Vermont
Small Pleasures: Digging Into Gammelgården Creamery’s Maple Skyr
If I had my druthers, I would eat a maple creemee for breakfast each morning.
Due to Pownal’s Gammelgården Creamery, I get fairly shut. The ladies-owned micro dairy’s dreamy, creamy maple skyr is a socially acceptable breakfast that tastes like a deal with.
Offered at shops in southern and central Vermont, Gammelgården’s Icelandic-style skyr is technically a delicate cheese, but it surely tastes and acts extra like yogurt. The creamery completely sweetens the wealthy skyr with Vermont maple syrup. It additionally sells skyr in flavors comparable to apple pie, cherry almond, strawberry and wild Maine blueberry.
Gammelgården’s origins date again to 2004. Stina Kutzer had at all times wished to have a small dairy. On her fiftieth birthday that yr, her husband, Peter, gave her a Jersey calf named Babette.
“I used to be simply going to have a household cow,” Stina Kutzer stated. When Babette had twin heifer calves two years later, she discovered herself with a herd and began experimenting within the kitchen.
In 2010, Kutzer and her sister, Marta Willett, constructed a small creamery and named it Gammelgården as a nod to their heritage; the title means “small, outdated farm” in Swedish, Kutzer stated. They deliberate to promote cultured butter and a yogurt made with the leftover skimmed milk, strained in cheesecloth to show it good and thick.
The milk inspector informed the sisters that they may promote their handmade product, however they could not name it “yogurt” until it was machine processed. In order that they determined to call it “skyr,” one other Scandinavian time period, since they make it the identical means as the standard Icelandic delicate cheese. After skimming off the cream, they pasteurize the milk, add cultures and rennet, and hold it to let the whey drip out.
Gammelgården launched with 5 cows and a 22-gallon pasteurizer. The sisters offered merchandise at farmers markets in Dorset, Bennington and Troy, N.Y., and introduced them to native shops. Williams School, simply throughout the border in Williamstown, Mass., began shopping for their skyr in 2012; to maintain up with the elevated demand, they acquired an even bigger pasteurizer and supplemented their very own milk provide with high-quality milk from space farms.
The creamery now wholesales merchandise to greater than 30 companies in Massachusetts, New York and Vermont — as far north because the Middlebury Pure Meals Co-op and Little Seed Espresso Roasters in Middlebury. Prospects across the nation place orders on Gammelgården’s web site.
Peter Kutzer handles a lot of the wholesale deliveries, although the crew — which incorporates Signe O’Neil, the Kutzers’ daughter — is searching for a distributor. “That may assist us increase in Vermont,” O’Neil stated, “as a result of my poor father is driving in all places proper now.”
Every week, the household nonetheless makes two or three batches of skyr by hand, precisely because it did when Gammelgården began, although the batches have grown. To verify the hanging skyr has strained sufficient earlier than including maple syrup (or jam, for the creamery’s different skyr flavors), Kutzer pinches it to examine its thickness, she stated. Seasonal adjustments such because the cows’ weight loss program and lactation can have an effect on the skyr.
In any season, I get pleasure from Gammelgården’s maple skyr with berries or rhubarb and do-it-yourself granola — or straight out of the container. Subsequent time I top off, I’ll attempt O’Neil’s winter-appropriate suggestion: a dollop on oatmeal.
Small Pleasures is an occasional column that options scrumptious and distinctive Vermont-made meals or drinks that pack a punch. Ship us your favourite little bites or sips with massive payoff at meals@sevendaysvt.com.
Vermont
Watch: Vermont man braves icy waters to save dog from drowning in a 'selfless' act – The Times of India
In a heroic act, a Vermont man leaped into freezing waters on Friday to rescue a dog struggling in the icy Winooski River, the New York Post reports.
Chris MacRitchie, accompanied by his family in Berlin, spotted the distressed dog while going through a Dunkin’ Donuts drive-thru. He quickly climbed down the embankment and entered the river to save the dog.
The courageous rescue was recorded by his son and widely shared online.
“It was one of those moments where you have to make a decision,” MacRitchie said. “I felt I was obligated to at least try to fetch this dog out of the river, as I have two dogs myself, and I would hope someone would do that for them if they were in that spot.”
The footage shows MacRitchie, dressed in a T-shirt and sweats, wading through the icy water as his wife encourages him. Despite the biting cold, his main concern was the river’s depth.
“I didn’t know if it was 20 feet or 2 feet,” he said. “When I broke through and it was waist-high, I thought, ‘OK, this isn’t that bad. Yeah, it’s cold, but I feel this is a very doable situation.’”
MacRitchie successfully pulled the shivering dog to safety, where his wife wrapped it in a sweatshirt. The dog’s owner, Morgan Cerasoli, was overwhelmed with gratitude when MacRitchie called her using the number on the dog’s tag.
Cerasoli, who had been searching for Arizona, her 7-year-old rescue mutt, since Thursday, described her reaction as emotional. “I started crying, and I told him, ‘Oh, my God, I love you,’” she said.
Now reunited with Arizona, who is recovering well, Cerasoli described the rescue as “brave, selfless, and commendable.” She added, “It’s everything we’re meant to be on this Earth.”
Vermont
Dramatic rescue of dog in Vermont goes viral
Spotting a dog struggling to stay afloat in an icy Vermont River, Chris MacRitchie never hesitated.
He jumped into the frigid waters and waded over to the dog, gently pulling it ashore where his wife, Erica, draped it with a sweatshirt. The dramatic rescue of the dog Friday afternoon in Berlin, Vermont, was caught on video by his son and has been shared widely on social media.
MacRitchie’s son, Ace, first spotted the dog as they were going through the drive-thru of a nearby Dunkin’ Donuts. When they reached the river embankment, the father of two felt he had no choice but to save the pooch.
“It was like one of those moments everyone probably has in their life like you’re going to make a decision,” MacRitchie said. “So, I felt I was obligated to at least try to fetch this dog out of the river, as I have two dogs myself, and I would hope someone would do that for them if they were in that spot.”
The video shows MacRitchie approaching the embankment as the dog struggles to get out.
MacRitchie gingerly steps through the ice and into the river, audibly gasping as he wades about 20-feet toward the dog, which was on the other side of the frozen tributary of the Winooski River. His wife repeatedly shouts “c’mon” to the dog and exclaims “Oh, my God” as MacRitchie lifts the dog, later identified as Arizona, out of the water and onto the icy embankment. He carries it over to his wife.
MacRitchie called the dog’s owner, Morgan Cerasoli, whose number was listed on the dog tag.
Cerasoli said she had been looking for her dog, a seven-year-old mutt who had originally been rescued from the side of the road in South Carolina, since Thursday. She was heading to pick up her daughter from school, when she got the call from MacRitchie
“I started crying, and I told him, oh, my God, I love you, I love you, I love you,” she said, as she sat besides Arizona during an interview. She said the dog has mostly recovered, though a checkup did find it was suffering from Lyme disease.
Vermont
Man’s dramatic rescue of dog from freezing river in Vermont caught on video
Spotting a dog struggling to stay afloat in an icy Vermont river, Chris MacRitchie never hesitated.
He jumped into the frigid waters and waded over to the dog, gently pulling it ashore where his wife, Erica, draped it with a sweatshirt. The dramatic rescue of the dog Friday afternoon in Berlin, Vermont, was caught on video by his son and has been shared widely on social media.
MacRitchie’s son, Ace, first spotted the dog as they were going through the drive-thru of a nearby Dunkin’ Donuts. When they reached the river embankment, the father of two felt he had no choice but to save the pooch.
“It was like one of those moments everyone probably has in their life like you’re going to make a decision … either trying to get in the water and help her or the alternative,” MacRitchie said. “So, I felt I was obligated to at least try to fetch this dog out of the river, as I have two dogs myself, and I would hope someone would do that for them if they were in that spot.”
The video shows MacRitchie — dressed in a T-shirt, sweats and boots — approaching the river embankment as the dog struggles to get out. He calls out to the dog at first and his wife, Erica, can be heard encouraging him to rescue it.
MacRitchie gingerly steps through the ice and into the river, audibly gasping as he wades about 20-feet toward the dog, which was on the other side of the frozen tributary of the Winooski River. His wife repeatedly shouts “c’mon” to the dog and exclaims “Oh, my God” as MacRitchie lifts the dog, later identified as Arizona, out of the water and onto the icy embankment. He carries it over to his wife.
“The only real stress I had about it wasn’t getting in the cold water. It was the depth. I did not know if it was 20 feet deep or it was 2 feet deep,” MacRitchie said. “When I broke through and I got on my feet and it was like waist high, I was actually relieved by that. In my mind, during the moment, I thought, OK this isn’t that bad. Yeah, it’s cold, but I feel this is a very doable situation.”
After retrieving the dog, MacRitchie called the dog’s owner, Morgan Cerasoli, whose number was listed on the dog tag.
Cerasoli said she had been looking for her dog, a seven-year-old mutt who had originally been rescued from the side of the road in South Carolina, since Thursday. She was heading to pick up her daughter from school, when she got the call from MacRitchie who said he had “pulled a drowning dog” out of the river.” He wanted to confirm it was her dog.
“I started crying, and I told him, oh, my God, I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you. Let me pull a U-turn and I’m coming right back,” she said, as she sat beside Arizona during an interview. She said the dog has mostly recovered, though a checkup did find it was suffering from Lyme disease.
After reuniting with her dog, Cerasoli said she saw the video and was brought to tears again — over MacRitchie’s exploits as well as the poor condition of Arizona in that moment.
“It’s brave, it’s selfless, it’s commendable. It’s everything that I think that we were on this Earth to be,” she said of the rescue. “Sometimes it feels like that’s very rare these days.”
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