VTTastingCenter.jpg?width=450There's a movement underway spanning from Burlington VT to Northeast Kingdom towns like Newport, Hardwick, and St. Johnsbury. For many visitors, perceptions of Vermont center on bucolic foliage scenes, maple syrup, and skiing. But residents are increasingly making their living from the area's booming farm-to-table movement.

The Vermont Fresh Network (VFN) is a big driver behind getting seasonal produce from local farms & small-batch 

northest-kingdom-535x1024.png?width=535artisans directly to your favorite restaurants' menus. This mutually beneficial statewide program now connects more than 150 chefs to hundreds of local producers. Restaurants benefit by having local sources for a wide variety of Vermont made products while farmers and artisan food producers have a growing client list to keep their businesses thriving.

Here's a tasting itinerary heavily skewed toward the locally produced beverage category:

Northeast Kingdom Tasting Center

Launch your excursions in downtown Newport,  just off I-91 near the Canadian border in a former storefront now revived as an under-one-roof bonanza of Northeast Kingdom artisan delights. Here you can taste a wide variety of spirits, syrups, and cheeses while browsing shelves lined with "Made in Vermont" foods and beverages like Switchel, an original thirst quencher before Gaterade or artificially colored energy drinks were concocted (farmhands kept ice- cold jugs filled with this gulp-inducing mixture of water, vinegar, lemon juice, ginger, and maple syrup in reserve for energy boosting rehydration during hay harvests or wood chopping sessions. Have lunch at the center's onsite cafe, which serves up grass-fed beef burgers, salads built with year-round local greens, and several rotating local brews on tap.

Eden Ice Ciders

Cider is the next burgeoning craft scene in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom - some say bigger than beer. Production is skyrocketing as new technologically equipped facilities ramp up each year. Farm orchards are fueling the frenzy rediscovering long forgotten apple varieties originally bred for cider. Head down to the visitors center's basement, which doubles as Eden Ice Cider headquarters. Banks of stainless steel tanks ferment ciders straight from their orchards. Eden was born when owners Eleanor and Albert Leger took a trip to Montreal in 2006. 

hillfarmstead-240x300.jpg?width=344A year later, they bought an abandoned dairy farm in West Charleston and soon had over 1,000 apple trees yielding 5 vintages of ice cider. Their latest lineup is Orleans herbal and bitter aperitif ice ciders perfect for meal time sipping.

Hill Farmstead Brewery


Similar to the way fans once endured long hours waiting in line for coveted concert tickets, beer aficionados now exhibit the same fervor over the latest Saison or Heritage Hop brew. Only open Wednesday through Satuday 12-5, with limited outside distribution, lines often snake from the entrance to this Greensboro brewery's barrel room. Here small-batch takes on religious proportions, with 6 draft lines, limited-release bottles, and a strict growler refill limit. Fresh sourced hops and creative fermentation like their Galaxy Single Hop Pale Ale are fueling Hill Farmstead's growth by leaps and bounds (they just finished a major addition). But they're trying not to grow too fast, shipping only to the local Vermont market.

Caledonia Spirits

Hold on to your hat, each Caledonia spirit has a distinct personality. Whether it's their taste-bud- tingling gin, versatile vodka, or Reserve Tom Cat, all are micro-distilled from organic local grain from

VTDrinks-300x225.jpg?width=458 nearby Butterwork Farms. A touch of raw honey raised in on-site hives is added to all bottles, as well. Added just before bottling, the honey imparts unique floral qualities that vary with season and blossom. With their signature gin, you're getting spruce on the nose and palate along with the noticeable pungency of fresh picked wild juniper berries. Barr Hill Vodka is smooth enough for sipping, yet has enough personality for mixing. Tom Cat is Caledonia's modern-day adaption of 18th- century England’s most revered spirit, Old Tom gin. Barrel-aged 4-6 months in locally harvested and produced charred American white oak, it's  a completely unique gin with whiskey-like notes of estabrook-300x225.jpg?width=465oak, spice and a finish of juniper and raw honey.

Where to Stay

Since you're actively seeking out authentic culinary experiences, it's only fitting that you'd want to stay at non-corporate accommodations directly supporting the region's many small business owners. One fantastic example is Estabrook House B&B in St. Johnsbury. This isn't the place to stay if you require nightly turndown service, an onsite spa, or a guaranteed private bathroom. But you have found

estabrookbreakfast-300x225.jpg?width=399 your temporary home if you want a room in a Victorian mansion restored to its original grandeur, complete with stained-glass windows, ornate carved-wood banisters, and a living room filled with games, maps, and books. Innkeeper Maureen Hennings cooks up breakfasts from scratch each morning (including, if you're lucky, a plate of her pillowy pumpkin pancakes). Best of all, staying here puts you within walking distance to nearby St. Johnsbury attractions like Fairbanks Museum & Planetarium, and can't-miss dining at Bailiwicks and Kingdom Taproom.

Photos courtesy of Steve Mirsky & Hill Farmstead Brewery.  Coverage made possible by participating in a visit partially sponsored by Northeast Kingdom Travel & Tourism Association.  Check out travelthekingdom.com for more NE VT trip ideas.

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