Filtering by Tag: Local Dairy Farm,April Bloomfield

5 CT Dairy Farms Selling Eggnog For The Holidays: Shop Local!

Features Ingredients Eggnog Holiday Local Farm Local Dairy Farm Beverage

Stephanie Webster

We all love Eggnog, but we love it even more when it is sourced from local Connecticut farms. Here are 5 spots to check out for locally produced Eggnog for your holiday table.

Arethusa Farm-Litchfield
https://www.arethusafarm.com/eggnog

This Eggnog lands on our gift-giving list every because, well, it’s simply a holiday must-have for a good, ol’ fashioned hap-hap-happiest holiday and this is the best one you’re going to get!

Mountain Dairy Farm-Storrs
www.mountaindairy.com

It’s a farm-to-bottle process for this holiday favorite that is produced at a home farm that has been chugging along for nearly two and a half centuries. This is eggnog the way eggnog should be made. 

Shaggy Coos Farm-Easton
www.shaggycoos.farm

From cow to bottling, Egg Nog made local. This nutmeg and vanilla kissed seasonal drink will have you coo-ing…


Chef April Bloomfield is Cooking at the Mayflower Inn

Features Restaurant April Bloomfield Fine Dining Washington Litchfield Mayflower Inn Lunch Celebrity Chef Homepage

Andrew Dominick

A posh five-star inn located in “the country” of Connecticut may be the last place you’d expect to stumble upon a former two-time Michelin star chef doing her thing in the kitchen.

Expect it. And expect to run into April Bloomfield.

Yeah, THAT April Bloomfield. The April Bloomfield who won a James Beard Foundation Award for Best Chef: New York City in 2014. The April Bloomfield who owns the British gastropub The Breslin. And the same April Bloomfield of the now shuttered, but acclaimed West Village haunt, The Spotted Pig.

And since mid-September she’s been spending her time away from the concrete jungle as the chef-in-residence at the Mayflower Inn & Spa where she’s firing up the refined pub fare that she is so lauded for and marrying that style with the bounty from local farms.

If you visit—and you absolutely should—there are a few dining experiences to be aware of.

There’s a seasonal, constantly changing four-course dinner tasting in the brightly lit, plant enshrined Garden Room. The $150 tasting’s polar opposite has been the occasionally offered bonfire experience where Bloomfield comes out to chat over cocktails, savory snacks, and gooey s’mores.

Then there’s the meal I elected to have, a lunch in The Tap Room. If the weather obeys, it’s a great idea to dine out on the back deck that overlooks the Shakespeare Garden, equal parts beautiful and haunting on an overcast autumn day.