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🧀 Where to Find the Best Artisan Cheese in America

Discover the top artisan cheese regions and creameries redefining American cheese culture—from Vermont to California and beyond.

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Last Updated on August 23, 2025 by Daily News Staff

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Not All Cheese Is Created Equal — Discover the U.S. Regions Making Cheese Worth Traveling For

When it comes to cheese, America often gets a bad rap—especially from international visitors used to shelves full of regional specialties and raw milk delicacies. Mass-produced slices and fluorescent shreds may dominate supermarket aisles, but beyond the plastic wrap lies a thriving world of artisan cheesemakers producing some of the finest cheese in the world.

Whether you’re a Euro expat feeling homesick for good camembert or a local foodie ready to explore beyond cheddar blocks, here’s your guide to America’s best cheese-producing regions and the creameries putting U.S. cheese on the global map.

artisan cheese map

Artisan Cheese Map of America

🟩 Northeast: Home of Heritage and Innovation

Vermont and New York are leading the charge in high-quality, farmstead cheeses. These producers emphasize small herds, raw milk, and European-inspired aging techniques.

Jasper Hill Farm (VT) – Aged in their own underground cellars, cheeses like Harbison and Bayley Hazen Blue have won international awards. Consider Bardwell Farm (VT/NY) – One of the oldest cheesemaking sites in the region, known for Dorset and Pawlet, both raw milk marvels. Nettle Meadow (NY) – Makers of Kunik, a decadent triple-cream goat and cow blend that’s pure bliss.

🟨 Midwest: America’s Original Cheese Country

Wisconsin earns its title as “America’s Dairyland,” but there’s much more than curds and cheddar here.

Uplands Cheese (WI) – Their Pleasant Ridge Reserve has been named the best cheese in America multiple times. Hook’s Cheese (WI) – Known for their sharp aged cheddars—some matured for over 15 years. Roth Cheese (WI) – Blending European tradition with American craftsmanship.

🟦 West Coast: Cheese with a Creative Spirit

From lush coasts to wine country, California and Oregon boast cheeses as fresh and bold as their surroundings.

Cowgirl Creamery (CA) – A pioneer in organic cheese, their Mt. Tam and Red Hawk are favorites in wine country. Point Reyes Farmstead (CA) – Their Original Blue is a creamy, complex blue cheese that pairs beautifully with fruit and wine. Rogue Creamery (OR) – Makers of Rogue River Blue, the first American cheese to win “Best Cheese in the World.”

🟧 The South: A New Frontier in Farmstead Cheese

You might not expect to find world-class cheese in Georgia or North Carolina, but Southern creameries are proving otherwise.

Sweet Grass Dairy (GA) – Farmstead cheeses from grass-fed cows. Green Hill is a Southern take on camembert. Boxcarr Handmade Cheese (NC) – Italian-style cheeses like Cottonbell and Rocket’s Robiola. Mozzarella Company (TX) – Fresh, handmade mozzarellas and seasonal specialties.

🟪 Southwest & Rockies: Earthy, Bold, and Unique

Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona offer high-desert cheeses shaped by elevation and heritage.

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Beehive Cheese (UT) – Known for Barely Buzzed, a cheddar rubbed with espresso and lavender. Haystack Mountain (CO) – Small-batch goat cheese with personality. Mesa Top Farm (NM) – Sustainable, local, and full of character.

🧭 How to Explore Artisan Cheese in the U.S.

Whether you’re traveling or staying local, here’s how to tap into this hidden world of American cheese:

✅ Visit Farmers’ Markets – Ask vendors about local dairy farms.

✅ Explore Regional Cheese Trails – Vermont, California, Wisconsin, and Oregon all have mapped-out routes.

✅ Buy Direct Online – Many artisan creameries ship nationwide.

✅ Look for “Farmstead” Labels – This means the cheese was made where the animals were raised.

✅ Use American Cheese Society’s Directory – A trusted source for discovering producers.

Final Bite: American Cheese, Reinvented

Forget what you know about “American cheese.” From the forests of Vermont to the valleys of California, a new generation of cheesemakers is redefining what domestic cheese can be: bold, complex, sustainable, and just as crave-worthy as anything from Europe.

The next time someone says, “The U.S. doesn’t do cheese,” just smile… and hand them a slice of Pleasant Ridge Reserve or Rogue River Blue.

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For more on Artisan Cheese, check out Food and Drink!

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The Wild, Wacky Legacy of Pasadena’s Doo Dah Parade

Discover the bizarre and beloved history of Pasadena’s Doo Dah Parade — the irreverent, comedic, anything-goes counter-parade that became a Southern California cultural icon.

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The Wild, Wacky Legacy of Pasadena’s Doo Dah Parade: Inside California’s Most Unusual Celebration

The Wild, Wacky Legacy of Pasadena’s Doo Dah Parade

For nearly four decades, Pasadena’s Doo Dah Parade turned the idea of a “traditional” parade on its head — then stomped on it with lawn-chair drill teams, absurd costumes, and satire that could lampoon anything from politics to pop culture to the Rose Parade itself. What began as a joke in a Pasadena bar became one of Southern California’s most iconic community celebrations of imagination, humor, and glorious weirdness.

From Barroom Idea to Cultural Phenomenon

The Doo Dah Parade began in 1978, dreamed up by a group of local artists and musicians at Chromo’s Bar. Tired of the strict formality of the Tournament of Roses Parade, they envisioned a counter-culture alternative — a parade where anyone could join, creativity reigned supreme, and the rules were… nonexistent.

What started with a few dozen eccentrics quickly exploded into a regional sensation. Over the years, it attracted national attention from outlets like TIME, USA Today, and multiple TV programs. Its success even inspired copycat Doo Dah parades in other cities.

A Parade with No Rules — And That’s the Point

The Doo Dah Parade embraces chaos by design. Participants often show up moments before marching — or don’t march at all. Many ride bikes, push shopping carts, drag absurd props, or simply strut in homemade costumes that defy explanation.

  • Synchronized “swimmers” performing on dry pavement
  • Flying baby-doll battalions
  • The Bicycle Ballet troupe
  • Unicycling men in Viking helmets
  • Marching bands that proudly do not play in tune
  • Political parody floats roasting current events
  • The famously unconventional “Queen of Doo Dah”

More Than a Parade: A Celebration of Free Expression

At its heart, the Doo Dah Parade represents something deeper than comedy. It became a platform for artists, eccentrics, activists, and everyday people who simply wanted to express themselves without restraint. In a world where everything is curated, polished, and filtered, Doo Dah stood proudly as a parade of pure authenticity.

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The Pause — and the Legacy

The last official Pasadena Doo Dah Parade was held in 2019 before the pandemic reshaped public events. While its future is uncertain, its cultural impact remains alive through the creative spirit it championed.

According to Wikipedia, in 2025, the Light Bringer Project (the non-profit organization behind the event) postponed Pasadena’s Doo Dah Parade until 2026, due to the thousands of locals displaced by the Eaton wildfires and unsteady funding.

Fun Facts About the Doo Dah Parade

  • Born in a Bar: The parade started as a late-night idea at Chromo’s Bar in Old Town Pasadena.
  • Unpredictable Royalty: Past “Queens of Doo Dah” include belly dancers, drag queens, and performance artists.
  • National Attention: Featured on The Tonight Show, CNN, and in major magazines.
  • No Rules: The only real rule is that anyone weird, funny, or creative is welcome.
  • Countrywide Influence: Inspired similar parades in cities like Columbus and Ocean City.

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The Substitute Teacher Who Wanted Blueprints of Our House

A fifth-grade assignment took a strange turn when a substitute teacher asked students to draw schematics of their homes. What followed — a wildly fictional floor plan and a priceless reaction from my mom — turned into one of my funniest childhood memories.

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Last Updated on December 8, 2025 by Daily News Staff

Comedic illustration of a 1970s–1980s elementary school classroom with a substitute teacher holding a blueprint while confused fifth graders draw exaggerated house schematics, including a two-story doghouse.  

The Substitute Teacher Who Wanted Blueprints of Our House

Elementary school memories tend to blend together — cafeteria pizza, playground arguments, the eternal struggle of times tables — but every once in a while, something happens that sticks with you for life. For me, that moment came in the fifth grade during a week when our regular teacher was out, and we cycled through substitute teachers like we were testing models for durability. By midweek, in walked a substitute with a mysterious, slightly intense energy — the kind of vibe that suggested he either meditated at dawn or worked a graveyard shift doing something he couldn’t talk about. We settled into our seats, expecting worksheets or quiet reading time. But nope. He had other plans. “Today,” he announced, “we’re going to draw schematics of our houses.” Schematics. Not drawings. Not little houses with smoke coming out of the chimney. Actual blueprint-style schematics. He wanted the layout of our bedrooms, our parents’ rooms, and where the pets slept. Every detail. Now, to be fair, Highlights Magazine did have a feature that month teaching kids how to draw floor plans. So maybe he was just a bit overenthusiastic about cross-curricular learning. Or maybe — and this is my completely rhetorical adult theory — he worked the graveyard shift as a cat burglar gathering intel between heists. Just moonlighting between blueprints. While the rest of the class tried their best to recreate their actual homes, my imagination sprinted in a totally different direction. The house I drew had:
  • A massive master bedroom with an oversized bathroom for my parents
  • Separate bedrooms for us kids on the opposite side of the house
  • A kitchen placed right in the center like a command center
  • And the dog — the true VIP — had a luxurious two-story doghouse
I had basically created a dream home designed by a 10-year-old watching too much Fantasy Homes by the Yard. A young African American boy shows his mother an exaggerated, hand-drawn house schematic with unrealistic room layouts and a two-story doghouse, while she reacts with a mix of concern, confusion, and relief in a cozy 1970s–1980s living room. Later that day, my mom asked the usual question: “So, what did you guys do today?” “We drew schematics of our house,” I said casually. The look on her face was instant and intense. She wasn’t panicked, but there was definitely a “Why does a substitute teacher need to know the exact layout of my home?” expression happening. Parental instincts activated. But then I showed her my diagram. She stared at it. Blinked. Then sighed with massive relief. “This isn’t our house,” she said. “Nope! I made it up,” I replied proudly. Her shoulders relaxed so much she probably lost five pounds of tension in one instant. If the substitute was secretly planning a heist, my masterpiece of misinformation would have sent him to the wrong house entirely. Looking back, the whole moment feels like a sitcom setup — a mysterious substitute collecting “house schematics,” me creating a completely fictional piece of architecture, and my mom going on a full emotional journey in under 30 seconds. Maybe he was just excited about the Highlights Magazine floor-plan activity. Or maybe — just maybe — he moonlighted in cat burglary. We’ll never know. But if he was, I like to think I threw him completely off the scent.

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Latin America’s Religious Shift: More Say ‘Yes’ to God but ‘No’ to Church

New research on 220,000 Latin Americans reveals a paradox: church affiliation dropped from 93% to 82% and attendance is declining, yet personal faith remains strong. Discover why Latin America’s religious decline differs dramatically from Europe and the US.

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Latin America's Religious Shift: More Say 'Yes' to God but 'No' to Church
A woman takes part in a Christ of May procession in Santiago, Chile, parading a relic from a destroyed church’s crucifix through the city. AP Photo/Esteban Felix

Latin America’s Religious Shift: More Say ‘Yes’ to God but ‘No’ to Church

Matthew Blanton, The University of Texas at Austin In a region known for its tumultuous change, one idea remained remarkably consistent for centuries: Latin America is Catholic. The region’s 500-year transformation into a Catholic stronghold seemed capped in 2013, when Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina was elected as the first Latin American pope. Once a missionary outpost, Latin America is now the heart of the Catholic Church. It is home to over 575 million adherents – over 40% of all Catholics worldwide. The next-largest regions are Europe and Africa, each home to 20% of the world’s Catholics. Yet beneath this Catholic dominance, the region’s religious landscape is changing. First, Protestant and Pentecostal groups have experienced dramatic growth. In 1970, only 4% of Latin Americans identified as Protestant; by 2014, the share had climbed to almost 20%. But even as Protestant ranks swelled, another trend was quietly gaining ground: a growing share of Latin Americans abandoning institutional faith altogether. And, as my research shows, the region’s religious decline shows a surprising difference from patterns elsewhere. While fewer Latin Americans are identifying with a religion or attending services, personal faith remains strong.
Three women in white robes and caps stand outdoors at nighttime by a large wooden cross.
Women known as ‘animeras,’ who pray for the souls of the deceased, walk to a church for Day of the Dead festivities in Telembi, Ecuador. AP Photo/Carlos Noriega

Religious decline

In 2014, 8% of Latin Americans claimed no religion at all. This number is twice as high as the percentage of people who were raised without a religion, indicating that the growth is recent, coming from people who left the church as adults. However, there had been no comprehensive study of religious change in Latin America since then. My new research, published in September 2025, draws on two decades of survey data from over 220,000 respondents in 17 Latin American countries. This data comes from the AmericasBarometer, a large, region-wide survey conducted every two years by Vanderbilt University that focuses on democracy, governance and other social issues. Because it asks the same religion questions across countries and over time, it offers an unusually clear view of changing patterns. Overall, the number of Latin Americans reporting no religious affiliation surged from 7% in 2004 to over 18% in 2023. The share of people who say they are religiously unaffiliated grew in 15 of the 17 countries, and more than doubled in seven. On average, 21% of people in South America say they do not have a religious affiliation, compared with 13% in Mexico and Central America. Uruguay, Chile and Argentina are the three least religious countries in the region. Guatemala, Peru and Paraguay are the most traditionally religious, with fewer than 9% who identify as unaffiliated. Another question scholars typically use to measure religious decline is how often people go to church. From 2008 to 2023, the share of Latin Americans attending church at least once a month decreased from 67% to 60%. The percentage who never attend, meanwhile, grew from 18% to 25%. The generational pattern is stark. Among people born in the 1940s, just over half say they attend church regularly. Each subsequent generation shows a steeper decline, dropping to just 35% for those born in the 1990s. Religious affiliation shows a similar trajectory – each generation is less affiliated than the one before.

Personal religiosity

However, in my study, I also examined a lesser-used measure of religiosity – one that tells a different story. That measure is “religious importance”: how important people say that religion is in their daily lives. We might think of this as “personal” religiosity, as opposed to the “institutional” religiosity tied to formal congregations and denominations.
A spotlight shines on a zigzag row of people wearing jackets, with the rest of the crowd hidden in the dark.
People attend a Mass marking the International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on June 26, 2024. AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd
Like church attendance, overall religious importance is high in Latin America. In 2010, roughly 85% of Latin Americans in the 17 countries whose data I analyzed said religion was important in their daily lives. Sixty percent said “very,” and 25% said “somewhat.” By 2023, the “somewhat important” group declined to 19%, while the “very important” group grew to 64%. Personal religious importance was growing, even as affiliation and church attendance were falling. Religious importance shows the same generational pattern as affiliation and attendance: Older people tend to report higher levels than younger ones. In 2023, 68% of people born in the 1970s said religion was “very important,” compared with 60% of those born in the 1990s. Yet when you compare people at the same age, the pattern reverses. At age 30, 55% of those born in the 1970s rated religion as very important. Compare that with 59% among Latin Americans born in the 1980s, and 62% among those born in the 1990s. If this trend continues, younger generations could eventually show greater personal religious commitment than their elders.

Affiliation vs. belief

What we are seeing in Latin America, I’d argue, is a fragmented pattern of religious decline. The authority of religious institutions is waning – fewer people claim a faith; fewer attend services. But personal belief isn’t eroding. Religious importance is holding steady, even growing. This pattern is quite different from Europe and the United States, where institutional decline and personal belief tend to move together. Eighty-six percent of unaffiliated people in Latin America say they believe in God or a higher power. That compares with only 30% in Europe and 69% in the United States. Sizable proportions of unaffiliated Latin Americans also believe in angels, miracles and even that Jesus will return to Earth in their lifetime. In other words, for many Latin Americans, leaving behind a religious label or skipping church does not mean leaving faith behind.
A man in a colorful knit hat and bright sweater or jacket holds up a small doll in a white robe that is surrounded by wisps of smoke.
An Aymara Indigenous spiritual guide blesses a statue of baby Jesus with incense after an Epiphany Mass at a Catholic church in La Paz, Bolivia, on Jan. 6, 2025. AP Photo/Juan Karita
This distinctive pattern reflects Latin America’s unique history and culture. Since the colonial period, the region has been shaped by a mix of religious traditions. People often combine elements of Indigenous beliefs, Catholic practices and newer Protestant movements, creating personal forms of faith that don’t always fit neatly into any one church or institution. Because priests were often scarce in rural areas, Catholicism developed in many communities with little direct oversight from the church. Home rituals, local saints’ festivals and lay leaders helped shape religious life in more independent ways. This reality challenges how scholars typically measure religious change. Traditional frameworks for measuring religious decline, developed from Western European data, rely heavily on religious affiliation and church attendance. But this approach overlooks vibrant religiosity outside formal structures – and can lead scholars to mistaken conclusions. In short, Latin America reminds us that faith can thrive even as institutions fade. Matthew Blanton, PhD Candidate, Sociology and Demography, The University of Texas at Austin This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

STM Daily News is a vibrant news blog dedicated to sharing the brighter side of human experiences. Emphasizing positive, uplifting stories, the site focuses on delivering inspiring, informative, and well-researched content. With a commitment to accurate, fair, and responsible journalism, STM Daily News aims to foster a community of readers passionate about positive change and engaged in meaningful conversations. Join the movement and explore stories that celebrate the positive impacts shaping our world.

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