Autumn Leaves Artisan Cheese & Foods Festival
Monday, October 08, 2007
After discovering existence of the Autumn Leaves Artisan Cheese & Foods Festival to be held at the end of September at Valley Shepherd Creamery and pouting because I wasn’t able to attend, I was delighted to find out an FTP reader was going and was more than happy to serve as our eyes and ears for this awesome-sounding event! What follows is Athena Fotiadis’ report on the festival:
Back in July, I was at my local farmer’s market (Montclair, NJ), and I noticed a new cheese vendor, Valley Shepherd Creamery. I perused the
selection, and I decided to try their manchego-style cheese. It was great! While waiting for my cheese to be wrapped, I picked up a flyer for the Autumn Leaves Artisan Cheese & Foods Festival on Saturday, September 29, 2007. I was so excited! I immediately lined up a friend to come with.We arrived about noon after a very pleasant and easy drive down Route 78. It was warm with a slight nippy breeze, my favorite weather. The leaves are
already barely starting to turn colors and the drive took us through some beautiful landscape. When we made it to the entrance, we were directed to
drive on a bit to the middle school. They had parking and a bus to take us to the farm itself. Already, we could tell, it was pretty busy!So, the cheese. There were quite a few farms/cheesemakers represented. Some were from New Jersey, many were from further up the northeast,
including Quebec. My friend and I tasted cheeses from Meadow Stone Farm from CT (cheese with chocolate liqueur and tobacco wrapped cheese), the
well-known and TV-featured Bobolink Dairy from NJ (Jean Louis and Drumm, if you like your cheese stinky, here’s where to go), Artisan Made-Northeast from CT who distribute some of the other cheeses there (five different blue cheeses, my favorite being the Benedictin, and handmade chocolate turtles that were orgasmic), Seal Cove Farm all the way from Maine (really creamy and nice goat cheeses and a couple of interesting washed rind cheeses), Cato Corner Farm from CT (our favorite, we tried everything he brought and this was the cheese we bought for our baguettes), and Beltane Farm from CT (the *freshest* goat cheese I have ever tasted!).There were other cheesemakers there, but it started getting very crowded. So, we were at Cato Corner Farm and decided to buy our slices for the baguette table as mentioned before. They had a really neat thing that you could buy a slice of cheese from whomever you liked for $2 and then go to the baguette table and pay $2 for a generous hunk of baguette and some olive oil and/or balsamic vinegar to make a nice sandwich. We got the Fromage d’O’Cow, a creamy and stinky cheese. We were lucky to have gotten the last of the baguettes (although, they started using the rounds of bread from one of the purveyers there, which for some reason, we didn’t visit). So good! The olive oil was such a nice green fruity counterpoint to the cheese.
We dived back into the tent, it was starting to approach mob levels. It wasn’t even 2pm at this point. We decided we need desert, so we headed to
the Bent Spoon table for the Lavendar Mascarpone ice cream. You know, the cheese was awesome, but I think the ice cream was divine. We never made it to any of the wine tables. At this point, you couldn’t get near them in under 10 minutes, and I noticed some of the other vendors were starting to run out of stuff. I don’t think they anticipated the turnout (I think their website mentioned 1,500 people!), which is actually a great thing to me. That many people care about quality, handcrafted food! We headed back to a few tables and got some apricot honey from Gooserock Farm from NJ, and tried the handmade chocolates by J. Emanuel, also in NJ. We totally missed the Quebecois cheese. It was starting to get really really crowded. We took a break and took some photos of the sheep, and headed to our final destination--Valley Shepherd’s own table outside their shop. We tried the Fairmount, a nice swiss style, mentioned by Nicole in a previous post, and the Califon Tomme, a beautiful gouda-style cheese, which actually, this was my favorite.Whew! Can you believe, we were actually cheesed out at this point. It was just about 2pm, so we headed back. The cheeses that I know that can be
found in the Philly area are Valley Shepherd and Cato Corner Farm. Everyone had a website, and quite a few ship their products.All in all, it was a perfect September day with really great food, and I can’t wait for next year!
My mouth is absolutely watering! Thanks, Athena, for such a great report - I’m completely jealous! To see more photos from the festival, click here.
hi, joanna! according to their website, they sell their cheeses at dibruno bros.
i have a pdf of all of the participating vendors if anyone would like me to send it to them.
Oh no, that’s fine. I’ve browsed the cheeses at DiBruno’s, but of course not comprehensively, so I’m sure I just missed them. I’ll ask for them next time I’m in there—thanks!
Excellent job, Athena - I feel like I was there (I wish I had been!)
That was fun - thanks for “taking us there”
I was at this cheese festival early (around 11am) and heard that the crowds were unbearable. I was, however, able to purchase some of Meadow Stone Farm’s chevre which was “to die for” - the smoothest and freshest thing ever. My partner went back later and they were completely sold out of chevre, but she purchased the Tobacco-Chevre and an aged Cinnamon Goat cheese which we served with pears. This farm was different than any of the others - lots of “experimental” and different cheeses using their own farm grown plants and fruits mixed in with the cheeses. Look forward to going back next year!




Thanks for the report, Athena! Being originally from north Jersey myself, I’m happy to hear that there’s a farmers’ market in Montclair! (I grew up near Wayne, but I have vivid memories of being dragged to Montclair every year during elementary school, by my mom, for a good annual used children’s book sale.)
You mentioned that the Cato Corner cheeses are available in Philadelphia; do you know where? The farm name doesn’t sound familiar…