Wineries and Distilleries” section of DigInVT.

Permission for use of photos given to Chelsea Green Publishing.

Source: Dig in VT Trails

Healthy Living Wants to Bring a Local Turkey to Every Table

 

Today Healthy Living Market and Café in South Burlington will be kicking off their annual Thanksgiving turkey pre-order program where customers will be able to order local, free-range and antibiotic/hormone-free turkeys over the phone, in-store or online at www.healthyliving.com/vermont. As in past years, they will be offering fresh and fair priced turkeys from a handful of local farms around Vermont as part of their “A Local Turkey for Every Table” campaign. Healthy Living has been a driving force behind the “Buy Local, Eat Local” revolution in Vermont and has made it a priority to support local growers by selling turkeys at fair market price to customers in Chittenden Country for over twenty five years.
 
To get things started, last week Healthy Living’s Co-founder Katy Lesser and team headed out to Adam’s Turkey Farm for their annual visit. Adam’s Turkey Farm has been a local Vermont poultry grower for over 30 years and is one of the three local farms that include Misty Knoll Farm and Stonewood Farm providing turkeys to Healthy Living for the pre-order season. Lesser has known Dave and Judy Adams since the late 80’s when she first started offering turkeys in her store during the holidays.
 
“I started thinking about Thanksgiving at the store and wondered if customers might like local turkeys. During my research, I came across Adams Turkey Farm and went to visit Dave and Judy Adams at their farm in Westford. That’s where I actually got my first lesson in local agriculture and met dedicated farmers who raise poultry of astounding quality,” said Lesser. “The rest is happy history; we worked together to make a plan. I learned about turkeys and the Adams learned about wholesale. That first year I sold about 25 turkeys….since then we’ve sold more every year!”
 
This year’s farm visit marked the 25th anniversary of the grocer and vendor working together to provide the highest quality turkeys during Thanksgiving. Knowing who grows the food they sell is a high priority for Healthy Living. Seasonal staff visits to the farms have become part of their mission. For this trip, new members of the Healthy Living staff were able to see the farm while learning more about raising local turkeys.
 
For more information and to pre-order your turkey today, check out www.healthylivingmarket.com/saratoga. Click here for more information and assets.

It’s almost turkey time.  Do you have your turkey yet?  Maybe you want to get out on the farm and see where the turkeys live; maybe you’re having a turkey-free holiday and need to get to the farmers market or food market for your supplies; maybe you head to a restaurant to have your holiday meal.  Whatever Thanksgiving looks like for you, Vermont is full of local foods to guarantee a delicious holiday!

Healthy Living Market and Café in South Burlington kicked off their annual Thanksgiving turkey pre-order program on October 14th.  Customers will be able to order local, free-range and antibiotic/hormone-free turkeys over the phone, in-store or online. As in past years, they offer fresh and fair priced turkeys from a handful of local farms around Vermont as part of their “A Local Turkey for Every Table” campaign. Healthy Living has been a driving force behind the “Buy Local, Eat Local” revolution in Vermont and has made it a priority to support local growers by selling turkeys at fair market price to customers in Chittenden County for over twenty five years.

To get things started, Healthy Living’s Co-founder Katy Lesser and team headed out to Adam’s Turkey Farm for their annual visit. Adam’s Turkey Farm has been a local Vermont poultry grower for over 30 years and is one of the three local farms that include Misty Knoll Farm and Stonewood Farm providing turkeys to Healthy Living for the pre-order season. Lesser has known Dave and Judy Adams since the late 80’s when she first started offering turkeys in her store during the holidays.

“I started thinking about Thanksgiving at the store and wondered if customers might like local turkeys. During my research, I came across Adams Turkey Farm and went to visit Dave and Judy Adams at their farm in Westford. That’s where I actually got my first lesson in local agriculture and met dedicated farmers who raise poultry of astounding quality,” said Lesser. “The rest is happy history; we worked together to make a plan. I learned about turkeys and the Adams learned about wholesale. That first year I sold about 25 turkeys….since then we’ve sold more every year!”

This year’s farm visit marked the 25th anniversary of the grocer and vendor working together to provide the highest quality turkeys during Thanksgiving. Knowing who grows the food they sell is a high priority for Healthy Living. Seasonal staff visits to the farms have become part of their mission. For this trip, new members of the Healthy Living staff were able to see the farm while learning more about raising local turkeys.

For more information and to pre-order your turkey today, go to the Healthy Living site.

Source: Dig in VT Trails

You’re in Good Company: Shelburne’s Food Artisans

 

Not only is Shelburne home to iconic Vermont brands (Vermont Teddy Bear and Shelburne Farms, to name two); our quiet town is home to a strong, and growing, community of hard-working, passionate artisans. They do things by hand, they follow their hearts and they produce incredible products. Here are some to check out.
Studio Cacao Chocolatier
Kevin and Laura Toohey, with their son Ronen, make each and every chocolate truffle by hand here in Shelburne. In fact, Studio Cacao was the first tenant to join Vermont Artisan Village back in 2012. Kevin, a trained chef, recently returned from a week at the L’Ecole du Grand Chocolat in New York City excited to tweak his silky-smooth truffle. “When a truffle is made properly,” he told us “it is super light and carries flavors well. I want you to bite into one of our truffles and get a real burst of flavor.” Sounds great to us! Toohey is currently at work perfecting a fleur de sel caramel and truffles infused with rose geranium. Check Studio Cacao out online and in the Burlington Town Center Mall on Church Street.
Folino’s Pizza
Folino’s Pizza, housed in a shared space with the award-winning craft brewer Fiddlehead Brewing Company, has a simple mission: To Make the Best Pizza. Fresh dough is made daily and shaped, by hand, into pizzas scattered with simple toppings. Every pie is baked in a 1000-degree brick oven to bubbly, charred-crust perfection. Wait! Before you take that first bite, don’t forget to grab a growler of Fiddlehead’s funky, citrusy IPA.
Chef Contos Kitchen & Store
Chef Courtney Contos is a Chicagoan by birth, a chef and a consultant who has worked with Charlie Trotter and Martha Stewart. She recently opened a kitchen store in town where she sells a curated selection of cool stuff for the kitchen and home and hosts cooking classes. We hear that she recently hosted an Apple Cake Cook-Off and Fall Party. She makes us excited about food and is a vibrant personality. Plus, she’s launching a culinary tours business and has one of the best foodie Instagram feeds around.
Shelburne Vineyard
Located across the street from Vermont Artisan Village is Shelburne Vineyard, a pioneer in the Vermont wine industry. Shelburne Vineyard harvests almost 20 acres of grapes every year to produce award-winning wines like their Marquette, made from a red grape cultivated to thrive in cold-climates like ours. The Vineyard practices sustainable agriculture. The Winery is open seven days a week for tastings and tours. We’ll often pick up a bottle of Marquette and a few pizzas from Folino’s to bring home for dinner.
Cricket Radio Linen
Elizabeth Archangeli and Angie Lizotte are the designers behind Cricket Radio Linen, which makes beautiful linens and other gorgeous goods like pillows, aprons and the most adorable baby onesies! We are thrilled to have Cricket Radio onsite at Vermont Artisan Village. Their products provide a beautiful backdrop for beautiful food. Cricket Radio’s designs are influenced by Indonesian batiks, vintage Americana and rural Vermont and have a decidedly Martha Stewart-meets-etsy flair (no surprise, they were finalists last year in Martha Stewart’s American Made Awards).
Shelburne Country Store
This country store, right off the Shelburne Green, dates back to 1859. Like any good country store, the Shelburne Country Store has anything and everything, including rubber duckie stickers, Bite Me boxer shorts, maple candy, handmade bracelets, scarves and authentic Vermont beef jerky. The collection, and store, is managed by Steve and Deb Mayfield.
What are some of your favorite Shelburne-and-area artisans? Please check out our Facebook page and share your ideas there.

There are great things going on in Shelburne.  Check them out!  

Not only is Shelburne home to iconic Vermont brands (Vermont Teddy Bear and Shelburne Farms, to name two); our quiet town is home to a strong, and growing, community of hard-working, passionate artisans. They do things by hand, they follow their hearts and they produce incredible products. Here are some to check out.

Studio Cacao Chocolatier

Kevin and Laura Toohey, with their son Ronen, make each and every chocolate truffle by hand here in Shelburne. In fact, Studio Cacao was the first tenant to join Vermont Artisan Village back in 2012. Kevin, a trained chef, recently returned from a week at the L’Ecole du Grand Chocolat in New York City excited to tweak his silky-smooth truffle. “When a truffle is made properly,” he told us “it is super light and carries flavors well. I want you to bite into one of our truffles and get a real burst of flavor.” Sounds great to us! Toohey is currently at work perfecting a fleur de sel caramel and truffles infused with rose geranium. Check Studio Cacao out online and in the Burlington Town Center Mall on Church Street.

Folino’s Pizza

Folino’s Pizza, housed in a shared space with the award-winning craft brewer Fiddlehead Brewing Company, has a simple mission: To Make the Best Pizza. Fresh dough is made daily and shaped, by hand, into pizzas scattered with simple toppings. Every pie is baked in a 1000-degree brick oven to bubbly, charred-crust perfection. Wait! Before you take that first bite, don’t forget to grab a growler of Fiddlehead’s funky, citrusy IPA.

Chef Contos Kitchen & Store

Chef Courtney Contos is a Chicagoan by birth, a chef and a consultant who has worked with Charlie Trotter and Martha Stewart. She recently opened a kitchen store in town where she sells a curated selection of cool stuff for the kitchen and home and hosts cooking classes. We hear that she recently hosted an Apple Cake Cook-Off and Fall Party. She makes us excited about food and is a vibrant personality. Plus, she’s launching a culinary tours business and has one of the best foodie Instagram feeds around.

Shelburne Vineyard

Located across the street from Vermont Artisan Village is Shelburne Vineyard, a pioneer in the Vermont wine industry. Shelburne Vineyard harvests almost 20 acres of grapes every year to produce award-winning wines like their Marquette, made from a red grape cultivated to thrive in cold-climates like ours. The Vineyard practices sustainable agriculture. The Winery is open seven days a week for tastings and tours. We’ll often pick up a bottle of Marquette and a few pizzas from Folino’s to bring home for dinner.

Cricket Radio Linen

Elizabeth Archangeli and Angie Lizotte are the designers behind Cricket Radio Linen, which makes beautiful linens and other gorgeous goods like pillows, aprons and the most adorable baby onesies! We are thrilled to have Cricket Radio onsite at Vermont Artisan Village. Their products provide a beautiful backdrop for beautiful food. Cricket Radio’s designs are influenced by Indonesian batiks, vintage Americana and rural Vermont and have a decidedly Martha Stewart-meets-etsy flair (no surprise, they were finalists last year in Martha Stewart’s American Made Awards).

Shelburne Country Store

This country store, right off the Shelburne Green, dates back to 1859. Like any good country store, the Shelburne Country Store has anything and everything, including rubber duckie stickers, Bite Me boxer shorts, maple candy, handmade bracelets, scarves and authentic Vermont beef jerky. The collection, and store, is managed by Steve and Deb Mayfield.

What are some of your favorite Shelburne-and-area artisans? Please check out our Facebook page and share your ideas there.

Source: Dig in VT Trails

The Vermont Hard Cider Tasting Project

Looking for something to do when the weekend rolls around?  There are many wonderful food and agriculture related activities and events. Why not try some hard cider tasting?  Read this great post from The Vermont Epicure.  Do your own tasting and see how your experience compares.  Cheers!

The sweet-tart crunch of an apple straight off the tree is hard to beat, but it’s also one of those rare fruits that tastes just as good—and sometimes even better—baked, fried, and pressed into cider. 
Cider’s cousin, hard cider, is all the rage in Vermont right now, although it’s really a resurgence of a once thriving colonial industry. I have to confess I’m a little late to the party. Doubtful that I would like it, I only tried my first hard cider this past summer. I was intrigued, and it inspired me to embark on a Vermont Hard Cider Tasting Project, similar to the Beer Tasting Project I undertook back in 2012. Chris enthusiastically agreed to join in. 
We started out at Citizen Cider in Burlington, venturing into their industrial-meets-cozy tasting room on a drizzly afternoon. The garage door windows open onto an elevated deck overlooking  artsy Pine Street, infusing the space with a comfortable, cool vibe—a “Cider for the People, Made by the People” vibe, as their logo states. We settled in at one of the communal wooden tables and ordered. Chris had done some advance research and zeroed in on a glass of The Full Nelson. I decided to go in without preconceptions and ordered the $6.00 tasting flight of five ciders on tap. 
Beginning with Unified Press, their popular flagship cider, I quickly determined it’s too sweet for me, even though it’s categorized as off-dry. It might be just right for many other palates, but it’s the kind of cider that made me previously think I wasn’t a cider person. Not giving up yet, I moved on to the Wit’s Up. Made with a Belgian beer yeast, it’s pleasantly dry, perhaps Citizen’s driest. It tastes more like a beer than a cider to me, but not as heavy. On a warm day, it would be especially quaffable. This was promising.
The Stan Up was next, a lively, bright cider, on the tart side. It’s made from an heirloom apple blend by Stan, the owner of Happy Valley Orchard in Middlebury. We’ve been picking apples there for years, since our girls were little, so that connection endeared it to me. I also sampled the B-Cider, a blend of cider and honey from Happy Valley’s own bees, described on Citizen’s menu as “a taste of the full circle of life on the orchard.” That’s a beautiful thing. B-Cider has a wonderfully floral perfume, and although sweet at first, it has a dry finish, almost like a wine, and a slight fizz. I was coming around.
My favorite one, though, is The Full Nelson, a rare new taste sensation for me. I have to admit I was skeptical when the menu described it as a cross between an IPA, a champagne, and a hard cider, but I’ll be damned if that isn’t accurate. Aged and finished with Nelson Sauvin hops, it’s yeasty and complex and left me wanting more from Chris’s glass. It’s the cider that won me over.
We’ve made it back to Citizen twice since then, bringing some friends along, enjoying more of The Full Nelson and some tasty pub fare, and once catching an excellent band in town from Philadelphia. Overall, it’s a welcome addition to the food and drink scene in Burlington, and I’m glad we can pick up a bottle of The Full Nelson right in Bristol when we want to enjoy it at home.
The next stop on our Tasting Project tour was Woodchuck Hard Cider in Middlebury, one of the largest cider makers in the US. This wildly successful company just opened up an impressive new facility that can fill 600 bottles a minute, or 3 million a year, according to the friendly server in their elegant tasting room. 
They give you four samples on the house and after that you need to pay for them, a more than fair deal.
I started off with the Local Nectar, made with 100% Vermont apples. Unlike Citizen who sources all their fruit from within 150 miles, Woodchuck, given the volume they produce, has to look elsewhere for many of their apples. This homegrown cider, though, has a subtle mustiness and goes down easy. Next up was the Ciderbration, a very apple-y cider but perhaps a bit too much like juice. The Hopsation, a “hop forward cider,” is their original small batch cider infused with Cascade hops, a winning combination in general, I’ve discovered.  Very clear and light, it’s their driest, but not quite dry enough for me. I prefer a more hoppy contrast to the apple’s sweetness, although I think my palate is drier than most. But for those who like a mildly sweet beverage that’s lighter than a craft beer (and gluten free; ciders are riding that wave) and much better for you than a soda or sugar-sweetened juice cocktail, this cider would be worth checking out (we tried some at home too).
The server added a fifth cider for us to sample, the Amber, saying it was the original and everyone should try it. Crisp and balanced, it has a classic cider taste. My favorite of the batch, though, was the Smoked Apple. Infused with deliciously smoky applewood, it has just the right amount of smoke. For those who like flavored ciders, Woodchuck has a wide array, from Chocolate Raspberry to Pumpkin, to Coconut Pineapple. That’s not really my thing, aside from the Smoked Apple, which I will seek out again. Besides, I like Woodchuck’s motto: “Give a ‘chuck.”
The next two tastings Chris and I conducted at home with ciders produced by smaller cider makers. Shacksbury Cider’s The Basque, is actually produced in Spain and then bottled in Shoreham. The owners also import cider from England, but have recently released in limited amounts a cider made from local “lost apples”—apples they’ve foraged from trees homesteaders planted specifically for homemade hard cider over a century ago.
The Basque is unfiltered and fermented with wild yeast, rendering it cloudy and golden, similar to an unfiltered pale ale, but without the carbonation. Its label describes it as extra dry, which is accurate; I’d say it’s a bit too dry even for my palate. It has a bold, citrusy tang with a musty finish, and is a whole different animal from the previous ciders we tried. A t$14.99 a bottle, it’s the most expensive cider for sale at the Middlebury Co-op. Shacksbury is getting a lot of media attention, so some people must love it, but for us it’s a yet to be acquired taste. We’re interested though in giving their local lost apple vintage, called 1840, a try.
Finally, we picked up a bottle of Flag Hill Farm’s Vermont Cyder, “with a y,” that is. 
Perusing the shelf of local, artisanal ciders at the Co-op, I was swayed to buy this one by the sign underneath it citing a New York Times description: “cider with the soul of wine.” The packaging does resemble wine more than anything else, from the shape of the bottle to the cork that seals it (the same goes for The Basque). And the cider itself is indeed more similar to wine than to the sweeter ciders at Citizen and Woodchuck (except for The Full Nelson which really does, amazingly, resemble champagne). It’s definitely dry, but not as dry as The Basque, and I tasted sour apple and earth. As for the bouquet, the best way I can describe it is that it smells like fall. 
Made with wild, organic apples and no additives or artificial ingredients, Flag Hill Cyder is fermented with wild yeast and aged at least one winter. At 8.5% alcohol, it’s the most potent of the ones we sampled (the others hover around 6.9% or lower); again, like wine, a cider meant for sipping.  It sells for $9.99 at the Middlebury Co-op but, alas, is available only in Vermont, in limited release. I usually lean toward red wine and Chris toward craft IPAs, but I can see the appeal of mixing it up and sharing a bottle of this cyder along with a hearty braise or stew on a chilly fall evening. 
So I guess I could say I’m a cider convert. Vermont was dubbed the “Napa Valley of hard cider” in a recent article, although I think Sonoma is more apt, and more preferable to most locals. Either way, I’m glad that hard cider is back, and is here to stay.

The sweet-tart crunch of an apple straight off the tree is hard to beat,

but it’s also one of those rare fruits that tastes just as good—and sometimes even better—baked,

fried,

and pressed into cider. 

Cider’s cousin, hard cider, is all the rage in Vermont right now, although it’s really a resurgence of a once thriving colonial industry. I have to confess I’m a little late to the party. Doubtful that I would like it, I only tried my first hard cider this past summer. I was intrigued, and it inspired me to embark on a Vermont Hard Cider Tasting Project, similar to the Beer Tasting Project I undertook back in 2012. Chris enthusiastically agreed to join in. 

We started out at Citizen Cider in Burlington, venturing into their industrial-meets-cozy tasting room on a drizzly afternoon. The garage door windows open onto an elevated deck overlooking  artsy Pine Street, infusing the space with a comfortable, cool vibe—a “Cider for the People, Made by the People” vibe, as their logo states. We settled in at one of the communal wooden tables and ordered. Chris had done some advance research and zeroed in on a glass of The Full Nelson. I decided to go in without preconceptions and ordered the $6.00 tasting flight of five ciders on tap. 

Beginning with Unified Press, their popular flagship cider, I quickly determined it’s too sweet for me, even though it’s categorized as off-dry. It might be just right for many other palates, but it’s the kind of cider that made me previously think I wasn’t a cider person. Not giving up yet, I moved on to the Wit’s Up. Made with a Belgian beer yeast, it’s pleasantly dry, perhaps Citizen’s driest. It tastes more like a beer than a cider to me, but not as heavy. On a warm day, it would be especially quaffable. This was promising.

The Stan Up was next, a lively, bright cider, on the tart side. It’s made from an heirloom apple blend by Stan, the owner of Happy Valley Orchard in Middlebury. We’ve been picking apples there for years, since our girls were little, so that connection endeared it to me. I also sampled the B-Cider, a blend of cider and honey from Happy Valley’s own bees, described on Citizen’s menu as “a taste of the full circle of life on the orchard.” That’s a beautiful thing. B-Cider has a wonderfully floral perfume, and although sweet at first, it has a dry finish, almost like a wine, and a slight fizz. I was coming around.

My favorite one, though, is The Full Nelson, a rare new taste sensation for me. I have to admit I was skeptical when the menu described it as a cross between an IPA, a champagne, and a hard cider, but I’ll be damned if that isn’t accurate. Aged and finished with Nelson Sauvin hops, it’s yeasty and complex and left me wanting more from Chris’s glass. It’s the cider that won me over.

We’ve made it back to Citizen twice since then, bringing some friends along, enjoying more of The Full Nelson and some tasty pub fare, and once catching an excellent band in town from Philadelphia. Overall, it’s a welcome addition to the food and drink scene in Burlington, and I’m glad we can pick up a bottle of The Full Nelson right in Bristol when we want to enjoy it at home.

The next stop on our Tasting Project tour was Woodchuck Hard Cider in Middlebury, one of the largest cider makers in the US. This wildly successful company just opened up an impressive new facility that can fill 600 bottles a minute, or 3 million a year, according to the friendly server in their elegant tasting room. 

They give you four samples on the house and after that you need to pay for them, a more than fair deal.

I started off with the Local Nectar, made with 100% Vermont apples. Unlike Citizen who sources all their fruit from within 150 miles, Woodchuck, given the volume they produce, has to look elsewhere for many of their apples. This homegrown cider, though, has a subtle mustiness and goes down easy. Next up was the Ciderbration, a very apple-y cider but perhaps a bit too much like juice. The Hopsation, a “hop forward cider,” is their original small batch cider infused with Cascade hops, a winning combination in general, I’ve discovered.  Very clear and light, it’s their driest, but not quite dry enough for me. I prefer a more hoppy contrast to the apple’s sweetness, although I think my palate is drier than most. But for those who like a mildly sweet beverage that’s lighter than a craft beer (and gluten free; ciders are riding that wave) and much better for you than a soda or sugar-sweetened juice cocktail, this cider would be worth checking out (we tried some at home too).

The server added a fifth cider for us to sample, the Amber, saying it was the original and everyone should try it. Crisp and balanced, it has a classic cider taste. My favorite of the batch, though, was the Smoked Apple. Infused with deliciously smoky applewood, it has just the right amount of smoke. For those who like flavored ciders, Woodchuck has a wide array, from Chocolate Raspberry to Pumpkin, to Coconut Pineapple. That’s not really my thing, aside from the Smoked Apple, which I will seek out again. Besides, I like Woodchuck’s motto: “Give a ‘chuck.”

The next two tastings Chris and I conducted at home with ciders produced by smaller cider makers. Shacksbury Cider’s The Basque, is actually produced in Spain and then bottled in Shoreham. The owners also import cider from England, but have recently released in limited amounts a cider made from local “lost apples”—apples they’ve foraged from trees homesteaders planted specifically for homemade hard cider over a century ago.

The Basque is unfiltered and fermented with wild yeast, rendering it cloudy and golden, similar to an unfiltered pale ale, but without the carbonation. Its label describes it as extra dry, which is accurate; I’d say it’s a bit too dry even for my palate. It has a bold, citrusy tang with a musty finish, and is a whole different animal from the previous ciders we tried. At $14.99 a bottle, it’s the most expensive cider for sale at the Middlebury Co-op. Shacksbury is getting a lot of media attention, so some people must love it, but for us it’s a yet to be acquired taste. We’re interested though in giving their local lost apple vintage, called 1840, a try.

Finally, we picked up a bottle of Flag Hill Farm’s Vermont Cyder, “with a y,” that is. 

Perusing the shelf of local, artisanal ciders at the Co-op, I was swayed to buy this one by the sign underneath it citing a New York Times description: “cider with the soul of wine.” The packaging does resemble wine more than anything else, from the shape of the bottle to the cork that seals it (the same goes for The Basque). And the cider itself is indeed more similar to wine than to the sweeter ciders at Citizen and Woodchuck (except for The Full Nelson which really does, amazingly, resemble champagne). It’s definitely dry, but not as dry as The Basque, and I tasted sour apple and earth. As for the bouquet, the best way I can describe it is that it smells like fall. 

Made with wild, organic apples and no additives or artificial ingredients, Flag Hill Cyder is fermented with wild yeast and aged at least one winter. At 8.5% alcohol, it’s the most potent of the ones we sampled (the others hover around 6.9% or lower); again, like wine, a cider meant for sipping.  It sells for $9.99 at the Middlebury Co-op but, alas, is available only in Vermont, in limited release. I usually lean toward red wine and Chris toward craft IPAs, but I can see the appeal of mixing it up and sharing a bottle of this cyder along with a hearty braise or stew on a chilly fall evening. 

So I guess I could say I’m a cider convert. Vermont was dubbed the “Napa Valley of hard cider” in a recent article, although I think Sonoma is more apt, and more preferable to most locals. Either way, I’m glad that hard cider is back, and is here to stay.


The Vermont Epicure is a blog about food, place, and family.  Read more delectable stories inspired by cooking, gardening, and eating adventures in Vermont (and beyond).

Source: Dig in VT Trails

It’s Apple Season!

Have you gone apple picking yet?  Enjoy the beautiful orchards and the beautiful fall foliage. Enjoy the orchards.  Happy Autumn!!

When Vermonters want to taste a unique apple, most of us reach for the closest heirloom variety. The definition of “heirloom” isn’t set in stone, but generally speaking it’s an apple variety born around the same time as our Great- Grandparents, or older. Today, heirloom apples are much easier to find than even a few years ago. I’m most familiar with the varieties from Scott Farm[http://www.diginvt.com/places/detail/scott-farm]  in Dummerston, VT. These apples, with names like Sheep’s Nose, Belle de Boskoop, and Knobby Russet, arrive on local store shelves across the state every fall. The store I shop at, Hunger Mountain Co-op, hands out guides to the farm’s 90 varieties of apples in a stack next to the apple bins. I’ve also made the trek South to the farm itself, a historic place where Rudyard Kipling once lived, that’s open seven days a week during the harvest.
The reason why I look for heirloom apples is because these varieties first came into popularity through backyard growers or very small orchards – venues that could value taste or an apple’s ability to serve a particular purpose (like pie baking) very well. These places did not select for other, less tasty, concerns like the ability to be shipped across the country or grow skin without a single blemish. But as much as I’ve thought about backyard growers in the 1800’s and the varieties they tended for future generations, I never thought about today’s backyard growers and the role they still play.
Todd Parlo of Walden Heights Nursery recently set me straight about the backyard orchardists: they’re still around, their numbers are growing, and they have a critical role to play in giving us a wonderfully diverse range of apples to sample.
Walden Heights Nursery, in Walden VT, sells more than apple trees (including pears, grapes, cherries and plums) but apples are clearly a passion of Todd’s. He has hundreds of varieties of apples growing right now. Hundreds, plural. His long term plan is to hover at 350 – 400 different kinds growing at any one time. 
It turns out that when you’re experimenting with apples simply because you love to experiment with apples, you can create a lot of diversity. 
There are several apple attributes that make them well-suited to playing with many varieties. For one thing, growers reproduce apples by grafting. Instead of growing a new tree from seed, they add a bud from one tree to rootstock, trunk, or branch of another. From that start, you can grow a seedling of one variety or, if you graft wood from multiple different trees onto a single trunk, you can get one tree with many apple varieties that change from branch to branch. 
Also, the reason why apples are propagated by grafting in the first place is that apples grown from seed don’t make the same fruit as their parents, they make something new. . . adding a new variety to the mix. Usually this new tree is not something that anyone would want to continue growing, but sometimes it’s a happy surprise — the classic Granny Smith apple came from a seedling that grew out of a bunch of apple cores dumped in a compost pile in 1868 and the first McIntosh was found as a wild seedling by a farmer clearing his field. 
And, of course, nurseries will sell seedlings of the known varieties, including heirlooms, some of which have recently been brought back from the brink of disappearing. 
I asked Todd to describe some of the unique apples in his orchard that I might not have tasted before. He listed Beacon apples that taste like anise, Sweet Sixteen apples that taste like cherry lollipops, Sunrise apples that taste more like grapes than apples.  . . and of course there are also his own experiments still in development. Plus, his website offers: “. . . we can custom graft nearly any variety that is still in existence, or from wood from your own tree.”   
Not everyone has a backyard they’re about to convert into a miniature orchard. I don’t. But I do enjoy wandering through other people’s orchards and daydreaming about what is possible. It’s a natural version of Charlie’s Chocolate Factory – endless flavors, textures, and aromas in eye catching apples that I never would have imagined when surveying rows of the standard Red Delicious. Some ways to vicariously satisfy your own inner orchardist in Vermont this fall: 
Visit one of the many Pick Your Own apple orchards open around the state [I think the best way to get a link is to click “U Pick” and then search “apple”? Or is there already an apple trail?]
Go to an apple event – events listed on DigInVT range from cooking classes to pie contests to a workshop on the science of apples [http://www.diginvt.com/events/detail/apple-science-at-liberty-orchard].
Sample Vermont’s specialty products that are designed to show off unusual flavors in our apples – particularly traditional hard ciders, ice ciders, and boiled cider syrup. 
And if you want to learn more about the growing your own apples, check out the workshops offered by DigInVT partner NOFA-VT [http://nofavt.org/], including workshops at their winter conference and their summer workshop series. 

When Vermonters want to taste a unique apple, most of us reach for the closest heirloom variety. The definition of “heirloom” isn’t set in stone, but generally speaking it’s an apple variety born around the same time as our Great- Grandparents, or older. Today, heirloom apples are much easier to find than even a few years ago. I’m most familiar with the varieties from Scott Farm in Dummerston, VT. These apples, with names like Sheep’s Nose, Belle de Boskoop, and Knobby Russet, arrive on local store shelves across the state every fall. The store I shop at, Hunger Mountain Co-op, hands out guides to the farm’s 90 varieties of apples in a stack next to the apple bins. I’ve also made the trek south to the farm itself, a historic place where Rudyard Kipling once lived, that’s open seven days a week during the harvest.

The reason why I look for heirloom apples is because these varieties first came into popularity through backyard growers or very small orchards – venues that could value taste or an apple’s ability to serve a particular purpose (like pie baking) very well. These places did not select for other, less tasty, concerns like the ability to be shipped across the country or grow skin without a single blemish. But as much as I’ve thought about backyard growers in the 1800’s and the varieties they tended for future generations, I never thought about today’s backyard growers and the role they still play.

Todd Parlo of Walden Heights Nursery recently set me straight about the backyard orchardists: they’re still around, their numbers are growing, and they have a critical role to play in giving us a wonderfully diverse range of apples to sample.

Walden Heights Nursery, in Walden VT, sells more than apple trees (including pears, grapes, cherries and plums) but apples are clearly a passion of Todd’s. He has hundreds of varieties of apples growing right now. Hundreds, plural. His long term plan is to hover at 350 – 400 different kinds growing at any one time. 

It turns out that when you’re experimenting with apples simply because you love to experiment with apples, you can create a lot of diversity. 

There are several apple attributes that make them well-suited to playing with many varieties. For one thing, growers reproduce apples by grafting. Instead of growing a new tree from seed, they add a bud from one tree to rootstock, trunk, or branch of another. From that start, you can grow a seedling of one variety or, if you graft wood from multiple different trees onto a single trunk, you can get one tree with many apple varieties that change from branch to branch. 

Also, the reason why apples are propagated by grafting in the first place is that apples grown from seed don’t make the same fruit as their parents, they make something new. . . adding a new variety to the mix. Usually this new tree is not something that anyone would want to continue growing, but sometimes it’s a happy surprise — the classic Granny Smith apple came from a seedling that grew out of a bunch of apple cores dumped in a compost pile in 1868 and the first McIntosh was found as a wild seedling by a farmer clearing his field. 

And, of course, nurseries will sell seedlings of the known varieties, including heirlooms, some of which have recently been brought back from the brink of disappearing. 

I asked Todd to describe some of the unique apples in his orchard that I might not have tasted before. He listed Beacon apples that taste like anise, Sweet Sixteen apples that taste like cherry lollipops, Sunrise apples that taste more like grapes than apples.  . . and of course there are also his own experiments still in development. Plus, his website offers: “. . . we can custom graft nearly any variety that is still in existence, or from wood from your own tree.”   

Not everyone has a backyard they’re about to convert into a miniature orchard. I don’t. But I do enjoy wandering through other people’s orchards and daydreaming about what is possible. It’s a natural version of Charlie’s Chocolate Factory – endless flavors, textures, and aromas in eye catching apples that I never would have imagined when surveying rows of the standard Red Delicious. Some ways to vicariously satisfy your own inner orchardist in Vermont this fall: 

Visit one of the many Pick Your Own apple orchards open around the state

Go to an apple event – events listed on DigInVT range from cooking classes to pie contests to a workshop on the science of apples.

Sample Vermont’s specialty products that are designed to show off unusual flavors in our apples – particularly traditional hard ciders, ice ciders, and boiled cider syrup. 

And if you want to learn more about the growing your own apples, check out the workshops offered by DigInVT partner NOFA-VT, including workshops at their winter conference and their summer workshop series. 

Helen Labun Jordan is a commentator on Vermont Public Radio. You can find her commentaries and other food writing at www.discoveringflavor.com

Source: Dig in VT Trails

A Delicious Collection

 

Have you noticed how many wonderful places there are to visit to experience Vermont’s food, drink, and farms?  There are many exciting road trips you can plan around visiting these places.  (Check out the trails or make your own.)  Have you ever wished that you could find some of these places all under one roof?  The Northeast Kingdom Tasting Center in Newport, VT is just such a place.  Check out the blog post from the Vermont Fresh Network’s Fresh Feed to get more information.  Another such place that is gathering the best Vermont food and drink together is the Vermont Artisan Village.  Slated to open in early 2015, the Village is currently looking for craftsmen, artisans and food producers to join the collaborative and creative community at the Vermont Artisan Village.  Read their post below to get more information and become part of the Village!
From the Vermont Fresh Network’s Fresh Feed:
On the Road – Northeast Kingdom Tasting Center
March 5, 2014
The Northeast Kingdom Tasting Center in Newport, VT opened its doors in August of 2013 enticing both visitors and locals to come taste what the Kingdom has to offer. The Center is a local food emporium featuring a bakery, butcher counter, café, maple shop, and a top-shelf tasting bar with a tempting array of Kingdom spirits and cheeses from local farms. I was lucky to visit the center last week, and explore its culinary treasures with the Center co-founders and Eden Ice Cider owners, Eleanor and Albert Ledger.
Eleanor and Albert moved their cider making, aging, bottling and distribution operations from their farm in Orleans to the basement of the Tasting Center. Guests can see the process of making the ice cider which makes the experience especially unique. Eden Ice Cider manages to capture that off-the-branch taste of a ripe apple in golden liquid form. We settled in at the tasting bar, where Eleanor poured us samples of her Orleans Bitter and Herbal, Ice Cider, and other local spirits from Caledonia Spirits, Dunc’s Mill and Artesano Mead. You can try a number of different wines and spirits, pair them with cheese, or have a Seasonal Tasting Plate featuring four “bites and sips” for just $9!
We headed for lunch across the room at the Brown Dog Bistro where local specials include items like a gorgeous beet salad, Vermont Bean Crafters Burgers, and Brisket sandwiches using Spring Hill Farm’s Beef that’s processed in the onsite butcher shop. Owner Stephen Breault chatted nearby with farmer partner Ben Nottermann of Snug Valley Farm as we ate our tasty sandwiches. The beer list at Brown Dog is full of local brewers like Kingdom Brewing—who grow most all their own brewing ingredients on their Newport farm. We topped off lunch with salted caramel and mocha cupcakes from Jocelyn and Cinta’s Bakery, who have also found a happy home at the Tasting Center. 
Sitting on the border of Canada, the shores of Lake Memphremegog and just 20 minutes from the awesome slopes of Jay Peak, hungry visitors surround Newport–and there is no better food than that produced by the farmers and producers of the Northeast Kingdom. “Bringing these businesses together in an attractive downtown location will create a destination for residents and visitors to learn more about locally-produced foods and beverages,” Eleanor said. “They will buy and eat more healthy local food, and area farmers and producers will benefit from a larger local market for their products.” 
We urge you to go explore the Northeast Kingdom, and there’s no better place to start than the Tasting Center! They can also now accommodate groups of 20-50 for tours of the center and cidery, followed by a tastings or meal in the barrel room of the Cidery. (Reservations required at least 2 weeks in advance, contact is Tracey@nektastingcenter.com)
From Vermont Artisan Village: 
vermont artisan village is a working community of artisans and food producers that promises to be one of the top food and tourist destinations in Vermont. Located on the busy Middlebury-to-Burlington Route 7 corridor in Shelburne near some of the most visited attractions in the state, Vermont Artisan Village brings together the best in sustainable local food production and artisan craftsmanship in a combined production and retail facility.
Calling all craftsmen, artisans and food producers to join the collaborative and creative community at the Vermont Artisan Village! Do you make artisanal hard cider? Or, maybe coffee roasting is your specialty? Maybe you are a traditional weaver? We’re looking for any and all types of food and craft artisans to join us at the Vermont Artisan Village. We are scheduled to open in early 2015 and are currently accepting applications for tenants. 
Come join our unique and collaborative community of artisans and producers in this beautiful new production and retail facility. Our spaces are 100% customizable to your needs. Learn about the Vermont Artisan Village, view site plans, rates and more on our website: http://vermontartisanvillage.com/.

Have you noticed how many wonderful places there are to visit to experience Vermont’s food, drink, and farms?  There are many exciting road trips you can plan around visiting these places.  (Check out the trails or make your own!)  Have you ever wished that you could find some of these places all under one roof?  The Northeast Kingdom Tasting Center in Newport, VT is just such a place.  Check out the blog post from the Vermont Fresh Network’s Fresh Feed to get more information.  Another such place that is gathering the best Vermont food and drink together is the Vermont Artisan Village.  Slated to open in early 2015, the Village is currently looking for craftsmen, artisans and food producers to join the collaborative and creative community at the Vermont Artisan Village.  Read their post below to get more information and become part of the Village!

From the Vermont Fresh Network’s Fresh Feed:

On the Road – Northeast Kingdom Tasting Center

March 5, 2014


The Northeast Kingdom Tasting Center in Newport, VT opened its doors in August of 2013 enticing both visitors and locals to come taste what the Kingdom has to offer. The Center is a local food emporium featuring a bakery, butcher counter, café, maple shop, and a top-shelf tasting bar with a tempting array of Kingdom spirits and cheeses from local farms. I was lucky to visit the center last week, and explore its culinary treasures with the Center co-founders and Eden Ice Cider owners, Eleanor and Albert Ledger.

Eleanor and Albert moved their cider making, aging, bottling and distribution operations from their farm in Orleans to the basement of the Tasting Center. Guests can see the process of making the ice cider which makes the experience especially unique. Eden Ice Cider manages to capture that off-the-branch taste of a ripe apple in golden liquid form. We settled in at the tasting bar, where Eleanor poured us samples of her Orleans Bitter and Herbal, Ice Cider, and other local spirits from Caledonia Spirits, Dunc’s Mill and Artesano Mead. You can try a number of different wines and spirits, pair them with cheese, or have a Seasonal Tasting Plate featuring four “bites and sips” for just $9!

We headed for lunch across the room at the Brown Dog Bistro where local specials include items like a gorgeous beet salad, Vermont Bean Crafters Burgers, and Brisket sandwiches using Spring Hill Farm’s Beef that’s processed in the onsite butcher shop. Owner Stephen Breault chatted nearby with farmer partner Ben Nottermann of Snug Valley Farm as we ate our tasty sandwiches. The beer list at Brown Dog is full of local brewers like Kingdom Brewing—who grow most all their own brewing ingredients on their Newport farm. We topped off lunch with salted caramel and mocha cupcakes from Jocelyn and Cinta’s Bakery, who have also found a happy home at the Tasting Center. 

Sitting on the border of Canada, the shores of Lake Memphremegog and just 20 minutes from the awesome slopes of Jay Peak, hungry visitors surround Newport–and there is no better food than that produced by the farmers and producers of the Northeast Kingdom. “Bringing these businesses together in an attractive downtown location will create a destination for residents and visitors to learn more about locally-produced foods and beverages,” Eleanor said. “They will buy and eat more healthy local food, and area farmers and producers will benefit from a larger local market for their products.” 

We urge you to go explore the Northeast Kingdom, and there’s no better place to start than the Tasting Center! They can also now accommodate groups of 20-50 for tours of the center and cidery, followed by a tastings or meal in the barrel room of the Cidery. (Reservations required at least 2 weeks in advance, contact is Tracey@nektastingcenter.com)

From Vermont Artisan Village: 

Vermont Artisan Village is a working community of artisans and food producers that promises to be one of the top food and tourist destinations in Vermont. Located on the busy Middlebury-to-Burlington Route 7 corridor in Shelburne near some of the most visited attractions in the state, Vermont Artisan Village brings together the best in sustainable local food production and artisan craftsmanship in a combined production and retail facility.

Calling all craftsmen, artisans and food producers to join the collaborative and creative community at the Vermont Artisan Village! Do you make artisanal hard cider? Or, maybe coffee roasting is your specialty? Maybe you are a traditional weaver? We’re looking for any and all types of food and craft artisans to join us at the Vermont Artisan Village. We are scheduled to open in early 2015 and are currently accepting applications for tenants. 

Come join our unique and collaborative community of artisans and producers in this beautiful new production and retail facility. Our spaces are 100% customizable to your needs. Learn about the Vermont Artisan Village, view site plans, rates and more on our website: http://vermontartisanvillage.com/.

Source: Dig in VT Trails