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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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A Vermont couple builds an 800-square-foot home on a budget – The Boston Globe

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A Vermont couple builds an 800-square-foot home on a budget – The Boston Globe


Sam Gabriels and Chrissy Bellmeyer were no strangers to living small. Before they met, Bellmeyer designed and lived in a tiny house on wheels and Gabriels spent four years living out of a van, looping the country to organize pop-up farm-to-table dinners alongside Michelin-starred chefs. So, when the couple bought a half-acre lot in Waitsfield, Vermont’s Mad River Valley in a development called the Waitsfield Ten, where neighbors help each other build, 800 square feet didn’t feel like a constraint.

Architectural designer and builder Andy White of Boreal Design started by creating a simple, 20-by-20-foot box that was drywalled, then painted, in a weekend. Inside it, White built the living spaces as independent, self-supporting platforms arranged at staggered heights. He describes the plan as a counter-clockwise spiral: Down one step from the entry into the living room, up two into the kitchen, up one more into the dining room.

The level variations define each space. “If built traditionally with two floor plates and 9-foot ceilings, the house would feel claustrophobic,” White says. “Here, you experience the full interior volume, with long sightlines from corner to corner.”

Without walls dividing the public spaces, rooms morph to fit current needs and individual elements do double or triple duty. For example, the open cubbies that store Gabriels’s vinyl collection are also perches for overflow dinner party guests in the dining room and extra seating in the living room. Initially, White worried — unnecessarily — that the living room was too small and lacked a wall for a television. The couple got a projector and screen, and noted that the deck expands the experience. The mechanicals and storage are under the floors.

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The window arrangement of this sustainable home in Waitsfield, Vermont, takes advantage of passive solar heating and cooling.Ryan Bent

Upstairs, the 8-by-12-foot space in front of the primary bedroom is both a closet/dressing area and mini lounge. In the morning, guests might wander over from the second bedroom to chat; during parties, it’s another spot to hang out. “We’re very open people, so it works for us,” Gabriels says. If things change, the couple could add standard-size French doors to hide their bed. The second bedroom, which already has a pocket door for privacy, could absorb the office nook beside it to become a larger bedroom.

The materials palette celebrates what’s commonly available: nothing is precious, everything is considered. Walls and ceilings throughout are CDX fir plywood — construction-grade sheathing that is normally hidden behind drywall. Structural fir posts, usually buried, are left exposed. The couple planed, sanded, and stained the posts and sanded all the plywood, removing lumberyard stamps. In place of galvanized joist hangers, White used inexpensive angle steel, spray-painted black. Running the length of the staircase and bracketing the bedroom thresholds, it’s the home’s signature accent. It matches the exterior siding — corrugated metal that is distinctive, inexpensive, easy to install, and low-maintenance.

The bedrooms, each in their own wood box, illustrate how architect Andy White conceived of the interior spaces on a grid.Ryan Bent

Sustainability was non-negotiable. Fourteen-inch-thick, cellulose-filled walls push the dwelling past passive-house standards for insulation and airtightness. They also leave deep window sills that double as seating, plant shelves, and such. The utility bill for the all-electric home averages just over $100 per month (excluding internet).

Decor-wise, color does the talking. The bright yellow kitchen and pink-tiled bath are odes to homes that Gabriels admired in New Mexico, Oregon, and California. “We took a Pacifico beer bottle cap to Home Depot to find the right canary yellow for the kitchen cabinets,” Bellmeyer says.

The built-in daybed under the stairs increases seating in the 101-square-foot living room, as do the storage cubbies and low wall that separate it from the dining room.Ryan Bent

White says his construction methods make it easy to add onto the home, although the couple has no plans to do so. Rather, they hope to build an ADU to offer housing to others in the community. “This is a mid-income development, making it cheaper than the median house price but not attainable for everyone,” Bellmeyer says.

Meanwhile, they’re grateful for White’s unconventional approach, fulfilling their wish list within the square footage their budget allowed.

White deflects the praise back onto the couple. “The home wouldn’t have come together the way that it did for anyone else; it’s very much theirs,” he says. “Chrissy and Sam’s vision, willingness to take risks and reimagine typical rooms, informed the design more than any specific space-saving or building strategy.”

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Architectural designer and builder: Boreal Design, borealdesignvt.com

Cabinetmaker: Han Hewn, hanhewn.com

Walking in the front door, you can see the entire first floor of this 800-square- foot Vermont home.Ryan Bent

Marni Elyse Katz is a contributing editor to the Globe Magazine. Follow her on Instagram @StyleCarrot. Send comments to magazine@globe.com.





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Ben & Jerry’s Foundation says it will shut down amid legal dispute with parent company – VTDigger

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Ben & Jerry’s Foundation says it will shut down amid legal dispute with parent company – VTDigger


Two patrons enter the Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream shop on Church Street in Burlington. File photo by Charles Krupa/AP

The Ben & Jerry’s Foundation says it will shut down at the end of the year after its corporate parent cut off funding and evicted its three staffers Wednesday. The move leaves $600,000 a year in grants to Vermont organizations, and 40 years of the ice cream brand’s progressive mission, hanging on a judge’s future ruling.

“This is the other foot dropping in terms of the way Magnum is trying to destroy the social values of Ben & Jerry’s,” said Ben Cohen, co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s Homemade, in an interview Wednesday.

The Vermont-based iconic ice cream brand has been in a legal fight with its parent company, The Magnum Ice Cream Co. — an ice-cream spinoff of the larger corporation Unilever — since November 2024. Ben & Jerry’s alleges that the corporation overreached its control, pushing out the CEO and interfering with the brand’s political views. The question before a judge is whether the corporate parent had the authority to reshape governance and withhold funding from the foundation. 

Amid the push-and-pull over governance, Unilever audited the foundation, which is the philanthropic arm of Ben & Jerry’s, in April 2025, finding conflicts of interest and a lack of governance and financial control. 

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Liz Bankowski, president of the foundation’s board of trustees, said in an interview that Unilever withheld the philanthropy’s funding late last year and ordered foundation staff to vacate its corporate office in South Burlington by July 15 because of governance issues the audit raised. This led the foundation’s leaders to join the ongoing lawsuit, fought by the ice cream brand’s independent board, in an effort to retain funding. The lawsuit is pending in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. 

While the foundation’s leadership is framing the decision to cease operations as the only option after Unilever withheld funding, an unnamed spokesperson for Magnum wrote in a statement to VTDigger that the shuttering is “entirely down to the Trustees and their decision to ignore the findings of an independent audit and failure to put in place basic good governance; much to our dismay.” 

Since the audit, the foundation has adopted a conflict of interest policy, but “the bottom line was that unless we changed our board, they were going to continue to withhold funding,” Bankowski said.  

Cohen described the audit as “a bunch of trumped-up charges.” 

“The foundation has been independently audited every year,” he said. “I think that Magnum was searching in vain for some illegal or unethical activities. I think they found none.” 

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Since Ben & Jerry’s sold the ice cream business to Unilever in 2000, the corporation has given $60 million to the foundation. The philanthropic arm has operated for 40 years, supporting the ice cream brand’s progressive mission by offering financial backing to social justice organizations across the country. The foundation does not have an endowment and is reliant on the funding its parent company gives annually, outlined in its merger contract.

A chunk of that funding, $600,000 a year, goes to Vermont organizations such as the immigrant farmworker rights organization Migrant Justice and the LGBTQ+ nonprofit Outright Vermont, according to foundation leaders. 

“We fill a particular niche that not a lot of other funders fill,” said Rebecca Golden, the foundation’s director of programs, who has worked at the organization for 34 years. 

Golden is one of three foundation staffers whose last day in the physical office is Wednesday, following orders from Magnum to vacate. Although Magnum did not directly address its vacate order in its statement to VTDigger, the spokesperson wrote that the foundation’s leaders recently “took the position that its staff are not Ben & Jerry’s employees, despite utilising Ben & Jerry’s offices and systems.”

Golden described the possible shutdown as an “enormous loss” that will not only affect the organizations that the foundation supports but also Ben & Jerry’s employees who “feel very proud of being a part of the foundation.” 

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“It’s been a really long year, so there’s been a lot of emotions — the whole gamut, as we like to say of the seven stages of grief. But I think at this point we’re sort of in the acceptance phase,” she said. 

The Magnum spokesperson indicated that the work of the foundation will continue even if its leaders decide to cease operations at the end of the year, writing that the company is “firmly committed to funding a grant-giving foundation, supported by appropriate governance controls to ensure it is living by its values.”

But Cohen is not confident that Magnum will uphold the values of the Ben & Jerry’s Foundation in the corporation’s continued philanthropic efforts. 

“What are they going to fund? I have no idea. My guess is that they would not be looking to fund entities that are opposed to the status quo,” Cohen said.

The foundation’s leaders have pointed to its support of Migrant Justice during a period when the farmworker organization was considering a boycott of Ben & Jerry’s as an example of their commitment to social justice. After immigrant farmworkers raised concerns about working conditions at farms supplying Ben & Jerry’s, the company joined a program that collaborates with farmworkers to strive for fair working conditions. 

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Political activism has been central to the Ben & Jerry’s brand since its founding. As a part of the ongoing lawsuit, Ben & Jerry’s alleged in a May filing that Magnum has been undercutting its social justice mission in order to “censor, intimidate and purge” the company’s independent board, which Cohen said was created to defend its progressive values. 

Three of the board’s members, including one who has been an outspoken critic of Israel, were removed late last year after the parent corporation introduced a new set of governance practices. In its motion to dismiss the lawsuit, Magnum argues that it retains ultimate authority and the brand’s social mission must be nonpartisan.  

As the lawsuit awaits a decision, Cohen, who is not a part of the suit, has created a campaign to “free Ben & Jerry’s,” amassing around 160,000 signers for its petition demanding that Magnum sell Ben & Jerry’s to a “group of values-aligned investors.”   

“The very values-led business model that built Ben & Jerry’s into this amazing, phenomenal brand is the very thing that Magnum is currently destroying,” Cohen said.





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Hazy, hot, and humid: Wildfire plumes give southern Vermont skies an odd glow

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Hazy, hot, and humid: Wildfire plumes give southern Vermont skies an odd glow


SOUTHERN VERMONT — A thick veil of wildfire smoke high in the atmosphere is transforming the sky over our local Bennington and Windham Counties this week – casting an eerie glow, muting the sun, and leaving air quality in the moderate range – even as temperatures and humidity remain oppressive.

According to federal forecasters, the hazy and particulate-laden sky and unusual colors are the result of smoke from more than 830 active wildfires burning across Canada and northern Minnesota, funneled into New England by the jet stream and trapped over the region by stubborn weather patterns.

What people are seeing, and why the sky looks so strange

Over the course of Wednesday, residents across Southern Vermont reported the sky shifting from orangey‑yellow to umber to violet hues tinged with pink, with a yellow cast over the landscape and a deep red or dark orange sun, especially nearest to sunrise and sunset.

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On a normal and clear day in Southern Vermont, tiny molecules in the atmosphere scatter mostly blue light, which is why the sky appears blue.

However, this week, the air is filled with larger particulate matter from wildfire smoke, which scatters longer wavelengths of light – oranges and reds – in a process known as Mie scattering (pronounced “mee,” and named after physicist Gustav Mie who first published the mathematical description of this weird-looking light-scattering phenomenon).

Due to Mie scattering, the sky can appear milky white, with sepia tones, or faintly pink‑violet, instead of blue. The sun may appear like a dark orange or red disk, especially when low to the horizon, and sunlight at ground level feels weaker and more filtered, as if being viewed through rose-tinted glasses. And these are the effects that we are currently experiencing.

Where the smoke is coming from, and how it travels

Federal agencies have reported that more than 800 wildfires are burning in Canada, with additional fires in northern Minnesota near the Canadian border. Many of these are large, and burning through dense boreal forests with little or no containment.

These blazes have triggered evacuations at their locales and in the surrounding areas, and are attributed to areas experiencing intensive drought.

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The smoke created from these wildfires reaches Vermont through a series of atmospheric steps.

The jet stream’s “conveyor belt” of high‑altitude winds scoop up smoke from the Central Canada region and carry it southeast across the Great Lakes and into New England.

A high‑pressure “lid” forms, where a strong high‑pressure system causes air to sink (a process known as subsidence) which then presses some of the elevated smoke closer to the surface.

A stalled weather pattern can occur, where slow‑moving systems over Canada and the Northeast keep the flow of smoke aimed at the region instead of sweeping it quickly away.

These patterns mean that – even though the fires are hundreds of miles away – fine particulate matter (PM2.5) from those blazes is now suspended over Vermont and neighboring states.

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Local air quality: Moderate, with cautions for sensitive groups

On Wednesday, air quality in Bennington and Windham Counties sat in the “moderate” category, with the Air Quality Index (AQI) fluctuating roughly between the low‑50s and high‑90s. This was driven primarily by PM2.5 from the presence of wildfire smoke.

In practical terms, most healthy adults can go about their normal routines outdoors. However, more sensitive groups – older adults, children, people with asthma, COPD, or heart disease – are advised to limit prolonged or heavy exertion outside, especially during the haziest periods.

Those with prolonged exposure may notice throat irritation, mild coughing, or even eye discomfort – particularly during intense exercise.

Residents can track real‑time conditions using the federal AirNow “Fire and Smoke Map” and Vermont‑specific dashboards, which show localized AQI readings as plumes shift during the day on Thursday.

How the smoke is affecting storms, heat, and humidity

The same smoke that is changing the sky’s color is also subtly reshaping the weather over Southern Vermont.

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Forecasters note several key effects. These include solar dimming, where smoke particles in the upper atmosphere scatter and absorb sunlight, acting as a partial sunblock. This can shave a few degrees off daytime highs, compared with what might otherwise occur under clear skies.

It can also include “capping inversion.” By warming the air aloft, the smoke can create a “cap” – a warm layer that suppresses rising air. This can weaken thunderstorms, even when surface heat and humidity are high.

Another key effect is cloud microphysics, where extra smoke particles provide millions of tiny surfaces for water vapor to cling to, producing many “very tiny” droplets rather than fewer larger raindrops. These smaller droplets don’t fall as easily, which can reduce heavy rainfall and the actual structure of a storm.

For example, on Tuesday night, Southern Vermont sat under extremely high humidity fueled by warm southerly winds pulling tropical moisture up the East Coast ahead of a cold front. Under normal conditions, that setup could have produced stronger thunderstorms. Instead, wildfire smoke likely muted the intensity of those expected storms, leaving the region with more of a muggy “soupy” feeling than the explosive severe weather that many expected.

Short‑term outlook for southern Vermont

Through Wednesday and into Thursday, forecasters expect the following for our Southern Vermont region:

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  • Sky conditions – Persistent haze and milky skies, with periods of thicker smoke as the plumes shift southward and then rise again. The sun may remain reddish or orange at times.
  • Temperatures and humidity – Highs in the mid‑80s, with oppressive humidity at times, especially ahead of the next cold front.
  • Air quality – AQI values are forecast to remain in the moderate range, occasionally bordering on “unhealthy for sensitive groups” during heavier smoke intrusions (these are expected through Thursday).
  • Showers and storms – As another cold front approaches us on Thursday, scattered showers are expected with isolated downpours and localized “non‑severe” thunderstorms. (Smoke may again limit storm strength somewhat.)

By Friday, higher pressure and drier air are expected to build in from the west, bringing more seasonable temperatures in the upper 70s to mid‑80s, lower humidity, and improved air quality – though some high‑level haze may linger.

For now, we will continue to look at our landscape through our “rose-colored” glasses.



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