A Day in Pennsylvania Dutch Country

What is it about the Amish life that’s always drawn me? Perhaps it’s the throwback to simpler times in the way they eschew modern technology in their homes, the romantic scenes along a country road of horse-drawn buggies and one-room schoolhouses, the traditional form of dress or the charming Pennsylvania Dutch accents. It feels like…

Linda Ly
A day in Pennsylvania Dutch Country

What is it about the Amish life that’s always drawn me?

Perhaps it’s the throwback to simpler times in the way they eschew modern technology in their homes, the romantic scenes along a country road of horse-drawn buggies and one-room schoolhouses, the traditional form of dress or the charming Pennsylvania Dutch accents.

Bucolic Amish countryside

It feels like the pages of a history book opened up before my eyes. Thousands of years of religious faith, persecution in Europe, and eventual settlement in Pennsylvania have created the oldest and largest Amish community in the country, in a sliver of the state called Lancaster County.

The region is evocative of a bucolic bygone era: rustic farmhouses, rolling green landscapes, horses plowing the fields. Holsteins relaxing in the grass. Nary a power line in sight.

Rustic white barns
Rolling green landscape in Pennsylvania Dutch Country
Wheat crop
Horses plowing the fields
Holstein cows

The sides of the road are dotted with the occasional farmstand selling whoopie pies (the local favorite), cookies, cakes, and jams. And down a driveway, one can even find an old-fashioned general store serving up homestyle root beer, freshly fermented.

Amish farmstand selling whoopie pies and other sweets
Amish general store
A farm in Pennsylvania Dutch Country

The Amish are members of a conservative Christian faith with roots in the Mennonite community. They’re united in the Anabaptist belief that one must make a conscious choice to accept God in order to be baptized.

Though the language and the culture are usually referred to as Pennsylvania Dutch, the term itself is a corrupted spelling of what is actually Pennsylvania Deutsch, a unique German dialect spoken by the Amish (with no relation to actual Dutch).

The community is largely insulated from the outside world, owing to a devout lifestyle that emphasizes purity, humility, and family and naturally limits interaction with the non-Amish (or their “English” neighbors, as they call it).

But they are not entirely shielded from their surroundings. The Amish vaccinate their children. They sometimes eat out at fancy restaurants. I was even told that buggies driving along the main thoroughfare have been cited for drunk driving!

Horse-drawn buggy on the main thoroughfare through town

But in accordance with their beliefs, electricity is considered taboo, as are most modern conveniences. Recreation is often found around the house or on the farm, and even instances viewed by outsiders as a rite of passage or everyday occurrence (such as owning a car or posing for a photograph) is unacceptable in the culture, believed to breed pride and inequality. This simple and modest approach is conducive to a life of farming, in which the Amish are well versed.

But what the Amish are perhaps best known for is their distinctive style of dress, a plain-clothed uniform of full skirts and aprons, broadfall trousers and suspenders, all in solid colors with simple hairstyles.

This uniform is what I found incredibly appealing about the people. The women, especially, look like they were plucked out of a Vermeer painting.

Inside a little herbal shop, Lillian, the owner and grower of Meadow View Heirloom Greenhouse, was telling me about her edible farm in Bird-in-Hand, Pennsylvania.

She wore a traditional long dress with her hair in a bonnet, her face free of makeup and framed by a dim glow of light through the window. There was such a lovely humbleness about her as she explained all the different tea blends and lotions she crafted in her shop, and all the chemical-free heirloom vegetables and herbs she tended and sold on her plot.

Meadow View Heirloom Greenhouse in Bird-in-Hand, Pennsylvania
Cold frames
Raised bed vegetable garden

Chemical-free is the key point here. One might think that the antiquated lifestyle of the Amish means a resistance to GMOs, pesticides, and other artificial means of raising crops, but in fact, like many outside farmers, they embrace the use of synthetic fertilizers and chemicals on their land to boost production and deter pests.

Chemical-free row crops in Amish country
Asparagus in spring
Raised planter boxes
Amish farm

Organic Amish farmers are in the minority, and finding a chemical-free farm like Lillian’s is sometimes still a challenge.

But one can be found if you have a hookup—and during my stay at the Harvest Moon Bed and Breakfast, proprietor Carl took me to Misty Creek Goat Dairy in Leola, Pennsylvania, an Amish farm that produces small-batch, 60-day aged cheeses on its premises.

Amish goat dairy
Misty Creek Goat Dairy in Leola, Pennsylvania
Amish goat farm

I have always toyed with the idea of raising my own goats one day, and being able to visit a goat dairy was such a delight.

Owner Amos, a gregarious and curious cheesemaker, tends to herds of happy goats that graze on grasses and clovers on his farm. From these goats, he makes the most delectable raw cheeses and fragrant soaps onsite.

Hungry goats
Making friends

Amos’ specialty is artisan goat cheese with surprising flavors, like his Misty Lovely—a once-accidental creation that starts like feta in the mouth but finishes like cheddar, making it more in line with ricotta salata.

Or his Midnight Dream, whose deep flavors are due in part to being soaked in port. He’s generous with his samples and explained that on his farm, the same cheese produced in spring will taste creamier and richer than cheese produced in fall, which tends to be denser and more piquant—a product of what the goats are eating at the time.

Feeding and milking time

He also said that goat’s milk is more easily and rapidly digestible by the human body than cow’s milk, a fact that stems from the different proteins present in goat’s milk. Theoretically, this could be advantageous to children prone to reflux or to those with cow’s milk allergies.

Hey kid

It was also from Amos that I learned the Amish do not fully shun technology as often thought.

Businessmen (and businesswomen) can and do utilize cell phones, hire drivers, and travel out-of-state as needed to sustain their livelihood, so long as they don’t allow those modern conveniences to disrupt their time at home with family.

In fact, their phone use at home is physically removed from the home—to a “phone booth” on the perimeter of the property, seen below as a wooden shed behind the horse.

Horse on an Amish farm

In this fast-paced and ever-connected world, I like to think it’s a philosophy we could all, perhaps, stand to follow more often.

Special thanks to Discover Lancaster for arranging my complimentary stay in Pennsylvania Dutch Country, Carl Kosco and Brian Murr of Harvest Moon Bed and Breakfast, Lillian Riehl of Meadow View Heirloom Greenhouse, and Amos G. Miller of Misty Creek Goat Dairy.

If you are planning an overnight visit to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, I wholeheartedly recommend the beautiful, antiques-adorned Harvest Moon Bed and Breakfast. Carl also happens to be an accomplished chef, and the breakfast alone is worthy of a stay!

Harvest Moon Bed and Breakfast

This post is brought to you by Discover Lancaster. Thank you for supporting the sponsors that support Garden Betty.

46 Comments

  1. Oh, my goodness, Linda! Wish I had known you were here!! You were practically in my backyard – even if this was 2+ years ago! I’d love to meet you. Maybe next time you’re in Dutch Country! Great write-up, images and share of our beautiful Lancaster County!! 🙂
    Cheers,
    Barb

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. All fields are required.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.