TUNBRIDGE โ€” The past two years Renรฉe and Steve Perry (not that Steve Perry) have come to the Tunbridge Fair in anticipation of eating apple crisp with vanilla ice cream, only to find that it has sold out before they even get there.

This year the couple, who live in Lebanon, were not going to make the same mistake. They made the Belgian Acres food truck on Antique Hill one of their first stops, got a bowl of crisp to share and savored it under the shade of a nearby tree.

Visitors walk through rows of food stands at the Tunbridge World’s Fair in Tunbridge, Vt., on Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. Fair food staples like fried dough and fresh-squeezed lemonade are interspersed with booths offering more varied selections like woodfired pizza or homemade burritos. (Valley News – Alex Driehaus)

โ€œWe had to get some,โ€ Renรฉe Perry said.

And was it worth the wait? Yes, they agreed. But this was not going to be their only stop. They were also eyeing Mexican street corn, sausage and peppers and the Quebec classic, poutine and fries โ€” a combination they acknowledged might have later ramifications.

However, โ€œitโ€™s one day a year. You gotta do it,โ€ Perry said.

People come to the Tunbridge Worldโ€™s Fair, held annually in September, for myriad reasons. The rides, the agricultural exhibits, the horse-pulling contests, the pig races, the historic exhibits on Antique Hill, the sense of community.

Not least, people come to eat.

They come for the fried dough, the hamburgers and french fries, the burritos, maple creemees, cannolis, gyros, smoothies, popcorn, candy-coated fruit, homemade pretzels, wood-fired, homemade pizza, Asian dumplings, and plates of fried onion rings stacked so high they look architectural.

And if you are so inclined, hard tack.

A yellowjacket helps itself to maple cream as Sandy Doyle, of East Barre, Vt., eats her donut at the Tunbridge World’s Fair in Tunbridge, Vt., on Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. “I don’t mind sharing,” Doyle said. (Valley News – Alex Driehaus)

Israel Provoncha, a Revolutionary War reenactor and Tunbridge resident who teaches history at Hartford High School, stood at his post on Antique Hill, the section of the fair devoted to tools, goods and machinery from the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Dressed as a Revolutionary War soldier, complete with cocked hat and musket, Provoncha tucked into a bowl of Indian pudding. An old New England classic made from cooking cornmeal, molasses, spices and milk, Indian pudding was not standard fare for the colonial armies.

Armando Aguilar cooks turkey legs at the Tunbridge World’s Fair in Tunbridge, Vt., on Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. (Valley News – Alex Driehaus)

Instead, Provoncha, who is also a fair director, pulled out a round, 3-month-old, hard tack biscuit that troops would customarily eat with small pieces of salt pork. So hard that in order to break it up, Provoncha uses the butt of a musket to split it into smaller pieces. Not his preferred fair diet.

โ€œIโ€™ll have four or five maple shakes over the four days,โ€ Provoncha said, adding, โ€œWhen in Romeโ€ฆ.โ€

Standing next to him, Lempster, N.H., resident Robert Nickerson, dressed in a Civil War Union Army uniform, proclaims โ€œI love a Moxie,โ€ the New England soda that bears a resemblance to root beer.

As for food, he said, deadpan, โ€œI like to eat something that doesnโ€™t cost a lot. Also, I like to eat stuff I donโ€™t eat during the year. You know, hamburgers or hot dogs.โ€

This year the fair has attracted 103 vendors, approximately 30 of them selling food, said Kelly Sammel, the superintendent of concessions.

One of them, Michael Flanagan, the owner of Ting Ting Dumplings, has returned to the fair after a number of years. Formerly an executive chef at the Sugarbush ski resort who lives in Vermontโ€™s Mad River Valley, Flanagan has spent the last 15 years taking an Asian-inspired menu to fairs and events throughout New England.

Sam Siegel, center, of Waitsfield, Vt., removes dumplings from a boiling pot of water at Ting Ting Dumpling at the Tunbridge World’s Fair in Tunbridge, Vt., on Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. “It stands out,” owner Michael Flanagan, left, of Vermont’s Mad River Valley, said of the booth, which sources its dumplings from Boston’s Chinatown and doesn’t serve any fried food. (Valley News – Alex Driehaus)

โ€œI like the freedom, the independence, not working 9 to 5,โ€ Flanagan said.

After years fine-tuning the menu โ€” โ€œBasically, Iโ€™m setting up a little restaurant,โ€ he said.

Flanagan made dumplings a centerpiece because of their popularity.

Another vendor, Kevin Goodwin from Andover, N.H., sells Dole Whip, a frozen, dairy-free dessert. Pineapple and mango are the most popular flavors he sells, Goodwin said. He dresses up the food truck with Hawaiian-themed decorations. โ€œI love doing it and introducing it to people,โ€ Goodwin said.

Sandy Doyle, of East Barre, Vt., eats a donut covered with maple cream at the Tunbridge World’s Fair in Tunbridge, Vt., on Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. Doyle, who is one of the Ed Larkin Contra Dancers, grew up in Chelsea, Vt., and has been attending the fair since she was a young girl. (Valley News – Alex Driehaus)

There are benefits to selling a dairy and gluten-free dessert, Goodwin says. He recalls doing a fair where a girl asked him whether the Dole Whip was, in fact, dairy and gluten-free. When he answered yes, she was thrilled, he said, that she could eat it.

โ€œIt gave me goosebumps,โ€ Goodwin said.

If he had his way, Goodwin, who works at a printing company in New London, would operate the truck year-round. โ€œVending is good money. I wish I could have figured it out in my 20s and 30s,โ€ Goodwin said. โ€œIโ€™m a people person.โ€

Sitting near the Grandstand, Rhonda Martell, from Bradford, Vt., dipped into a plate of Buffalo chicken-loaded fries. She has been attending the fair for about 40 years, she said.

โ€œBefore we leave, weโ€™ll find fried dough,โ€ she said.

Next to her, Sarah Mayotte, who grew up in Tunbridge but now lives in Hartland, always looked forward to coming to the fair as a child.

Schools in the Upper Valley have traditionally bused their elementary and middle school students to the fair on Thursday, its first day.

โ€œI loved that we got to leave school and I did scavenger hunts,โ€ Mayotte said. โ€œFor all of us in Vermont, this is one of the better Ag fairs. Itโ€™s not as commercialized, and it still has a smalltown feel.โ€

Prices have risen, as they have everywhere.

โ€œI paid $18 for food but you know what, itโ€™s once a year. I feel you just have to indulge in fair food,โ€ Mayotte said.

Mark, left, and Deb Blain, both of Boston, assemble a cannoli in their Simply Cannoli booth at the Tunbridge World’s Fair in Tunbridge, Vt., on Thursday, Sept. 11, 2025. The Blains have been working the fair for about five years and said they have tried to keep their prices affordable, even as they notice the prices of other vendors rising. (Valley News – Alex Driehaus)

Kris and Phil Partridge come down from Barre, Vt., every year.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been coming for most of our married life,โ€ she said. โ€œWe come for the fair food.โ€

Phil Partridge ate french fries while a plate of fried dough waited in front of Kris Partridge.

They used to love to eat oysters, a discontinued concession stand; now they like the Dole Whip, which theyโ€™ve tried before at Disney World in Florida, Phil Partridge said.

Up on Antique Hill, Civil War reenactor Gary Ward, a member of the 2nd Vermont Company, talked to young kids who quizzed him about his sword, his Union Army uniform and the cannon balls lying on the ground.

Ward, from Plainfield, Vt., pondered the monotony of the Civil War soldierโ€™s diet, not much changed from the hard tack, salt pork or beef diet of the Revolutionary War diet. What if a Union Army soldier had had access to the kind of food that people come miles to eat at the Tunbridge Fair?

Ward mimicked a soldier looking befuddled by pizza: โ€œWhat is this strange triangular food with tomatoes on it?โ€

Put it this way, he said: โ€œIf the Army of the Potomac wouldโ€™ve had it, they wouldโ€™ve ate it.โ€

The Tunbridge Worldโ€™s Fair continues Saturday, 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and Sunday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tickets cost $20 on Saturday and $15 on Sunday.

Nicola Smith can be reached at mail@nicolasmith.org.