" Rich, not so much deep woods like your ME & NH haunts, but any situation that your hunting woods with no crop fields for the deer to rely on. "
Sounds like you are mainly just talking about woodlots or decently large pieces of timbered land.
Two things come to mind.
First, there is ALWAYS a food source.
Second, it may be farther away than you think.
I've never hunted in Vermont but I grew up hunting in PA where it was about an 80/20 ratio of timber to farmland. We always had lots of oaks around and there was always some sort of crop land within a reasonable distance. However, up in north central PA where we had our hunting camp (Lycoming county) it was probably a lot like your Vermont area. Lots of mountains, all timbered with only here and there an opening for a cabin or something. LOTS of mountain laurel, hemlocks etc. But, there was almost always some area around where there had been recent logging and the brush was starting to grow in various stages. These logged areas created edges, plant/food diversity and areas of different light. All things that are important. If you are limiting your thinking to what deer do in say a 50 acre patch of woods, you are only seeing a small part of the DEERS picture. Try to think of it from their point of view. They can't read no trespassing signs and don't recognize borders. Try to find out what is surrounding your hunting area and imagine travel routes. Aerial photo's are great.
I'm certainly no expert but it seems to me that deer in an area like yours can and do rely almost entirely on browsing for their food. There is no corn around, no soy beans or any other man made crop. Of course, most years, acorns are found all over the place and so are the deer. I think a year with an abundant acorn crop is actually harder to hunt than one with a poor mast crop. If acorns are abundant, the deer can just sort of wander around, munch a bit, bed down, get up munch some more and never really cover much ground. If they don't have to move, the use of funnels becomes less effective. Fertilizing a couple oak trees on your property is a great way to increase deer traffic in that sort of situation.
I would just suggest to simply make an effort to look at the big picture. Try to learn what browse the deer in your area prefer and more importantly, WHEN during the year they prefer each particular type. For instance, here in my part of MO, the deer seem to really like to nip the tips of of silver maple shoots at times. You can walk the river banks during October and where the maples are growing like weeds about 2 to 3 ft tall and it looks just like the edge of a bean field in August with all the tips mowed off.
To get an idea of what they are eating, simply observe deer from your stand or even from your car if you see them every chance you get. Once they leave, walk over and see if you can tell what they were eating.
There is no pat answer on the best way to hunt deer in any terrain. Only, learn all you can about all times of the year and use it to hunt the best way at any given time. It's a never ending education...