Windsor Star

DINERS DRAWN TO FARMS

Eating where food is grown ‘makes you appreciate farmers’

- LISA RATHKE

What was once a few farms offering expensive dinners within view of the fields where the food was raised has sprouted into popular summer and fall events at farms across the U.S.

These farm feasts are popping up from California to Vermont and are part of the growing agritouris­m movement.

Diners enjoy locally raised foods; farmers supplement their income.

“It makes you appreciate farmers in a different way. And you can’t beat the food,” said Barbara O’Connell, of Ardsley, N.Y., who with her family recently attended a farm dinner for a second year in a row at Valley Dream Farm in Cambridge, Vt.

They were among the 60 people seated on hay bales around two long tables on the farm stand’s open-air porch on a clear, hot evening. A neighbour’s cows chomped on grass across the road, and an occasional truck passed by on the rural road pulling trailers of freshly cut hay.

The feast included a salad of lettuces, kale and blueberrie­s; maple mustard chicken; tiny new potatoes; grilled zucchini and summer squash; and homemade vanilla ice cream with maple syrup. The dinner — US$65 for adults, $39 for children under 10 — came after a hay wagon tour of the lush green fields where the organic produce is grown.

At least five farms offer regular farm dinners in Vermont. Farm dinners also have grown in the Midwest, said Bob Benenson, spokesman for the non-profit FamilyFarm­ed, which works with farmers and food entreprene­urs to help grow their businesses.

“By using these dinners to draw people down to a farm, it serves to educate them, enlighten them more about sustainabl­e agricultur­e practices and hopefully, at the end of it, they go back to wherever, Chicago, the suburbs, and they start shopping more at farmers markets and things like that,” he said.

Kruger’s Farm in Portland, Ore., couldn’t survive on farming alone, said its president, Don Kruger.

“I’m telling you, just farming doesn’t make it. You got to do everything else to make things work,” said Kruger, whose farm serves meals to patrons under a 300-year old oak tree with a huge canopy.

“I think when people come to farm-to-plate dinners they’re really supporting the farm. It’s getting farms a chance to make a living.”

Diners generally must pre-register, and many of the farms don’t have liquor licences. At some farm dinners, customers can bring their own bottles of wine or beer. Farms that do offer booze or pairings of wine or beer with meals are pricier; one starts at more than $200 per person.

The dinners can also be culinary feats. Granor Farm in Three Oaks, Mich., has started running periodic weekend meals this summer. A recent menu included coddled egg with garlic scapes, mushroom cream sauce and frybread; and brown butter and pork belly with wheat berries, rhubarb and fennel.

A multicours­e meal costs $75. The 16-person dinners, which run until November, were sold out in July.

“We are seeing repeat customers,” said chef Abra Berens, adding that the farm is hoping to expand the dinner events to other seasons.

“The best compliment I’m getting is that a group will come to a dinner and then book several dates later in the season.”

 ?? LISA RATHKE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Valley Dream Farm in Cambridge, Vt., offers visitors a weekly farm feast, featuring foods grown nearby.
LISA RATHKE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Valley Dream Farm in Cambridge, Vt., offers visitors a weekly farm feast, featuring foods grown nearby.

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