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Ski-Town Eats: New at Restaurants Near Vermont's Slopes | Seven Days

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Ski-Town Eats: New at Restaurants Near Vermont's Slopes | Seven Days


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  • A patio party at Lot Six Brewing last spring, with snowy Smugglers’ Notch in the background

I’m not a skier or a snowboarder. Despite having grown up in Vermont, I’ve always been more of a cozy-in-the-lodge person than a hurtling-down-the-slopes one. My idea of thrill seeking is finding the best snacks — you don’t have to do the “ski” part to enjoy après-ski, right?

Whether you find yourself on the lift or not, this winter’s sure to be a tasty one in Vermont’s mountain towns. We headed to new and newly reimagined restaurants near Stowe, Sugarbush, Mad River Glen, Smugglers’ Notch, Bolton Valley and Cochran’s Ski Area to survey the scene. If you’re hitting resort areas this winter — for whatever reason — be sure to stop for a bite. I’ll probably be at the bar.

— J.B.

Night Moves

Nocturnal, 140 Cottage Club Rd., Stowe, 760-6316, nocturnalstowe.com

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Nocturnal general manager and operator TC McNeill - KEVIN GODDARD

  • Kevin Goddard

  • Nocturnal general manager and operator TC McNeill

Opening beside the Alchemist could put a lot of pressure on a brewpub. But for the team behind Nocturnal — which has run Nocturnal Brewing in Hayesville, N.C., since 2018 — that proximity was one of the draws.

“North Carolina and Vermont are two of the best beer states in the entire country,” general manager and operator TC McNeill said. “We wanted to feature our beer against some of the best in Vermont, give the beer nerds something else to enjoy, and serve it with some southern comfort and hospitality.”

Proximity to the mountain was another plus; Nocturnal owner Mike Plummer has long spent winters at Smugglers’ Notch, skiing and snowboarding with his family. After refreshing the longtime Sunset Grille & Tap Room space, his team opened Nocturnal’s Stowe outpost in March with a smokin’ hot barbecue menu befitting its North Carolina roots.

All the beer comes from the brewery, which is 1,000 miles away near the North Carolina-Georgia border. There, head brewer David Grace uses a 10-barrel system — upgraded from a 3.5-barrel system to supply the Vermont expansion but still a nanobrewery — to make “classic styles with a modern twist,” McNeill said. The lineup ranges from lagers to IPAs to imperial stouts, from flagship the Hayes (a hazy IPA) to Life on the Nautilus, a gose brewed with squid ink.

The Nocturnal team make the 18-hour drive to deliver the beer themselves. “It’s a very mom-and-pop operation,” McNeill said.

The 38-year-old Georgia native previously worked for Plummer at Southbound, a restaurant outside Atlanta. He quickly embraced the Vermont lifestyle and took up snowboarding last winter.

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“I got, like, 22 days on the mountain and have all my gear and pass for this year,” McNeill said. “I’ve made many friends who promised to make this one a memorable season.”

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Nashville hot cauliflower and a smash burger at Nocturnal - KEVIN GODDARD

  • Kevin Goddard

  • Nashville hot cauliflower and a smash burger at Nocturnal

His après meal of choice? Nashville hot cauliflower with white barbecue sauce ($14) to start, paired with a Sun & Life Mexican-style lager ($7), which is brewed with North Carolina malts and heirloom Bloody Butcher corn. Next McNeill would order the NOC smash burger ($16), with two four-ounce patties, American cheese, house sauce, onions and pickles. Like all of Nocturnal’s sandwiches, it comes with waffle fries.

On a late-lunch stop last month, I focused on the restaurant’s barbecue classics. The succulent smoked brisket sandwich ($16), stacked high on Texas toast, would be another ideal post-mountain (or anytime) meal. Hungry for more than a sandwich? The platter version ($32) comes with half a pound of meat and two sides.

Since opening, Nocturnal has shifted its menu from entirely barbecue to a lineup with broader appeal, McNeill said, though the meats still shine. Slather them with mustardy Carolina Gold sauce and sip a North Carolina-brewed beer. With late-night hours and live music planned for this winter, there’ll be plenty of opportunities to hang out and soak up that southern hospitality.

— J.B.

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Global Terrain

Scrag & Roe, 40 Bridge St., Waitsfield, 496-3911, scragandroe.com

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Nathan Davis - MELISSA PASANEN ©️ SEVEN DAYS

  • Melissa Pasanen ©️ Seven Days

  • Nathan Davis

Most of the dishes on the recently relaunched menu at Waitsfield’s Scrag & Roe trace their roots to the six years that chef-owner Nathan Davis spent living in China. The soy-and-vinegar chicken adobo ($20) and fragrant, lightly sweet coconut curry ($22) are exceptions.

“I learned those in prison in the Philippines,” Davis, 43, mentioned offhandedly. “Three joints, six months, $12,000,” he continued, adding later that he had traveled there to celebrate his birthday. Instead, it was his first day in jail, busted for weed.

The Middlebury native and career cook returned to Vermont from China in 2017 and spent several years working for caterers and restaurants as what he called “a kitchen mercenary.”

Last December, Davis and a partner opened Scrag & Roe in the heart of Waitsfield. They named the restaurant for nearby Scrag Mountain and fish roe and served shareable plates, from seafood crudo to housemade gnocchi.

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Spicy dan dan noodles and dry-fried shiitake mushrooms at Scrag & Roe - COURTESY OF MADISON HAYES

  • Courtesy Of Madison Hayes

  • Spicy dan dan noodles and dry-fried shiitake mushrooms at Scrag & Roe

In mid-September, now steering the small restaurant solo, Davis shifted to pan-Asian cuisine with a focus on Chinese dishes, such as umami-rich, dry-fried shiitake mushrooms ($10) with bacon; smashed cucumbers ($7) with soy, chile and a slick of sesame oil; and spicy dan dan noodles ($22) electrified with chile and tongue-tingling Sichuan peppercorns.

“It’s the food that I love and I miss,” he said.

Scrag & Roe currently serves Thursday through Sunday, from noon to 8 p.m., and Davis expects to add another day or two this winter, he said. While he appreciates the area’s steady flow of tourists, including those who come to ski or ride at nearby Sugarbush and Mad River Glen, he hopes the new menu and other changes, such as adding a TV and high-top tables in the bar, will also appeal to locals.

“I don’t want to be the fancy place,” Davis said.

Davis started snowboarding at the Middlebury Snowbowl as a teen, around the same time he began working the dish pit at his hometown’s Fire & Ice Restaurant. Sugarbush soon became his mountain of choice, one of the reasons the restaurant’s location appealed to him.

The regularly changing menu includes dishes influenced by his time living in Shenzhen and his wide travels through Asia. “Whenever I’m anywhere and people are cooking, I’m watching,” Davis said.

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After a powder morning, he said, it’s a toss-up whether he’d want to eat the dan dan or the adobo, but he’d wash either one down with a $5 Tsingtao beer.

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Grilled flank steak with herb-cucumber salad at Scrag & Roe - MELISSA PASANEN ©️ SEVEN DAYS

  • Melissa Pasanen ©️ Seven Days

  • Grilled flank steak with herb-cucumber salad at Scrag & Roe

During a recent late lunch, a dining companion and I relished the dry-fried shiitakes, especially when we offset their salty intensity with mouthfuls of tiger salad ($11), a pick-up-sticks pile of lightly vinegary raw leek, cucumber and carrots. The combo paired perfectly with a refreshing plum wine spritz ($15) from the bar’s small but on-point cocktail list.

Bouncy dan dan noodles with ground beef packed prickly heat, but the spiciness didn’t KO the underlying flavors of garlic, sesame, black cardamom, orange peel and fermented mustard root. “I’m gonna crave this dish,” my friend said.

Perfectly grilled flank steak ($23), with a fresh, acidic herb and cucumber salad and touch of fish sauce, was equally compelling in an understated way. Davis explained it was a riff on Thai beef salad. He claims only “some semblance of authenticity,” he cautioned with a grin.

“At the end of the day, I just want food that slaps,” Davis said.

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— M.P.

Parking Lot Beers

Lot Six Brewing, 4087 Route 108, Jeffersonville, 335-2092, lotsixbrewing.com

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Post-mountain beers outside at Lot Six last spring - COURTESY

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  • Post-mountain beers outside at Lot Six last spring

On a blustery Saturday in late October, I saw the roof come off the shed behind Lot Six Brewing, lifted not by the wind but by a crane. A week later, longtime Burlington-area brewer Justin McCarthy was staring at a hole in the ground when we spoke on the phone. By spring, he’ll be working in a brand-new timber-frame brewery with a seven-barrel brew system.

McCarthy and Adam Shirlock opened Lot Six right at the base of Smugglers’ Notch Resort in May. The duo renovated the former Brewster River Pub & Brewery top to bottom, contract brewing a small selection of beers at Zero Gravity Craft Brewery, where McCarthy was formerly director of brewing operations, while they waited to tackle the second phase of the project.

Inside the warm and welcoming brewpub, head chef Jeff Silver’s beer-friendly menu hits the classics. During that late-October visit — expressive toddler in tow — my husband and I devoured the excellent wings (both chicken and cauliflower in various sauces and rubs, $14) and tater tot poutine ($14) loaded with rich mushroom gravy, cheddar curds and toasted black sesame seeds. We ate quickly, partly because it was good and partly to contain the toddler. A downstairs game room with a top-of-the-line foosball table and a very kind staff helped with the latter effort.

The menu has a subtle Asian influence, with pickled cabbage and katsu on the nachos ($14), a seared broccoli snack with chile crisp do chua ($8), and karaage fried chicken on the club sandwich ($17). Silver is in the process of tweaking things for the upcoming season, and Shirlock is winterizing the surprisingly extensive cocktail list. Family- and dietary-restriction-friendly offerings will remain plentiful, including nonalcoholic drinks, a kids’ menu, and well-labeled gluten-free and vegan options.

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Clockwise from front left: Seared broccoli, La Moule lager, chicken wings, Freefall IPA and tater tot poutine at Lot Six Brewing - JORDAN BARRY ©️ SEVEN DAYS

  • Jordan Barry ©️ Seven Days

  • Clockwise from front left: Seared broccoli, La Moule lager, chicken wings, Freefall IPA and tater tot poutine at Lot Six Brewing

On the beer side, Lot Six’s house offerings are now four: La Moule lager, Prefunk pale ale, Freefall IPA and Drivetrain IPA. The selection is hop-heavy, McCarthy said, largely due to the confines of brewing elsewhere. Once the on-site brewery is up and running, he’ll add stouts, porters, saisons, and Belgian- and German-inspired lagers.

“It opens us up to the world of whatever I feel like brewing,” he said.

Brewery construction means the patio is on hiatus for now, but it should be back “for some springtime enjoyment,” McCarthy said. Lot Six started last season, pre-opening, by throwing outdoor parties with an up-close view of the mountain where the patio is now.

“The Smuggs crew, we’re all used to drinking beer in a muddy parking lot,” McCarthy continued. “Why not just do it outside behind the bar?”

Meanwhile, the team is “psyched” for their first full winter, he said. “We’re all skiers, so we’re selfishly excited. But it’s our bread and butter up here, and it livens up the town.”

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Lot Six will soon be open later to accommodate the après crowd, but not too late: They’re shooting for 10 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays.

“We’ve got to get up and catch first chair at 8:30,” McCarthy said with a laugh.

— J.B.

‘App-rès’ Appeal

Hatchet Tavern, 30 Bridge St., Richmond, 434-3663, hatchetvermont.com

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Hatchet Tavern bar director Katie Hlavacek - COURTESY OF WINTER CAPLANSON

  • Courtesy Of Winter Caplanson

  • Hatchet Tavern bar director Katie Hlavacek

Like many Burlington-area kids, our two boys started skiing and snowboarding at Bolton Valley. My short-lived attempt to become a downhill skier also started and ended there, but that’s another story. Our varied appetites for zipping down the slopes aside, I think we would agree on a refueling pit stop at the new version of Hatchet Tavern.

The Richmond eatery is getting a jump on winter this week with the launch of an “app-rès” menu designed to take advantage of its location near Chittenden County’s only downhill ski destinations: Bolton and Cochran’s Ski Area.

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Hatchet owner Gabriel Firman, 51, said his almost-10-year-old restaurant has always seen some post-ski traffic, but “we’re going to lean into it this year.”

From 4 to 5:30 p.m. every day the eatery is open, all the small plates will be $10, as will the very good marinated tempeh Reuben and a single-patty version of the satisfying Tavern smash burger with fries or salad.

Recently appointed culinary director Christian Kruse and his chef de cuisine, Chase Dunbar, crossed Bridge Street to Hatchet in October after Firman closed his second Richmond restaurant, the Big Spruce. The pair previously cooked together at Black Flannel Brewing & Distilling in Essex, where Kruse, 40, earned a 2022 James Beard Foundation semifinalist nod for Best Chef: Northeast.

But the Westford native is no fine-dining snob. Kruse’s revamp of the Hatchet menu is down-to-earth while bringing flair to the details. The kitchen prides itself on accommodating dietary needs: The fryer is gluten-free, and several dishes can be made vegetarian or vegan.

I’d happily make a meal of small plates, especially with the pricing incentive.

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Sesame-crusted tuna, fried Brussels sprouts and fried calamari at Hatchet Tavern - COURTESY OF WINTER CAPLANSON

  • Courtesy Of Winter Caplanson

  • Sesame-crusted tuna, fried Brussels sprouts and fried calamari at Hatchet Tavern

The deliciousness coming out of that fryer includes light, crunchy calamari rings and tentacles ($16), scattered with pickled onion and chile and served with housemade black garlic aioli. Bronzed fried Brussels sprouts ($15) come with a creamy, citrusy version of the aioli. Crisp-shelled arancini risotto balls ($14), rich with Cabot cheddar, are paired with a tangy, emulsified roasted red pepper sauce.

To balance the richness, I’d add the roasted beets ($14), which are served with excellent lemony hummus, dusted with crushed pistachios and enlivened with the pop of pickled mustard seeds.

My now-grown sons would definitely appreciate the extensive après drink options at Hatchet. The bar boasts 24 taps and a standout cocktail program with housemade syrups and infused spirits. On a recent evening visit, my husband and I found two stools at the busy bar, and I watched bartender Henry Sheeser expertly shake up my Really F’in Good cocktail ($14).

With its tart, bitter edge and egg-white froth, it lived up to its name and even conjured visions of powder days ahead.

— M.P.

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Vermont defends climate superfund law in federal court

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Vermont defends climate superfund law in federal court


RUTLAND, Vt. (WCAX) – Attorneys defended Vermont’s landmark climate superfund law on Monday, as it faces a lawsuit filed by the Trump administration.

Vermont lawmakers passed the Climate Superfund Act in 2024 after devastating flooding in 2023 and other extreme weather events.

The law requires certain large fossil fuel companies to help cover the costs of climate-related damage linked to their emissions between 1995 and 2024.

It is being challenged by the federal government, along with the American Petroleum Institute, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and attorneys general from 24 Republican-led states.

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They argue Vermont is overstepping and that climate policy should be handled at the federal level.

Attorneys for Vermont and environmental groups asked a federal judge in Rutland to dismiss those challenges, arguing the state has the right to hold companies accountable.

“It was an intense and technical day of legal arguments over whether the Climate Superfund Act passes muster under federal law, and whether it is appropriate under our Constitution and other doctrines, and is going to survive this series of lawsuits that have been filed against it,” said Christophe Courchesne of the Vermont Law and Graduate School.

Vermont was the first state to pass a law like this. New York followed, and more than 10 other states are considering similar measures.

This case could help decide whether those laws move forward.

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Star bartender raised in VT hunts the ‘big shebang’ of a James Beard

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Star bartender raised in VT hunts the ‘big shebang’ of a James Beard


Ivy Mix knew only small-town life growing up in Vermont. In 2003, she decided that needed to change.

“I realized the world was a very big place,” she said recently. “I thought I might want to go someplace and see something.”

She left for Guatemala to volunteer and teach photography in an orphanage. She hung out daily in a nearby bar, enjoying the environment at least as much as the imbibements. When she realized she couldn’t pay off the tab she had racked up, Mix started pouring drinks to offset her debts.

A celebrated bartending career began.

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The Tunbridge native is a semifinalist in the Outstanding Professional in Cocktail Service category of the James Beard Awards, the top honors in the American food-and-drink industry. The nod recognizes her work at Whoopsie Daisy, the bar she co-owns in Brooklyn. The author and five-time nominee hopes this is the moment she can finally call herself a James Beard winner.

The 20 bartenders in her category include Kate Wise, who grew up in Stowe and works at Juniper at Hotel Vermont in Burlington. Wise said she’s stunned she’s in the same category with a woman she saw give a cocktail-making demonstration years ago at Waterworks Food + Drink in Winooski, the sort of event celebrity bartenders do.

“She is so talented,” Wise said of Mix, who has owned two successful bars.

Catching on to the cocktail boom

Mix spoke with the Burlington Free Press while driving from New York City to Tunbridge. She splits her time living in Brooklyn and her hometown.

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“Tunbridge when I was growing up was small and really rural,” Mix said. “It’s still rural, but it was before the demise of the dairy industry.”

Mix and her twin sister, Tess, are the daughters of glass blower Robin Mix and Susan Dollenmaier, founder of the Vermont-based textile company Anichini. They lived off a dirt road with only one house nearby. Mix attended a Waldorf school and then Chelsea High School and became obsessed with horseback riding.

“I horseback rode all the time,” she said. “Before I went to college that’s what I thought I was going to do. Olympic riding was my goal.”

She stayed in Vermont to study philosophy and fine art at Bennington College. While in college she spent time in Guatemala, sowing the seeds of her bartending career.

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Mix graduated from Bennington in 2008. She sold her horse and thought she’d become a professor. The economic collapse that year changed her plans. She lived in New York, worked for free at art galleries and hated it. Mix began working at cocktail bars just as that trend was catching on.

“I was like, ‘OK, this is cool,’” she said. “The cocktail revolution was really booming.”

Shining a spotlight on female mixologists

The cocktail revolution, though, felt like it had little room for women.

Mix said the speakeasy “meme” was big then, which meant men in moustaches, arm garters and suspenders. She and friend Lynnette Marrero in 2011 started Speed Rack, which as the movement’s website explains has “been able to shine a spotlight on female mixologists thriving behind bars around the country; and while they are at it, raise money for breast cancer research, education and prevention.”

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That’s when her career really took off. She was named one of Food & Wine magazine’s most innovative women in 2015 and honored by Wine Enthusiast as Mixologist of the Year in 2016.

The first time she was up for a James Beard Award was two years later. Her bar, Layenda, was up for the Outstanding Bar Program category. (It would also be a semifinalist in 2019 and last year before closing.) She scored a second Beard nod in 2025 as a media-award nominee for her book “A Quick Drink: The Speed Rack Guide to Winning Cocktails for Any Mood.”

She co-owns the Brooklyn wine shop Fiasco! Wine + Spirits and runs Whoopsie Daisy with Piper Kristensen and Conor McKee. Mix said she used to play Little League baseball against Kristensen, who’s from Strafford.

‘I want to go to the big shebang’

Mix said Vermont helped shape her career because of the sense of community it inspires.

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“I can make a good cocktail, but if you’re not having a good time and you don’t feel welcome, it’s not going to taste good,” she said.

The small-town tendency to take good care of people “has really infiltrated my sense of hospitality,” Mix said.

She would love to finally win a James Beard Award after her string of nominations. She said she’s been lucky to have “a mountain of accolades” that she’s proud of. But the Beard honors are different.

“Accolades — it’s such a funny world. Do they matter? Yes. Do they dramatically help your business? Absolutely,” Mix said.

“For me to get a medal around my neck, that’s the one I really want to get,” she said of the James Beard Award. “It kind of puts you on a whole different playing field.”

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Finalists will be announced March 31. Winners will be revealed June 15 in a ceremony in Chicago.

“I want to go to the big shebang,” Mix said.

If you go

WHAT: Whoopsie Daisy bar

WHEN: 5-11 p.m. Monday-Thursday; 5 p.m.-midnight Friday; 3 p.m.-midnight Saturday; 3-11 p.m. Sunday

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WHERE: 225 Rogers Ave., Brooklyn

INFORMATION: (347) 365-4193, whoopsiedaisybk.com

Contact Brent Hallenbeck at bhallenbeck@burlingtonfreepress.com.



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Skier dies after fall at Sugarbush Resort in Vermont, police say – The Boston Globe

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Skier dies after fall at Sugarbush Resort in Vermont, police say – The Boston Globe


A man died Saturday after falling while skiing at Sugarbush Resort in Warren, Vt., officials said.

The man fell and slid into a wooded area while skiing Stein’s Run, a double-black diamond trail on Lincoln Peak, Vermont State Police said in a statement.

The double-black diamond rating is the highest difficulty designation in skiing, according to the National Ski Areas Association.

The man was found unresponsive by ski patrol members and was brought to an ambulance at the base of the mountain, police said. He was pronounced dead due to his injuries, according to the statement.

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The man’s name was not released pending notification of his family, officials said.

Police said the death did not appear suspicious. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Burlington, Vt., will condut an autopsy to determine the cause and manner of death.

No further information was immediately released.


Collin Robisheaux can be reached at collin.robisheaux@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @ColRobisheaux.





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