Archive for the 'Green Topics' Category

Going Green, Lending Green, FHA & Fannie Mae Offer Green Programs

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

This week FHA and Fannie Mae have started to offer loans for energy efficient home improvements.  FHA’s Powersave program will allow home owners to borrow at fixed rates up to 20 years to make energy efficient improvements on their primary homes. 

This  is a sign that credit is easing and more creative lending programs are becoming available for programs that will allow homeowners to save energy and reduce costs.  Read more here…

Vermont Comes in #1 In the USA!

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

Vermont Life Magazine

{First We’d Like to Say}

California has more sand. Texas has bigger hair. New York has more Knickerbockers.
But when it comes to certain other things, Vermont is No. 1 in our book.

Researched and written by Kathryn Flagg
Illustrated by Willa Koerner

Arts & Letters

★ Vermont has more writers and authors per capita than any other state.

★ Vermont also has the most libraries per capita in the country, even though it is one of only eight states that do not supply funding directly to the libraries.

Colleges

★ More colleges per capita than any other state.

Sacrifice

★ More Vermonters died in the Iraq War per capita than any other state.

★ During the Civil War, Vermont contributed more per capita from its treasury and from its population of young men to the conflict than any other state in the Union.

Service

★ Most Peace Corps volunteers per capita.

Farmers Markets & Local Foods

★ We’re leading the United States in the number of farmers markets per capita.

★ Vermont also has the most CSAs, the most certified organic farmers, the greatest amount of certified organic farmland and the greatest number of local dollars spent buying local foods. That’s per capita for the country.

Cow Power

★ Vermont has the highest number of farm digesters, which turn cow manure into energy, per capita.

Breweries

★ Vermont has more breweries per capita than any other state in the country — one brewery for about every 30,000 people.

Artisan Cheese

★ Greatest number of artisan cheesemakers per capita.

Dairies

★ Vermonters lead the nation in per capita production of dairy products.

Oatmeal

★ According to Wikipedia, Vermont leads the United States in per capita consumption of cooked oatmeal cereal.

Tennis, Anyone?

★ Vermont has the most tennis courts per capita of any state in the country.

Health

★ In 2009, the United Health Foundation ranked Vermont the “healthiest state in the country.” Vermont ranked first this year for a combination of reasons, including low rate of obesity, high number of doctors and low rate of child poverty.
Wildlife Watchers

★ According to a 2002 study by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that compared the states, Vermont had the highest percentage — 60 percent — of residents engaged in some form of wildlife watching.

Preservation

★ No. 1 per capita in the use of federal historic tax credits for rehabilitating old buildings.

Patents

★ No. 1 per capita.

Green

★ Vermont ranked No. 1 in the inaugural survey by Forbes magazine of “America’s Greenest States.”

Public Safety

★ Vermont has the fewest state and local sworn police per capita, with 15.5 per 10,000 residents. However, the state is ranked the third safest in the country based on the number of violent crimes per capita.

Moonlighting

★ Highest percentage of population who work more than one job (9.4 percent) among all New England states, and well above the national average of 5.2 percent.

Maple

★ Vermont has the highest percentage of sugar maple trees of any state in the nation and is the largest producer of maple syrup in the country.

Home Value

★ The foreclosure crisis continues to batter much of the United States. But in the third quarter of 2010, Vermont’s largest city, Burlington, led all metro areas nationwide in percentage increase in the median price for the sale of existing homes — 17.6 percent.

Rural Rides

★ Highest percentage of unpaved roads in the nation.

WE JUST MISSED

Close only counts in horseshoes and the Olympics, but here are some categories where Vermont finished near the top.

2nd

★ High school graduation rate.

★ Hunters per capita, behind Alaska.

★ Golf courses per capita, behind Florida.

3rd

★ Skier and snowboarder visits, behind Colorado and California.

★ Per capita exports to the rest of the nation, behind Washington and Texas.

★ The well-being of children, based on 10 health indicators such as infant mortality and teen birth rate.

4th

★ “Best-run” state, according to business website www.247wallst.com, blending a range of factors, including percentage of people with health insurance, state debt levels and violent crime rates.

5th

★ Vermont was No. 5 globally (and No. 1 in the United States) in “destination stewardship,” a National Geographic study that weighed such factors as environmental quality, social and cultural integrity, historic preservation, aesthetic appeal, quality of tourism management and outlook for the future.

Vermonters Love Cheese and Beer, So Does The Smith Macdonald Real Estate Group!

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Beer LOVES Cheese

At long last, the perfect pairing of two Vermont staples

Vermont Life Magazine
By Melissa Pasanen

Photographed by Jim Westphalen

In the corner of the basement cheese-aging cave at Mt. Mansfield Creamery in Morrisville sits a single open bottle of Rock Art beer. “It’s for the cheese, not the cheesemaker,” jokes Stan Biasini as he starts pulling some of his Inspiration cheeses from the shelves, turning them and carefully wiping them down with a mixture of salt water and the beer. “This cheese was complex and it paired really well with beer so I thought it might taste good made with beer,” Biasini, 51, explains. “It gives the cheese a nutty finish, an added twist. And people like it; they ask for the cheese made with beer.”

Even though Mt. Mansfield has only been in business since June 2009, its beer-washed, Corsican-style tomme is already a favorite of local tastemakers. “I love the cheese,” says Donnell Collins, executive chef and co-owner of Leunig’s Bistro in Burlington. “The Rock Art wash on the rind catches the eye of a lot of our younger clients and it just puts the cheese on a whole other level. I think it makes it nuttier, earthier. It’s like you can almost taste the hops. It’s totally different from any other cheese out there.” Success has both thrilled and slightly stunned Biasini, who grew up around Utica and originally trained as a chef, and his wife, Debora Wickart, 46, a Vermont native who has raised cows since she was a teenager. The family started their cheese business to supplement low liquid milk prices and tide them over until the economy improved and their rug installation business rebounded. “The demand is really overwhelming,” says Wickart with both a sigh and a smile as she sweeps the barn after the morning milking.

This happy marriage between one Vermont cheese and one Vermont beer is more than just a delicious bite. It represents the parallel and complementary growth of artisanal cheese and craft beer within Vermont and across the nation, as well as the significant contributions these two taste-based entrepreneurial niches have made to Vermont’s reputation and landscape. Nationally, there has been a return to handcrafted, small-batch food and drink as consumers search out unique authenticity versus generic corporate sameness. “Cheese and beer are among the artisanal foods that were most ruined by our industrial food system during the 20th century,” notes Garrett Oliver, longtime brewmaster of the Brooklyn Brewery and editor-in-chief of the forthcoming “Oxford Companion to Beer.” “They were wonderfully pleasurable foods that were made into ‘food facsimiles.’ Now that we’re in recovery from that era, we are returning to normal, and it’s natural that beer and cheese should lead the way.”
Shaun Hill
Shaun Hill of Hill Farmstead Brewery

In Vermont, it all started in the early to mid-1980s when pioneers like Shelburne Farms, Allison Hooper and Bob Reese of Vermont Butter and Cheese Creamery, and Marian Pollack and Marjorie Susman of Orb Weaver Farm began making handcrafted cheese. Around the same time, the late Greg Noonan spent three years lobbying the Vermont legislature to legalize brewpubs before opening the Vermont Pub and Brewery, the East Coast’s third brewpub, and Stephen Mason and Alan Davis co-founded Catamount Brewery, one of the original New England microbreweries. “Vermont was one of the first places in the eastern United States where the craft-brewing renaissance took hold,” Oliver elaborates, “and I think it’s not a coincidence that it’s one of the few places in the country that never entirely lost the culture of real cheesemaking. Vermont cheddar is a touchstone for American cheesemakers.”

Vermont now claims the highest per capita number of cheesemakers (more than 40) and breweries (more than 20) in the country, draws sell-out crowds annually to the Vermont Brewers Festival and the Vermont Cheesemakers Festival, and earns top national awards for both its cheeses and beers. In 2004, the Vermont Institute for Artisan Cheese (VIAC) at The University of Vermont was established as the nation’s first and only comprehensive center devoted to artisan cheese education, research and technical services.

The state is a “beacon” in both fields, says Liz Thorpe, author of “The Cheese Chronicles,” a cultural history of the new American cheese, and vice president of leading specialty retailer, Murray’s Cheese. “Vermont is unusual and different from many other states in terms of cheese and beer diversity,” she adds.

At a basic and tangibly tasty level, beer and cheese are slowly but surely nibbling away at the time-honored pairing of wine and cheese. Oliver often faces off against sommeliers during tastings in which the same cheeses are matched with both wines and beers. “Beer always wins,” he reports. “Essentially, beer and cheese both come from grass,” he explains. “Barley is a grass and wheat is a grass. It may sound outlandish, since there’s a cow, a sheep or a goat in the middle of the cheese production process, but there is a flavor of the pasture in great cheeses. There are warm, bread-like flavors in real beers. There is a primal bond between the two foods that tastes natural on the palate.” D.J. D’Amico, a senior research scientist at The University of Vermont and VIAC staff member, adds that beer lacks the acidity and tannins that can make wine a challenging partner. The carbonation also cuts the fat in cheese, he explains, “literally breaking the flavor open and exposing it to your mouth.” Beer is also less risky from a price standpoint and less intimidating, especially to younger generations. “Wine works too,” allows Thorpe, “but it’s harder.” Cheese and beer, she says, are “a case where one plus one definitely make three.”

The crowd that pressed around the bar at Burlington’s Farmhouse Tap and Grill last fall didn’t need much convincing to enjoy bites of pungent Bayley Hazen blue cheese between sips of bourbon oak-aged oatmeal stout or Cabot’s caramel-kissed clothbound cheddar with an all-American Imperial IPA. The beer-focused gastropub offers the best brews it can find both locally and globally along with a fully Vermont cheese list. For the fall event, dubbed “Beer Loves Cheese #1,” the restaurant paired Hill Farmstead Brewery, one of the state’s newest brewers but already attracting serious attention, and Jasper Hill Farm, the seven-year-old operation of the Kehler brothers, who have made waves nationally not only for their own award-winning cheeses but also for their ambitious project: a state-of-the-art cheese cave. Here they age cheeses from other regional cheesemakers like Cabot in an effort to support the state’s dairy business, preserve agricultural land and build critical mass for New England artisanal cheese.

Shaun Hill, Hill Farmstead’s owner and brewer, was on hand with Zoe Brickley, Jasper Hill’s sales and marketing manager. The brewery and the cheesemaker are both in North Greensboro and share close ties, Hill explained, starting with the fact that he is a cousin of the cheesemaker’s namesake, Jasper Hill. As relationships between breweries and cheesemakers go, Hill asserts, “None is as intimate as ours.” After brewing at The Shed in Stowe and at Nørrebro Bryghus in Copenhagen, Hill, 31, returned to his family’s seventh-generation homestead to start his own brewery, which opened in the spring of 2010.

Stan Biasini
Stan Biasini of Mt. Mansfield Creamery

 
Many of his beers are named for relatives, like the Imperial India pale ale called Abner after Hill’s great-grandfather who raised 14 children where the brewery now stands. Hill also brews a custom Belgian lambic-style beer that captures wild yeasts from the Jasper Hill cellars and is used to wash their seasonal Winnimere cheese, a rich, oozy and often funky delicacy, which has even made it to Thomas Keller’s Manhattan restaurant, Per Se. The practice, explains Brickley, goes back to the Benedictine monks who made similar styles of cheese and beer and used their beer, the most sanitary liquid available to them, to clean the ripening cheeses. “The sweetness of the beer helps balance the subtle bitter notes of a washed rind,” she says.

One of Jasper Hill’s latest projects involves working through the Vermont Food Venture Center in Hardwick to teach small dairies how to make more of the in-demand Bayley Hazen blue cheese. Efforts such as this have earned Jasper Hill support from various sources, including the Vermont Economic Development Authority (VEDA), which provides financial assistance to promising businesses. Over the years, VEDA has financed a number of cheese and beer enterprises like Magic Hat Brewing Company, Vermont Butter and Cheese Creamery, and Rock Art Brewery. “The food industry seems to be a niche in which we can really generate some traction,” says VEDA’s chief operating officer Steve Greenfield. “Those businesses benefit from the already established Vermont karma and the state gets added oomph when more products are out there.” Greenfield also notes that these ventures also support critical sectors like tourism and agriculture and generate revenue from outside the state. Naturally, there will be business failures like that of the still-missed Catamount Brewery, as well as the risk that successful homegrown companies will be bought, as happened this past summer when North American Breweries purchased Magic Hat. “Definitely, when you create an interesting little brand,” says Hooper of Vermont Butter and Cheese Creamery, now topping $10 million in annual sales, “you have suitors.”

Back in Morrisville, Matt Nadeau, president and co-owner of Rock Art Brewery, says, “I’m having too much fun right now” to sell. “It was never the goal to be on every supermarket shelf,” he continues. “Craft beer is about fresh, local beer, not that your beer is in 30 different states on every shelf.” The 14-year-old company broke ground last fall on a new building just down the road that will double the size of their brewery to 10,000 square feet, a huge leap from the original basement brewing operation launched by Nadeau, 44, and his wife, Renée, 41. Their first 220-gallon tanks with homemade foil jackets lined with bubblewrap are still in the brewery, dwarfed by newer tanks 10 times their size. “When we got started we could hardly keep one of those half full and now we’ve got five states waiting for beer,” says Nadeau proudly.

Success, of course, brings its own growing pains from overexpansion to market demand outpacing supply. Rock Art experienced its biggest challenge in 2009 after Nadeau filed a trademark for his Vermonster American-style barley wine only to receive a cease and desist letter from Hansen Beverage Company, owner of Monster Energy drinks. Even though lawyers believed the huge corporation had no case, they also cautioned that he could lose his whole business in a David versus Goliath battle. “That didn’t sit well with me,” Nadeau recalls. “That’s not what our Founding Fathers intended.” Prompted by independent retailers who boycotted Hansen and public outcry fueled by media and the Internet, the giant backed down. “You’re going to tell a Vermonter you can’t use Vermonster?” Nadeau recalls. “Good luck. You just pissed off a whole state, a small but very vocal state.” He is now working with Sen. Patrick Leahy on trademark law reform and hopes to effect change that will benefit small businesses nationally.

The Nadeaus started their basement brewery in 1997 with a conservative $12,000. Across town in his basement cheese cave, Biasini washes cheese with Rock Art beer and shares his similarly careful approach to launching Mt. Mansfield more than a decade later. With an Intervale Center Success on Farms grant, Biasini took a course with a highly regarded Vermont cheesemaker and consultant who told him that he’d need $100,000 to get going. Biasini did it for $6,000, and “I paid cash for everything,” he recounts, showing off his steam kettle bought used online for $1,500 and an old gas station cooler for $500. His only employee is a retiree who offered to work for cheese and his cheese press is weighted with filled plastic gallon jugs. “A gallon of water didn’t cost anything,” he notes. To meet the growing demand for his cheeses, Biasini knows he must expand and is cautiously exploring his options. Despite Mt. Mansfield’s early success, the cheesemaker observes as he gently stirs the morning’s milk, “You’ve always got to remember that this may be fun, but it’s a business.”

Tasting Beer and Cheese Together

 D.J. D’Amico, a senior research scientist at The University of Vermont, is also on the staff of the Vermont Institute for Artisan Cheese and is a competitive home brewer. He frequently organizes Vermont beer and cheese tastings. Here are some of his recommendations, and you can find more @ vermontlife.com.

  • l First, the flavor intensity should be similar between the two. A delicate cheese needs a delicate beer, while a strong cheese requires a beer with heft so that neither is overpowered by the other.
  • Try to match flavors to accentuate or complement. This could mean matching the chocolate flavors of stouts and porters to those same nuances found in some blue cheeses, or in the case of wheat beers and fresh goat cheese, use the spicing of the beer to complement the citrus tang of the goat’s milk.
  • Or go for a contrast like porters with aged cheddars, or the dark fruit flavors found in Belgian-style dark ales to balance the funk of washed-rind cheeses.

 

With these guidelines in mind, D’Amico suggests these pairings:

  • Aged cheddars like Cabot clothbound with a moderately bitter pale ale or India pale ale such as Lucky Kat IPA from Magic Hat or the chocolate and coffee notes of porters and stouts such as Wolaver’s Oatmeal Stout.
  • Fresh goat cheeses with light-bodied Belgian-style witbiers (wheat beers) like Long Trail Belgian Wit or Harpoon UFO White and harder aged goat cheeses like Blue Ledge Farm’s Riley’s Coat with the less pronounced spicing of American wheat ales or hefeweizens like Harpoon UFO Hefeweizen or Magic Hat Circus Boy.
  • Bloomy-rind Camembert or Brie-style cheeses made from goat’s milk like those from Vermont Butter and Cheese Creamery, Lazy Lady, Does’ Leap and Blue Ledge with funky Belgian-style saison beers like Rock Art’s Sunny and 75°. The more delicate, buttery versions made from cow’s milk go well with the butterscotch and toffee notes of Irish red ales and mild ales like Long Trail Harvest.
  • Alpine-style cow cheeses like Cobb Hill’s Ascutney Mountain or Thistle Hill and Spring Brook Tarentaise, and sheep cheeses like Vermont Shepherd and Woodcock Weston Wheel with lightly hopped nutty amber and brown ales like Long Trail ale, Otter Creek Oktoberfest and Wolaver’s brown ale.
  • Washed-rind cheeses with funky and strong flavors but soft texture like Lazy Lady’s Barick [sic] Obama or Mixed Emotions, or Jasper Hill Farm’s Winnimere with strong but complex beer like Belgian-style ales Harpoon Quad or Long Trail Double IPA and Otter Creek Imperial IPA.
  • Blue cheeses like Boucher Blue or Jasper Hill’s Bayley Hazen with English-style old ales and barley wines like Rock Art’s Vermonster or stouts with chocolate and roasted coffee flavors like McNeill’s or Otter Creek Russian Imperial Stout.

Stowe Farmers Market

Monday, July 26th, 2010

The Stowe Farmers Market is open every Sunday starting May 16th through October 17th from 10:30AM – 3PM rain or shine. The Stowe Farmers Market offers an array of fresh produce, local crafts and prepared foods. Whether you’re in the mood for Asian or BBQ, you will find it here.

Not only is the farmers market a great place to pick up locally grown produce for the week, it also offers entertainment with live music. It’s a great way to spend a few hours with the kids outside on a warm summer or fall day. Your kids can even enjoy a horseback ride while you’re there.

The Stowe Farmers Market is located right off the Mountain Road in the field next to the Red Barn shops, directly across from the Stoweflake.

Stowe Land Trust Video

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

The Stowe Land Trust just release an informational video about their cause. The idea was to show what it is they (and we all) love about Vermont and also to showcase a number of the properties they’ve been able to protect over the years.

In honor of Earth Day they released the video in order to raise awareness about the Earth’s environment! Go to their website to check it out and learn more about the Stowe Land Trust. (Stowe Land Trust Video, Click Here)

Washburn Ceremics, Stowe VT

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

If you are looking for a great gift idea and want to support our local community, I have the best suggestion! Katherine Washburn, owner of Washburn Ceremics makes the most wonderful hand painted ceremics. Her stuff is the most fun! She will do custom images too, you just have to send her a picture of your favorite pet. I had her do a clock and lamp of my daughter’s dog, Gizmo, a few years ago. He is still one of her best sellers!

So if you have a animal lover on your Christmas list this year, check out Katherine’s site! WashburneCeremics.com, Hand painted ceremics from Vermont!

Saying Goodbye to the Stowe Land Trust

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

I have just finished thirteen years as a member of the Stowe Land Trust board. It has been an exciting time in Stowe to be part of this wonderful organization. We have conserved over 3,000 acres and have just completed out 27 th project. I have personally been a major part of the fund raising efforts to preserve these projects. I have seen the organization grow from one executive director to a staff of three. We have became an accredited land trust as of 2008. This was a daunting feet, with the final document weighing in at 48 pounds.

I cannot thank my fellow board members and the SLT staff enough. Without the direction of Heather Furman, our executive director, Becca Washburn assistant director, and Erin Bruhns, administrative assistant the Stowe Land Trust would not be the organization it is today. They all work tirelessly to help the Board and to meet with potential donors while attending site walks, and fund raising functions. ,It has been a good run and I have enjoyed every minute. But now it is time for new members to take over and bring new and creative ideas to energize the organization.

The environment and the habitats that it protects have been a life long mission of mine. I have been on the Vermont Nature Conservancy, the Stowe Conservation Board and the Stowe Land Trust. I will continue to support these organizations.

Stowe Land Trust Flea Market, May 24th

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

Stowe Land Trust Flea Market

I have been a long time board member of the Stowe Land Trust. It has been our goal to conserve scenic, recreational, and productive farm and forest lands for the benefit of the greater Stowe Community.

We put our head together and came up with the idea of having a flea market to fund raise for our cause. What better way to continue our goals of conservation and clear out our basements! We’re jumping on the GREEN train and what you to join US!

Grab a booth to sell your goods or stop by to help Reduce, Recycle and Reuse!
Saturday, May 24th from 8AM – 3PM

Admissions to buy is $2.50 for adults, children are free. More than 60 vendorsthere is food available and rock bottom prices!

Booths are still available for $35 (8′ x 6′ space). Click here to register!

Hot Topic: Green Building

Friday, October 19th, 2007

As a REALTOR in Vermont, I hear more and more about Green building. I recently came across an article on RISMedia addressing the issue: “Real Estate Industry Leaders, USGBC Discuss Next-Generation ‘Green Buildings’”

The sum up the issue well in this statement: “Green building has moved from a frill, to a necessity,…”

Interested in reading more? Click here to read the full article.