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âNew England After Summerâ Co-hosts Amy Traverso and Richard Wiese trek to Vermont to visit Allison Hooper, whose Vermont Creamery helped put New England cheeses in the spotlight. Then itâs off to the White Mountains for a taste of winter adventure at the Omni Mount Washington Hotel. Finally, Yankee editor Mel Allen hits the road to share some favorite autumn vistas on New Hampshireâs Kancamagus Highway. Back in the kitchen, Amy makes a Beet Salad with Crispy Goat Cheese. [WATCH NOW]( [Vermont Creameryâs Recipe for Success | Yankee Magazine]( Allison Hooper and Bob Reese have staked the future of their Vermont Creamery enterprise on the robust goodness of goat's-milk cheeses. For âBest of New Englandâ (season 2, episode 9), Weekends with Yankee visited with goat farmer and cheese maker Allison Hooper of Vermont Creamery, a brand thatâs helped put New England in the national cheese spotlight. Learn more about the Vermont Creamery operation in this 2016 Yankee profile by Weekends with Yankee co-host and Yankee senior food editor Amy Traverso. Lush blooms grace the dinner table on a bright summerâs day at Allison and Don Hooperâs farm in BrookÂfield, Vermont.
Heath Robbins Do goats hold the key to Vermontâs dairy future? On a wet early-summer day in Vermont, the 4-month-old kids at Ayers Brook Goat Dairy line up at a fence in the big barn, curious about a new group of visitors, eager and winsome, bringing to mind golden-retriever puppies on stilts. When Allison Hooperâa partner in the operation and, as co-founder of Vermont Creamery, the stateâs best-known cheesemakerâsteps into their pen, they bound over, rooting in pockets for a treat, rising on hind legs for a scratch. Her reaction is mostly unsentimentalâAyers Brook has nearly 500 head to manage, and Hooper is scanning them for signs of sore mouth, a highly contagious, though not particularly dangerous, viral infection that herd manager René De Leeuw has been treating in some kids, now quarantinedâbut yes, sheâll admit that theyâre cute. Cute and demanding. Case in point: Goats donât like to get wet. Theyâre not grazers, like cows, eating any vegetation at ground level. Theyâre browsers, gleaning choice leaves, bark, and stems, preferring hay to grass. Mostly âthey like to be indoors,â Hooper says. âThey can go outside, they hang out, but when theyâre eating, theyâre inside.â No long, lazy days on Vermontâs green hillsides for these divas. Theyâre smart, stubborn, and disease-prone. And yet Hooper believes that the future of Vermont dairy should restâat least in partâon more goat farms. Allison Hooperâs goats gather around for a good scratch (and, hopefully, treats).
Heath Robbins To that end, Vermont Creamery and Evergreen Conservation Partners, a consortium of agriculturally minded private foundations, purchased the former Hodgdon farm in Randolph, Vermontâ30 minutes down I-89 from the Creameryâs headquarters in Webstervilleâto create a model goat dairy. They did this not merely to provide milk for their own operation, but to develop best practices, to improve genetic stock, and to demonstrate to other farmers and to students that goats represent a viable alternative to cows in a landscape where milking 100 head of cattle no longer guarantees a living wage. âThose original family homesteads with 100 acres donât provide enough land to feed the number of cows farmers now need to be at scale,â Hooper says. âIf you could say to that farmer, âIf you milked 500 goats, you could harvest the feed on your 100-acre farm,â I think we can build that story and connect them with investors who want to be helpful.â With everything theyâre learning at Ayers Brook, the team hopes to create a more-level path for future farmers. The demand for the milk is already established. Vermont Creamery, which began in 1984 as an experiment with co-founder Bob Reese, now produces nearly 4 million pounds of product annually: fresh chèvre in many forms, aged goatâs-milk cheeses such as Coupole (a [2014 Yankee Food Award]( winner) and Bijou, as well as cowâs-milk products like crème fraîche and cultured butter. To feed all that production, the Creamery supplements its Ayers Brook output with milk from 17 other Vermont farms and 10 additional farms in Ontario. Hooper and Reese would prefer that it all came from Vermont. Itâs where their business took root, and itâs the place they call home. Miles Hooper and Sandy Reese help themselves to grilled salmon.
Heath Robbins Allisonâs own home is a serene 1815 Cape on a 67-acre farm that she shares with her husband, Don Hooper, a gregarious former state senator and National Wildlife Federation representative. Set on a west-facing hill, it boasts a front porch wide enough for a table and chairs and a view of the barn where Vermont Creamery first got its start. It was an inauspicious beginning. Back in 1983, Reese was the marketing director for the stateâs agriculture department. Hooper was a dairy-lab technician, a recent college grad just returned from a stint studying cheesemaking in France. Preparing for a formal dinner with the stateâs Restaurant and Lodging Association, Reese asked Hooper to make 10 pounds of fresh chèvre, a rare delicacy at the time. âShe saw a free dinner out of it,â Reese jokes. âShe went and sat at one of the round tables. After her course was served, a couple of chefs put their business cards in front of her and said, âI want to talk to you about buying some goat cheese.ââ Sweet-faced, ever-curious goats check out the visitors at the Ayers Brook dairy in Randolph, Vermont.
Heath Robbins âWhat should I do now?â Hooper thought. She was 23. In France, sheâd seen a glimmer of a life that she wanted to replicate in Vermont. And Reese was ready for a change. So they began talking possibilities. At the time, the state had just 13 licensed dairy, ice cream, and cheese plants, down from more than 200 at the turn of the century. So they decided to gamble. Vermont Butter & Cheese was born. (The company changed its name to Vermont Creamery in 2013.) âWe were so in the weeds, so day-to-day,â Hooper says, now sitting on her porch with Bob Reese and his wife, Sandy. The Hoopers are hosting a small gathering of employees to reminisce and celebrate more than 30 years in business. âI made the cheese, we sold the cheese. Make the cheese, sell the cheese. Collect the money, meet the payroll.â For the first four years, Hooper was âchained to a cheese vat seven days a week,â Reese says. Meanwhile, he worked from home, taking orders, marketing, making deliveries. But their timing couldnât have been better. As the business was growing, so was the American culinary scene and artisanal-cheese movement. Hooper might not have been the first small-batch, European-inspired cheesemaker in the United States, or even in New England. But in addition to building the business and raising three sons, she served on the board of the American Cheese Society, helped found the Vermont Cheese Council and the [Vermont Cheesemakers Festival]( mentored other cheesemakers, and has had an outsized influence on American cheese-making. As demand grew and new hires freed her from the cheese vat, Hooper became the ever-more-public face of the company, while Reese held it all together behind the scenes. The Hoopers at home in Brookfield. Allison is the cofounder, with business partner Bob Reese, of Ayers Brook Goat Dairy and Vermont Creamery; Don is a former Vermont state legisÂlator and National Wildlife Federation representative.
Heath Robbins Today, Vermont Creameryâs staff includes a president (French native Adeline Druart), a team of sales reps, and a marketing manager. Hooper and Reese still keep up punishing travel schedules, but both have a bit more time to relax and entertain. âDon is constantly making lists of dinner-party ideas at any time,â Hooper says. âItâs often weeknights. But I donât worry about it. People just want to get together. We donât fuss over making everything perfect. We just have wine and lots of great cheese.â When the Hoopersâ son Miles, now Ayers Brookâs farm manager, arrives, everyone sits down to eat. Don pauses, wineglass in hand, always ready with a toast. âTo health and wealth and time to enjoy both,â he says. âCheers!â The following menu presents several delicious ideas for cooking with three of the Creameryâs signature products: fresh goat cheese, butter, and crème fraîche. In keeping with the Hoopersâ style, theyâre exquisitely simple. All were originally made with Vermont Creameryâs productsâyouâll find them at many supermarkets, cheese shops, Whole Foods, and Wegmanâs storesâbut we tested them with several brands and all worked well. SPONSORS Weekends with Yankee is a production of WGBH Boston and Yankee Magazine and is distributed by American Public Television. [Unsubscribe](
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