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At cheesegeek we’re always drawn to cheeses with a story behind them - and few British dairies embody that better than Village Maid. Behind the cheeses is a family whose lives have revolved around cheesemaking for nearly forty years.
Village Maid was founded in 1986 by Anne Wigmore after a trip around Europe with her husband Andy. While travelling, Anne fell in love with the traditional Sardinian cheese Pecorino Sardo. Inspired to create her own British interpretation, she returned home determined to start making cheese herself.
That decision led to the creation of Spenwood - a firm, ewe’s milk cheese that would become the dairy’s signature.
In the beginning, production took place in a converted shed in the couple’s garden in Spencers Wood, Berkshire. Like many great food businesses, Village Maid started small but grew quickly as demand for Anne’s cheeses increased.
At the same time, the Wigmore family was growing too. Anne and Andy welcomed their first son, Josh, in 1988, followed by Jake in 1991. By the time Jake was born, the business had already moved into its third dairy - just a few minutes up the road in Riseley, where Village Maid still produces cheese today.
From the start, the dairy was very much a family operation. Anne’s parents lived with them at the dairy and played a huge role in helping both the family and the business thrive. During the day they would look after the children while Anne and Andy worked. Anne’s dad helped build the dairy and ran the pasteuriser, while her mum got involved with cheesemaking itself.
Everyone mucked in wherever they were needed.
More than three decades later, the next chapter of the Village Maid story began.
In 2017, Jake and his wife Kayleigh joined the business as Anne and Andy began thinking about retirement. Keen to keep Village Maid firmly in the family, they passed the responsibility for running the dairy to the next generation.
Anne personally trained Kayleigh in the art of cheesemaking, sharing the knowledge she had built over decades. Kayleigh’s first major project was developing a washed-rind cheese — the rich and characterful Maida Vale cheese - which has since become one of the dairy’s standout creations.
Today, the business continues to operate with the same family spirit that defined its early years. Jake’s parents still live on the dairy premises, meaning the family sees each other every day and conversations about cheesemaking are a constant part of life.
For Kayleigh, working alongside Anne has been a privilege. Anne is widely regarded as one of the pioneers of modern British artisan cheesemaking, and learning directly from her has been an extraordinary experience.
The relationship is also deeply personal. Kayleigh’s own family lives in New Zealand, and after losing her mother last year she has become especially grateful for the bond she shares with Anne - who she describes as being very much like a second mum.
And now, the third generation is growing up around the dairy.
Jake and Kayleigh’s children, Olive (born in 2021) and Jude (born in 2023), already spend plenty of time at Village Maid. Just as Anne’s parents once helped care for Jake and his brother while the business grew, Anne now looks after her grandchildren a couple of days each week while Jake and Kayleigh work in the dairy.
The children often come along for the day - visiting the dairy, spending time with their Nannie and Grandy, and seeing how the cheese is made. Olive sometimes sits in the office while Kayleigh finishes admin at the end of the week, and both children occasionally accompany her when she delivers Village Maid’s wedding cheese cakes.
Rather than juggling family and business, the children are simply growing up as part of it.
Nearly forty years after Anne first began making cheese in a garden shed, Village Maid remains what it has always been: a family business built on craftsmanship, collaboration and a shared love of great cheese.
You’ll regularly find Village Maid cheeses in our selections - and once you know the story behind them, they taste even better.
From Spenwood to Maida Vale, these are cheeses made with decades of knowledge, family tradition and a whole lot of love.


