My youngest sister, Helen, has been living in Vermont for nearly a year as a travel med tech and was celebrating a birthday. My other sister, Mary, planned to visit her and celebrate that birthday as well as her own two days later. Of course, they needed their older sister to tag along and keep track of them.
On arriving in Montpelier, Helen whisked us out for a Vermont specialty called a “creemee”, a soft serve ice cream with a high milk fat content that is sweetened with Vermont maple syrup. We tried the delicacy, dusted with maple sugar, at two different farmstands outside the city to vote on the creamiest creemee and found that we disagreed, as we do on many topics. But we agreed to disagree and enjoyed both confections.
It was prime leaf-peeping season in Vermont, but the drought dimmed the usually vibrant display. The countryside is beautiful anyway, and the line of cars that crept along Route 100, the Green Mountain Byway, was long and slow-going. Not that we were in a hurry! There was much to see—and taste.






Both Morse Farm and Bragg Farm were busy in the last hour of the workday. After our creemees, we cleansed our palate at Barr Hill Distillery, a gin (mostly) distillery that started in 2011 in the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont. A partnership between a distiller and a beekeeper has resulted in a unique product that respects the land and the pollinators that keep it fertile. Barr Hill gin is distilled with juniper and finished with raw honey, and was recognized nationally by USA Spirits Ratings as Spirit of the year two years in a row in 2020 and 2021. We all agreed on that!




The next morning, Helen took us to Wayside, an iconic Montpelier diner, and we all agreed to order the same thing—Creamed Chipped Beef on Toast, which was our mom Jo Quinn's favorite. Josephine would have loved it. We needed to be especially fortified for a big day of culinary touring—and thrifting at area hand-me-down shops, our guilty pleasure.




Route 100 offered many culinary notables. First, we came upon Ben & Jerry’s, a mecca for ice cream enthusiasts. There were long lines for everything, so we joined a tour list for the end of the day since we would be returning along the same road. We hopped over to Cold Hollow Cider Mill, which was also busy, and watched the apple pulp being hosed onto flats for the pressing process. We enjoyed a paper cup of crisp, fresh cider and grabbed apple cider donuts to go. Next, we veered off 100 to get on 108 in Stowe to tour along Smugglers Notch, a pass through the Green Mountains, and landed at the Von Trapp Family Lodge, of the Sound of Music fame. The Austrian-style resort crested a mountain top and offered panoramic views. A friendly herd of goats in a field adjacent to the road added a Heidi element to the drive, and it was easy to imagine yodeling echoing through the valleys below.








But we had places to go and things to see—and now the deadline of the 5:15 B&J tour. We drove through the backwoods of the Green Mountains to Burlington. Our destination was Burton Headquarters to see if Donna Carpenter, the late Jake Burton Carpenter’s intrepid widow, was on site. She was not, but her assistant showed us through the showroom filled with the newest snowboard equipment and clothing. Since Rose had edited Dear Rider, the movie about Jake Burton, I felt very invested in the story of the “father of snowboarding” and couldn’t pass up the opportunity to see the source.



Afterward, we shot down I-89 to reach our tour and enjoyed the visit. Our sample of Milk and Cookies ice cream hit the spot after hearing all about the enterprise from our personable and theatrical tour guide. It was the night of the October Harvest moon, a Supermoon, so we drove back to Barr Hill Distillery, where we had watched it rise the night before, but the distillery was closed on Monday. After basking in the moonglow in the parking lot, we headed back to Helen’s studio apartment so she could finish baking her sourdough bread. We had a snack birthday supper, complete with a brownie with ice cream and a candle that Mary had managed to procure from Wayside that morning without Helen’s notice. We watched Hocus Pocus and laughed along with the three sister witches in the movie.



The next morning, after finishing off the remains of our previous day’s breakfast (since we all brought home half of our chipped beef) we retraced our steps to Helen’s favorite thrift store, where Mary last remembered using her missing credit card and wallet. Thankfully, it had been found, so we spent more time there finding the perfect this and that and plowing some of that found money back into the charity for aiding local at-risk teenagers.
Then we set our compass for Stowe and drove up to experience that picturesque village. It was busy, but we dodged the crowd by parking at Helen’s favorite Catholic Church, Blessed Sacrament, with its exterior carved wooden panels. We walked into downtown Stowe from the church and stopped at the Woodland Café for a delicious Bakewell pastry, a turmeric-laced Golden Milk, a tea, and a coffee. I watched the chef at the café preparing burritos for the next day and admired her technique to produce 70 burritos in the time it took us to have a beverage and a bite. Fortified, we filed into the throng on the main drag in Stowe, stopping here and there to see what we could see.




Cabot Creamery was our last stop on the way home, and that was also crowded, but the personnel at the tasting table were gracious and happy to answer questions. It is a vast operation, drawing most of the milk produced in a seven-state range. The cooperative controls the cheese market in the area, and its extensive distribution makes it easy to support a worthwhile initiative that perfectly exemplifies sharing and caring. We all could agree on that. I purchased a ten-year-old Cabot cheddar that has minimal availability elsewhere, and I look forward to sampling it and recalling our trip to the land of milk and honey.




We went out for dinner that night to Ladder 1, a Barre, Vermont favorite of Helen’s. The restaurant is in an old firehouse and serves delicious food in a campy setting. Beneath the Halloween decorations, there were many vintage signs and posters. After dinner, we enjoyed looking upstairs at the old photographs of the firemen and seeing where they lived while they waited for a call. Arthur, our waiter, was a wealth of information about the property and brought the old days into the light for us. We enjoyed our dinners, sharing Helen’s Black Diamond steak, my Eggplant parmesan, and Mary’s onion soup and onion rings. The wedge salad proved our eyes were bigger than our bellies, and I took it home in its entirety, enjoying it once I was back in PA. We all agreed that it was a fun and tasty dinner and a fine ending to our culinary tour. Vermont leaf peeping is an annual event, and maybe next year the weather will be agreeable.
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Autumn road trip with 3 sisters! Magic🧡