Cheesemonger’s Weblog

November 4, 2009

Cheese 101: The Eight Faces of Cheese

The Lady has discovered that Customers are often reluctant to ask in-depth questions about cheese and instead either ask her to recommend a cheese she (or I) like or they’ll just pick a cheese that sounds or looks “familiar”.

Your favorite Feline Foodie and Tillamook Cheese Fan of the Month for November (that would be me) thought it might be a good time to start short tutorials about the basics of cheese.

First up: the eight basic styles of cheese – all cheeses fall into one of the following categories and understanding what each style is can help make your next cheese-buying trip anxiety-free and more enjoyable.

Fresh Cheese:  Any cheese that does not undergo any ripening period is a fresh cheese. These cheeses have high moisture content; are mild in taste and have a creamy texture. Fresh cheeses include cottage cheese, cream cheese, and ricotta. While mostly bland, they improve, taste-wise, when mixed with other flavors such as herbs, fruit and sweeteners. These cheeses often have acidic or citrus taste and also the taste of fresh milk. Most of these cheeses should be eaten within a few days to a couple weeks of when the package is opened. These cheeses have a short “Use-by” date.

Other fresh cheeses include Cotija, some Mozzarellas, Queso Fresco, Mascarpone, Feta, Vermont Butter and Cheese Company Fromage Blanc, Fresh Goat Cheese aka Chevre, Bel Gioioso Burrata, Crave Brothers Mascarpone, Vermont Butter and Cheese Company Crottin, Valencay, Cabecous Feuilles, Bel Gioioso Crescenza-Stracchino and BelGioioso Tiramisu Mascarpone.

Soft-Ripened Cheese: These are cheeses that ripen from the outside in and are soft even when chilled and can be runny when out at room temperature. The outside rind is often a white, bloomy rind that has been sprayed with a mold, usually penicillium candidum, before a short aging period. The most common cheeses in this category are Brie, Camembert and Triple Creams. In the United States most of these cheeses are made from pasteurized milk; whereas in Europe many of these cheeses are still made from raw milk. Because of the FDA Regulation requiring that raw milk cheeses be aged at least sixty days, most European Cheesemakers make both raw milk and pasteurized versions of their cheeses that fall into this category. I have addressed this issue in a separate posting that you might like to read.

Included in this category are Brie de Nangis, Humboldt Fog, St. Andre, Delice de Bourgogne, St. Albray, Champignon, Cambozola, Pierre Robert, Formager d’Affinois, Crave Brothers Les Freres, Florette, Explorateur, St. Maure, Le Chatelain, Soignon Chevrion Buche, Fourgerus.

 Semi-Soft Cheese:  Cheeses in this category have a smooth and mostly creamy interior with little or no rind. Like fresh cheeses, semi-soft cheeses usually have high moisture content and often are very pungent; but can also be quite mild. Raw milk and pasteurized milk are both used in this category. Blues and washed-rind category cheeses can also be in this category.

Semi-soft cheeses include Chaumes, Bel Gioioso Fontina, Havarti, Tillamook Monterey Jack, Bleu D’Auvergne, St. Agur, Bellwether Farms’ Carmody, Roth Kase Petit Swiss, Jarlsberg, Roth Kase ButterKase and young Goudas.

 Washed-Rind Cheese: These cheeses are surface-ripened by washing the cheeses with brine, wine, brandy, beer or other ingredients throughout the aging process. The washing encourages the growth of bacteria and promotes pungent, sometimes very pungent, aromas and are therefore sometimes known as “stinky cheese”. While at Roth-Kase last spring, one of the duties The Lady completed in her Cheesemaking Class was to wash the ripening Gruyere. Also in my review of Taleggio, I state that it is also known as “My Father’s Smelly Feet”. In contrast to their smelly rinds, many of these cheeses are quite mellow and mild in taste such as Epoisses and Taleggio. Both taste absolutely nothing like the way they smell…and that’s a good thing…who would eat cheese that tasted like smelly feet???

Washed-Rind Cheeses include Raclette, Morbier, Epoisses, Taleggio, Pont l’Eveque, Livarot, Le Timanoix, Abondance, Bel Gioioso Italico, Winey Goat and Roth Kase Raclette.

Blue Cheeses: These cheeses have distinctive blue or green veining which is created by injecting penicillium roqueforti mold. This mold adds an easily recognized flavor that ranges from mild to bold and pungent. In Italy these cheeses are called “Gorgonzola”, in France “Bleu” or Roquefort – a protected name and style and in Britain and the US “Blue”.

In this category are Rogue River Blue, Bleu D’Auvergne, Forme d’Ambert, Maytag and Black River Gorgonzola.

Hard/Firm Cheeses: This is a broad category that covers cheeses that may be elastic at room temperature or are hard enough to grate like a Parmesan. Most of the Beemster Premium Goudas fall into this category as do most Cheddars, Swiss-style and Gruyere-style cheeses.

Specific cheeses in the hard category include Beecher’s Flagship Reserve, Comte, Rembrandt Gouda, Parrano, Piave, Grana PadanoParmigiano-Reggiano, Manchego, Idiazabal, Roth Kase Grand Kru, Emmenthal, Tillamook 2-Year Vintage White Extra Sharp Cheddar,  Beemster XO and Beemster Vlaskaas.

Natural Rind Cheeses: These are cheeses that develop a natural rind during the aging process without the addition of molds and without washing of the rind. Because they age over several weeks, many of these cheeses are made using raw milk. Many “Tomme” style cheese including Tomme de Savoie are in this category. The rind is usually edible but not necessarily tasty and is often gritty – try a nibble before going full steam ahead with the rind.

Other cheeses in this category include Mimolette, Cantalet, Brillat Savarin, Garroxta, English Stilton (also a blue), Shropshire Blue (another blue), Testun and St. Nectaire.

Spun Cheeses: Often called “Pasta Filata”; these cheeses are usually Italian in origin. As the name says, they are cooked and then kneaded (spun). They can be fresh or very hard grating cheeses depending on the producer. The cooking occurs when the curd is exposed to warm water which in turn makes the curd silky and elastic. The softer cheeses are then brined and the harder cheeses are air-dried.

This category includes BelGioioso Burrata, Mozzarella and Scamorza which all have a high moisture content and BelGioiosos Provolone and Caciocovallo with lower moisture content.

(There is a ninth category sometimes included in a list of cheeses but since your humble feline foodie does not consider it cheese, I refuse to really include it here: processed cheese such as Velveeta, “American Cheese” and other cheeses that can withstand a nuclear war…)

Up Next: Cheese 101: What is a Cheesemonger and other Cheese Vocations

August 25, 2009

2009 Feline Foodie Cheese Awards

2009 Feline Foodie Awards®

Portland, Oregon

For Immediate Release

 

Spaulding Gray, Portland’s Favorite Feline Foodie and CF(eline)O of the Feline Foodie Awards®, is pleased to announce the winners of the 2009 Feline Foodie Awards®.

When interviewed, Mr. Gray admitted it had been a grueling and tough job, “But someone had to do it, choosing the “Best of the Best” in cheeses from the Pacific Northwest, Wisconsin, the United States and beyond.”

 Mr. Gray personally sampled and reviewed each winner and added how impressed he was with the high quality of entries.

 

Best of Show (tie)

Beecher’s Handmade Cheese – No Woman

“Beecher’s No Woman is the cheese that started it all,” stated Mr. Gray, “the first cheese The Lady brought home that I fell in love with. I found that it was a perfect pairing with 34° Sesame Crispbread Crackers and peromyscus leucopus pate.”

BelGioioso – Burrata

Per Spaulding Gray, “The first time I tasted this divine little pocket of yummy cream and mozzarella, I thought I had died and gone to cheese heaven. When The Lady visited the BelGioioso Bellevue Plant where Burrata is made, I was so overcome I lost one of my lives…”

 Best Northwest Farmstead Cheese

Willamette Valley Cheese Company Brindisi

“The Willamette Valley Cheese Company, in addition to making a superior Fontina-style cheese (Brindisi), this local cheesemaker is to be commended as a sustainable Jersey Cow dairy farm that is 100% certified organic.” Spaulding added when naming this cheese his favorite farmstead cheese.

 

Best Bait Cheese

Roth Kase – Petite Swiss

According to Portland’s Favorite Feline Foodie, “Roth Kase Petite Swiss is preferred 10 to 1 by mus musculus living in the Salmon Creek area of SW Washington State.” Now that’s quite a ringing endorsement.

 

Best Pub Cheese

Clawson Creamery – Cotswold

“I must admit I gravitate to flavored cheeses and Cotswold with its onion and chive taste is right up there as one of the best,” states Mr. Gray.

 Best Flavored Cheese Curds

Golden Age Cheese Company Jalapeno Cheese Curds

“These little squeekers make a terrific snack!!” Spaulding Gray

 

 

 Best Everyday Cheeses

“ ‘Everyday’ means the cheese is high quality and yet still affordable for everyday use. Tillamook delivers on so many wonderful cheeses but this is their best.”

 

Cheddar

Tillamook Vintage White Extra Sharp Cheddar

Swiss

Roth Kase Petite Swiss

Blue/Gorgonzola

Black River Gorgonzola

Parmesan

BelGioioso American Grana

Gouda

Beemster Vlaskaas

 

   Best Licensed Cheesemaker and Favorite,

Former All-around Party Guy

Roth Kase’s Bob, Wisconsin Licensed Cheesemaker

“Although I was prohibited from accompanying The Lady the day she made cheese with Bob at the Roth Kase Cheese facility, I chose Bob based on how much The Lady liked him…and the fact that he was very patient with her and her other Cheese Stewards who were making cheese that day”. Spaulding Gray added that he trusts The Lady’s instincts as though they were his own.

 

 

 

Cheese Banned From French Public Transportation

Berthaut Epoisses

At room temperature, this cheese is pungent enough to set off the neighbors and have them calling the EPA to report the possibility of a toxic leak. “But, without compare, this is the tastiest Camembert that this Feline Foodie has tasted. I would give at least one of my lives to always have Epoisses at the manse. Ooh, la, la…I love this cheese,” Spaulding Gray exclaimed enthusiastically.

 Special Award:

Sustainable Farming: Turning Sh*t Literally into Shinola

Wisconsin’s Crave Brothers

When The Lady went to Wisconsin to make cheese, one of the cheesemakers her group visited was the Crave Brothers of Waterloo. This farmstead cheesemaker makes the best Mascarpone I have ever tasted.

But above and beyond their superior cheeses, the four brothers literally turn sh*t into shinola, using their  Holstein herd’s processed manure to power their entire plant and up to 120 houses in the surrounding neighborhood.

“These guys are amazing and deserve this special award and it is bestowed on The Crave Brothers with pride,” Mr. Gray enthusiastically exclaims.

 

Spaulding Gray was a stray, gray striped tomcat who adopted The Lady and The Man when they lived in Southern California before migrating to the Pacific Northwest. Mr. Gray reviews the cheeses The Lady sells, observes humankinds and generally acts obnoxious whenever he wishes.

July 1, 2009

Vegetarian Suitable Cheese & Raw Milk Cheese Chart

The Lady gets a lot of requests for cheeses that meet specific dietary needs. After goat cheese (ych…) the next two most requested cheese categories are “Vegetarian Suitable” and cheeses made from raw milk for those following the raw food lifestyle.

The Lady decided to build a chart to help these two lifestyle enthusiasts enjoy cheese more.

CHEESE VEGETARIANSUITABLE RAW/PASTEURIZED SOURCE
Applewood Ilchester Yes Pasteurized Cow
Asiago   Pasteurized Cow
Beechers Flagship No Pasteurized Cow
Beechers Flagship Reserve No Pasteurized Cow
Beechers Marco Polo No Pasteurized Cow
Beemster Mustard No Pasteurized Cow
Beemster Vlaskaas No Pasteurized Cow
Beemster Xo No Pasteurized Cow
Berthaut Epoisses   Pasteurized  
Black RiverGorgonzola Yes Pasteurized Cow
Bleu d’Auvergne   Pasteurized Cow
BlueShropshire   Pasteurized Cow
BlueberryStilton Yes Pasteurized Cow
Brescianella Aged      
CabecousFeuilles   Pasteurized Goat
Cablanca Goat Gouda Yes Pasteurized Goat
Caerphilly Somerdale Yes Pasteurized Cow
Cahill’s IrishPorter Yes Pasteurized Cow
Cambozola Yes Pasteurized Cow
Cantalet Yes Pasteurized Cow
Castello Blue     Cow
Capretta      
Champignon Yes Pasteurized Cow
Chaumes Yes Pasteurized Cow
Comte Yes Raw Cow
CranberryWensleydale Yes Pasteurized Cow
Cremier deChaumes      
Crottin     Goat
Delice deBourgogne   Pasteurized Cow
Denhay FarmhouseCheddar   Pasteurized Cow
Double GloucesterSomerdale Yes Pasteurized Cow
Emmenthaler Yes Raw Cow
Explorateur   Pasteurized Cow
Florette   Pasteurized Goat
Fol Epi Yes Pasteurized Cow
Fontina d’Aosta   Raw Cow
Fourgerus   Pasteurized Cow
Forme d’Ambert   Raw Cow
Fresh Mozzarella curd   Pasteurized Cow
Fromager d’Affinois   Pasteurized Cow
Gaperon Garmy   Pasteurized Cow
Gorgonzola Dolce   Pasteurized Cow
Gorgonzola Mountain Aged   Pasteurized Cow
Grana Padano   Raw Cow
Greens of Glastonbury Yes Pasteurized Cow
Gruyere Yes Raw Cow
Humboldt Fog Yes Pasteurized Goat
Iberico   Pasteurized Cow, Sheep, Goat
Idiazabal   Raw Sheep
Jarlsberg   Pasteurized Cow
Kerrygold Blue   Pasteurized Cow
Le Chatalain   Pasteurized Cow
Livorot     Cow
Mahon   Raw Cow (may have up to 5% sheep)
Manchego   Pasteurized Sheep
Maytag Blue Yes Raw Cow
Mimolette   Pasteurized Cow
Morbier   Raw Cow
Muenster Fleur de Sur      
Ossau-Iraty   Pasteurized Sheep
Parmigano-Reggiano   Raw Cow
Parrano No Pasteurized Cow
Pecorino Romano  

Raw

Sheep
Pecorino Toscano   Pasteurized Pecorino
Piave Vecchio   Raw Cow
Pierre Robert   Pasteurized Cow
Pont l’Eveque   Pasteurized Cow
Provolone (Hanging)     Cow
P’tit Basque   Raw Sheep
Quicke’s Bad Ass Goat Cheddar   Pasteurized Goat, really nasty goat
Raclette Yes Raw Cow
Red LeicesterSomerdale Yes Pasteurized Cow
Rembrandt Aged Gouda Yes Pasteurized Cow
Ricotta Salata   Raw Sheep
Robiola Di Rocc   Pasteurized Goat
Robiola 2 Milk   Pasteurized Goat & Sheep
Robiola 3 Milk   Pasteurized Goat, Sheep, Cow
Rogue Crater Lake Yes Raw Cow
Rogue Echo Mtn. Yes Raw Cow
Rogue Grape Leaf Yes Raw Cow
Rogue Oregon Blue Yes Raw Cow
Oregon Smoked Blue Yes Raw Cow
Roquefort Societe   Raw Sheep
Roth Kase Grand Cru Gruyere  Yes  Pasteurized  Cow
Roth Kase Grand Queso  Yes  Pasteurized  Cow
Roth Kase Petit Swiss  Yes  Pasteurized  Cow
Rozaire Brie de Nangis Yes Pasteurized Cow
Saint Agur   Pasteurized Cow
Saint Albray Yes Pasteurized Cow
Saint Andre Yes Pasteurized Cow
Soignon Chevrion Buche Yes Pasteurized Goat
St. Marcellin      
St. Maure   Raw Goat
Stilton Blue Yes Pasteurized Cow
Taleggio   Pasteurized Cow
Tomme de Savoie Yes Pasteurized Cow
Valdeon   Pasteurized Goat & Sheep
Valencay   Raw Goat
W.V. Brindisi Yes Raw Jersey Cow
W.V. Perrydale Yes Raw Jersey Cow
Winey Goat   Pasteurized Goat

 

This list is comprised primarily of the cheeses The Lady sells in her kiosk and while not yet complete (it will be updated as more information is found), it’s a start to help all those cheeselovers who are vegetarians and/or raw foodies…

May 12, 2009

Tillamook Vintage White Extra Sharp Cheddar

Winner: 2009 Feline Foodie Awards: Best Everyday Cheddar

The Lady has what she calls her “everyday cheeses”; cheeses that are superior in quality and taste and still affordable for “everyday” use..

Her “everyday” Parmesan is BelGioioso’s American Grana which is made by her friend Gaetano and sold on The Lady’s Cheese Island which is Beverly Hills’ “adjacent” to her Kiosk. Her “everyday Swiss” is Roth Kase Petite Swiss which she sells at the Kiosk. Her “everyday blue” is Black River Gorgonzola which she also sells at the Kiosk.

Tillamook Vintage White Extra Sharp Cheddar

Tillamook Vintage White Extra Sharp Cheddar

Her “everyday cheddar” is Tillamook’s Vintage White Extra Sharp Cheddar. This cheese is sold elsewhere in her store, but The Lady loves this cheese and so does this Feline Foodie.

It is the sharpest of the cheddars that Tillamook sells regularly. (The Lady bought a 3-year Tillamook cheddar a year or so ago at Costco; but it had limited-time availability…she keeps hoping it will show up again. It also was sold as a wedge whereas most Tillamook comes as a brick.) It is a bit crumbly and tastes delish.

Tillamook is made using milk that is heat-treated rather than pasteurized. You ask, what difference does it make? Well, I happen to know. By using the heat-treated process bacteria essential for producing high-quality cheddar can be retained. Tillamook also uses a vegetable rennet making it suitable for those  who worry about such things… why anyone would want to give up meat is beyond me…but what do I know…well I know that a baked potato tastes better when it sits on a plate with a ribeye steak than it does sitting on a plate with well… another baked potato…

The Lady loves Cheddar cheese and along with her life-long search for the world’s best mac n cheese, she is constantly on the hunt for that cheddar that is so sharp that it burns the roof of her mouth. As her “mouth piece”, I request that any of you that know of a Cheddar that will bring tears to her eyes, please let this feline foodie know and I’ll pass it along…

Don’t get me wrong, there are many fine Cheddars that The Lady sells and likes but as with most quests…it’s the journey and not the destination…

I give Tillamook Vintage White Extra Sharp Cheddar 4 Paws out of 4 Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got).

Serving Suggestions: There is absolutely nothing that this cheese does not do well. You can serve it with fruit; you can melt it on bread; you can slice it and eat it with most anything. You can grate it or shred it and add it to your favorite mac n cheese recipe. It makes the BEST grilled cheese; it makes a wonderful cheese sauce.

Wine Pairings: The Lady likes to pair this cheese with a glass of her favorite merlot.

Beer Pairings:  Pale Ale

Source: Cows’ milk

Fat Content: 45%

For more about the fine folks at Tillamook Cheese, click here.

May 1, 2009

Wisconsin – Day 2 – BelGioioso – Bellevue Plant

Marcella and Gaetano

Marcella and Gaetano

After the tour of the Chase Plant, we traveled to BelGioioso’s Bellevue Plant, also in the middle of nowhere.

This Plant makes that divine Burrata cheese that Spaulding gray reviewed recently. 

Again, we were divided into two groups. I was lucky enough to be in the group led by Gaetano, the son of the founder of BelGioioso. Gaetano was three when his parents immigrated to the US to make Italian cheeses in America. When Gaetano learned of Spaulding Gray’s love of Burrata, he was quite impressed by SG’s “expensive and refined tastes”.

The tour began with the fresh mozzarella. We watched the entire process from adding the starter to slicing (into sixteen slices)and packaging of the fresh one pound log  – perfect for Caprese salad.

Next we watched the making of provolone. We toured the aging room – thousands of cylinders and specialty shapes including pyramids and pear-shaped were hanging.

We also toured the room where ricotta and their newer item, ricotta salata are made. BelGioioso makes their ricotta salata with cow’s milk rather than sheep. And SG’s suspicions were confirmed when Gaetano stated that they used cows’ milk because there were almost no sheep in Wisconsin.

After the tour, we were taken to the corporate offices and treated to lunch and what a lunch it was. We started with a cheese plate that had Burrata, Mascarpone, Provolone, Asiago, Parmesan, Fresh Mozzarella and creamy gorgonzola. On the table were wedges and containers of all their other cheeses and we were encouraged to taste them. It didn’t take much to encourage these cheeseheads. We tried American Grana, Tiramisu Mascarpone, Italico, Crescenza-Stracchino, Pepato and several others.

After the wonderful cheese plate, which really could have been a meal itself, we were served a field green salad with sugared walnuts and gorgonzola, Pizza Marguerite, farfalla pasta with Fontina, asparagus and mushrooms, and baked tenderloin. The meal ended with my favorite, Tiramisu…bellissimo!!

It was quite a wonderful morning hanging with the BelGioioso (pronounced Bell Joy Oh So)…arrivederci to a wonderful family of cheeses…we will meet again soon…most likely this evening…our parting gift was a thermal carrying case that contained a half pound wedge of American Grana…

Up Next: Day 3 – Roth Kase and Cheesemaking 101

April 29, 2009

Wisconsin – Day 2 – BelGioioso – Chase Plant

The Lady has decided to write about the next two days in Wisconsin…so…heeeeeere’s The Lady…

First of all, I want to thank my company and specifically John and Cheryl for giving me the opportunity of a lifetime for this cheesemonger. What a fabulous trip and learning experience. I also want to thank the cheesemakers who welcomed us to their plants: BelGioioso, Crave Brothers and Roth Kase. I want to add a special thanks to Deb and Robert from the Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board who put the trip together.

Wednesday began at 8am when we boarded a motor coach for the BelGioioso Chase Plant somewhere in the middle of nowhere in the country side of Wisconsin outside Green Bay. The land is flat and dotted with dairy farms and silos (I never saw a single goat or sheep…). It was a chilly but clear morning. After getting lost, even though the bus driver had a GPS (turns out it had NOT be updated recently), we arrived at the Chase plant and were met by the Plant Manager. This plant makes most of the hard, table cheeses that BelGioioso has developed after the Italian cheeses with the same names. The plant has just finished making Parmesan and had started production of Asiago. As you may recall from one of Spaulding gray’s earlier blog entries, the founder of BelGioioso immigrated to the US in 1979 with the express purpose of making world-class Italian cheeses in America.

We were divided into two groups and my group was guided by the Plant Manager who is also a licensed Cheesemaker. Of the thirty-five employees at the Chase Plant, seven are licensed by the State of Wisconsin to make cheese. Wisconsin is the only state that has a licensing program for cheesemakers. The first step is to apprentice for a minimum of eighteen months with a cheesemaker. Then there are university-level courses you must take and finally you must take and pass a three-hour test given at the University of Wisconsin.

Once you have become a licensed cheesemaker, you can, after another ten years of cheesemaking, become a Master Cheesemaker which requires more university-level courses and testing including a rigorous oral exam given by college professors. A Master Cheesemaker can only apply for a license to make two different cheeses each time they apply for the license.

Our tour began in the room where the wheels are formed after the milk has coagulated to form its curds. This is a two-step process. After the separated milk is pumped into the vat and reaches the desired temperature, a starter is added. (The milk is separated from the cream and the cream is used for other cheese and milk products.)The starter consists of bacteria cultures necessary to start the cheesemaking process. After a specific amount of time, rennet is added and the coagulation begins. When the desired coagulation is reached, the curds are cut and both the curds and whey are pumped into a table where the curds are separated from the whey and formed into the desired shapes for the cheese being made. The whey is pumped off and used for various purposes including field feed and dry whey protein which is used in a variety of everyday items from protein bars to cosmetics. The water is separated out, polished and returned for other uses in the plant. Nothing is wasted.

One of the impressive aspects of all three cheesemaking companies that we visited was the level of commitment to recycling. Almost nothing is tossed away; everything is used and re-used.  Another impressive feature is how incredibly clean these facilities are kept. The term “cleaning as you go along” was never truer than in a cheesemaking plant.

From the cheesemaking room we were taken to the brine vats where the wheels are placed after the initial forming and drying. Depending on the style of cheese being made, the cheese may soak in the brine for several hours or several days. The brine bath has three important components; it removes moisture from the cheese; adds flavor to the cheese; and helps create and develop the rind. Because the cheese is floating in the brine, employees come along on a regular schedule and turn the wheels to keep the brining process uniform on all sides. Also, again recycling is foremost in the minds of the cheesemakers. The brine is recycled; cleaned and used over and over. At any given time, there is over 650K gallons of brine being used in the plant. As the salt is absorbed into the cheese, salt is added back into the brine to keep the desired saline level at all times.

I noticed is how labor-intensive and hands-on the cheesemaking process is at each of the plants we visited. When people ask why cheese is so expensive, I can now answer honestly that I wonder why it doesn’t cost more. There is a lot of time and labor that goes into making cheese.

After removal from the brine, the cheese wheels are taken to a drying room and placed on racks where they continue to dry and age. Again, employees come along on a regular schedule and turn and flip the wheels. Again, it’s amazing how much detail goes into making high-quality specialty cheeses.

This plant uses about one million pounds of milk per day from local farmers. Depending on the cheese, it takes between ten and fourteen pounds of milk to make one pound of cheese. BelGioioso has five plants; all of which use approximately the same amount of cheese everyday and cheesemaking is a 24-7-365 business.

The milks are co-mingled but detailed records are kept regarding which farmer delivered what milk to the truck and plant. Field samples are taken when the milk is pumped into the truck and tested upon arrival at the plant. If one of the milks tests badly, that farmer ends up buying the entire load of milk rather than selling his day’s yield. This is certainly one incentive to making sure your milk is good. Also, based on this same rigorous testing, the price paid to the farmer for his milk is determined. The higher the quality of the cheese, the higher the premium paid to the farmer. In other words, the better the milk; the more the farmer makes. Yet another incentive to produce quality milk.

Another facet of the testing has to do with antibiotics that have been given cows when they are sick. Cows get sick and must be treated. But antibiotics are bad in the cheesemaking process. In addition to the general public not wanting to ingest unnecessary antibiotics, the presence of antibiotics in milk can kill the cultures needed to start the cheesemaking process. The cow that is being treated is pulled from the line and her milk is not used until her milk tests clean…yes even cows are subject to workplace drug-testing. The plant has a chart that lists the cows receiving antibiotics and when the day arrives to return them to the line, their milk is sent separately to the plant to check and make sure it is clean. On a small farm that cow might be listed as “Rosie”; but on a larger farm, the cow is merely a number on an ear tag. After testing the plant tells the farmer the cow can or cannot be put back on-line.

A couple of asides here.

The milk at this plant is not pasteurized. Pasteurization requires that milk be heated to 162-164° and held there for sixteen seconds. The state tests and seals the vats when pasteurization is being used. The reason that the cheese in this plant is not pasteurized is because all of the cheese made here will be aged more than sixty days.

And beginning in August of this year, the Chase Plant will begin producing and selling to our company our private label of Parmesans, Asiagos and Romano cheeses in wedges and shredded or shaved cups.

And finally one bit of trivia: Romano cheese must be cured and dried in a separate room from the other cheeses due to its pungent smell. If you dry Romano with Parmesan, then the Parmesan will absorb some of the Romano smell and will change the taste. If you dry Parmesan cheese in a room filled with Romano, the Parmesan will taste like Romano.

Up next: BelGioioso Bellevue Plant and Lunch.

April 26, 2009

The BelGioioso Family of Cheeses – Part Three – Cheeses You Don’t Use Everyday

T Minus 2 Days and Counting…The Lady isn’t sleeping…she claims it’s the excitement of traveling; but I prefer to believe it is anxiety over the repercussions she might encounter in the event she leaves The Cat behind…a feline scorned is…well anyone who has ever been owned by a cat knows what happens when you annoy him…

I thought I would review a few cheeses that most humankinds don’t encounter daily; cheeses you might want to consider the next time you are throwing a party or want to pamper yourself.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Burrata

Burrata

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Winner: 2009 Feline Foodie Awards: Best of Show (tie)

Burrata

This is a rare Italian delicacy that BelGioioso thankfully decided to bring to America. Burrata is fresh mozzarella filled with cream. It is silky on the outside and…well, creamy on the inside. It is sweet and pleasing on the palate. It is made in 8 oz balls and packed in water to extend its shelf life. However, once opened, you should eat within two days for maximum flavor enjoyment.

Due to its delicate nature, BelGioioso suggests that when serving, you remove the seal from the cup, drain the water and cut your portions while the cheese is still in the cup. Remove the portions you are using and reseal the remaining pieces.

I give Burrata 4 Paws out of 4 Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got).

Serving suggestions: Cut and serve on fresh endive leaves. You can drizzle it with olive oil and sprinkle it with salt and pepper. Use it as the mozzarella in your next Caprese salad. This is something The Lady plans to do. On an antipasti platter, it goes well with peppers, olives, herbs, melon, grapes and an array of charcuterie.

Wine Suggestions: Something light such as a rose.

Beer Suggestions: Pale Ales

Source: Cows’ Milk

 
 

 

 

Crescenza

Crescenza

 

 

 

Crescenza-Stracchino

Another delicate cheese that you have to hunt to find even in your high-end cheese kiosks. This cheese is a fresh, rindless cheese with a soft and creamy consistency. It is sweet with a slightly tart aftertaste that encourages you to want more.

Originally this cheese was made in the Lombardy and Romagna regions of Italy only in the autumn and winter months as the cows descended from the pastures of these mountainous regions. The exertion of the cows coming down the mountains increased the butterfat content of the milk and the cooler temperatures of the mountains helped keep the cheese fresh as the shepherd guided their cattle home for the winter.

I give this cheese 3 Paws out of 4 Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got)

Serving Suggestions: Spread this cheese on a toasted baguette, sprinkle with olive oil and fresh chopped herb. You can also spread this cheese across the top of fresh pizza dough; sprinkle with your favorite pizza topping and bake at 450° for fifteen minutes until the cheese is melted and the dough is crisp. It also goes well with fresh strawberries.

Wine Pairings: Champagne

Beer Pairings: Pale Ales

Source: I’ll bet you already know it’s Cow’s milk…

 
 

 

 

Italico

Italico

 

 

 

Italico

This is the newest cheese from BelGioioso. It is an elegant, surface-ripened cheese that is aged 60 days to ensure a full, earthy flavor. It has a soft, creamy texture that is supple enough to slice, cube and it also melts easily.

I give this new cheese 4 Paws out of 4 Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got) – this is a terrific cheese.

Serving Suggestions: Combine cubed Italico with chopped asparagus and diced Roma tomatoes with risotto. Melt this cheese over ravioli and garnish with a homemade marinara and fresh basil. This makes a great dip when melted and mixed with diced artichoke hearts. You can also put it on a cheese platter with crusty bread, pears and almonds.

Wine Pairings: Jurancon

Beer Pairings: Heineken

Source: Cows’ Milk

This concludes my series of reviews of the BelGioioso Family of Cheeses and the other hosts of The Lady’s Wisconsin trip – Roth Kase and Crave Brothers.

I am not sure what my next blog will cover; I can’t get a read on whether The Lady plans to allow me to join her on the trip…I’ll either be one happy kitty or one pissed off feline…you will get a clue tomorrow when The Lady makes her final decision…

April 24, 2009

The BelGioioso Family of Cheeses – Part Two – The Hard Cheeses of BelGioioso

T Minus Four Days and Counting…You can still vote and comment about whether you think The Lady should take me to Wisconsin by clicking here…cast your votes…

Mathilda, my new love, has voted that I stay in Vancouver and let The Lady do her own thing in Wisconsin. Your caring is causing me great distress…what to do??? What to do??? The Lady says the voting is close and she will continue to review the votes and comments through Monday before she makes her final decision. (I am already packed and ready to go…Mathilda…please understand that if I do go, I shall return to you…you can trust me…)

grandpa

In 1979 Errico Auricchio moved his family from Italy to the United States with the single goal of making great Italian cheeses in the tradition that his family had honored for over a century.

In Part One, I reviewed Provolone, American Grana, Mascarpone and Fontina. In Part Two, I will review the other Hard Italian cheeses that Errico makes at BelGioioso.

Asiago

 

 

Asiago

Asiago

 

 

This is a favorite of The Lady. She takes a couple of bones (the rind) of Asiago and tosses them into her marinara sauce to take it to a new level. She has a customer at the kiosk who buys both Asiago and Parmesan bones to add to sauces and soups. This client and his wife are adopting a vegetarian life style and the flavor from the bones helps them make the transition.

Asiago is aged at least five months and has a sweet and nutty flavor. It is made from part skim milk. In 2008 this Belgioioso cheese won third Place at the American Cheese Society Awards.

I give Asiago 3 Paws out of 4 Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got).

Serving Suggestions: As mentioned above, toss some of the rind into your favorite marinara sauce or soup for added flavor. This cheese makes an excellent table cheese and is perfect for snacking. Cube this cheese and toss it with pasta. You can top it with crusty Italian bread with charcuterie, artichoke hearts, olives and sprinkle with olive oil for a tasty Italian sandwich. You can shred it on pizza, bagels, breadsticks and broil to melt the cheese. You can add Asiago to dips and serve with your favorite crudités. Grill veggies and sprinkle Asiago on top with a little olive oil. I find that tossing Asiago with a little sautéed Mustela nivalis (not to be confused the two-legged species that populate too many workplaces, particularly the US Congress, according to The Lady…certainly not by this feline…) and it is simply bellissimo.

Wine Pairings: Full-bodies red wine.

Beer Pairings: Nut Brown Ale, Malty Brown Ale

Source: Wisconsin Cows’ Milk

Awards: Several since the 1990s including the Third Place noted above.

 

Parmesan

 

 

Parmesan

Parmesan

 

 

Made from skim milk and aged over ten months, this hard cheese is one of the great cheeses of the world. It is used in everyday cooking and also is absolutely the best as a table cheese. The Lady loves to let it sit out for an hour and then serve it with grapes and pears. Like Asiago, it is sweet, buttery and nutty to taste. Even though it is hard, it crumbles well when sitting at room temperature.

I give Parmesan 4 Paws out of Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got).

Serving Suggestions: The best known sauce is Alfredo and before the diet, The Lady made an Alfredo sauce that brought tears to The Man’s eyes. She tossed pasta, frozen peas (which warm up enough from the heats of the pasta and the sauce and require NO cooking before adding) and julienned Boar’s Head Sweet-sliced ham with her Alfredo sauce. Easy, simple; yet elegant…I miss the good ole days before that damned diet… mix Parmesan into mashed potatoes; top asparagus and bake it; sprinkle grilled veggies; grilled chicken…just about any entrée can benefit from adding Parmesan. With fruit, it makes a terrific light dessert.

Wine pairings: Oaked merlot, Meritage blends

Beers pairings: A Marzen lager

Source: Cow juice

 

Romano

 

 

Romano

Romano

 

 

Another hard Italian cheese from BelGioioso that is aged five months and possesses a strong, sharp taste that makes it one of the more popular Italian cheeses. In 2004 and again in 2008, the American Cheese Society awarded BelGioioso Romano cheese First Place – Best of Class. Again, as with most hard Italian cheeses, Romano is a versatile cheese and makes most dishes better when added.

I give Romano 3 Paws out of 4 Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got).

Serving Suggestions: You haven’t lived until you have added Romano to your favorite mac n cheese. This cheese goes well in risotto; add it to your bread and pizza dough; melt it on your favorite veggies and add it to your sauces and soups. Again, you can pretty much do anything with this cheese.

Wine Pairings: Full bodied reds

Beer Pairings: Bohemian Pilsner

Source: Here’s a newsflash…Cows’ Milk

Awards: Best of Class 2004 and 2008 – American Cheese Society

 

I will conclude my reviews of the BelGioioso Family of Cheeses on Sunday.

Tomorrow I will review Beecher’s Flagship Reserve, which The Lady began selling and sampling in the Cheese Kiosk today. She is so in love with this cheese. She brought a piece home for The Man and me. We will have it tomorrow with a glass of appropriate adult beverages and then I will review it.

Mithilda, sleep well tonight and sweet dreams…

April 22, 2009

BelGioioso Family of Cheeses – Part One – American Grana, Fontina, Mascarpone Tiramisu, Provolone

T Minus 6 Days and Counting – Voting Begins Tomorrow – “Send Spaulding Gray to Wisconsin…or Not…”

 

What do American Grana, Fontina, Mascarpone Tiramisu and Provolone have in common that would cause me to combine them into one blog entry? All of these cheeses are sold by The Lady at The Cheese Island which is adjacent to The Kiosk.

 

 

American Grana

American Grana

 

 

 

American Grana

Winner: 2009 Feline Foodie Awards: Best Everyday Parmesan

In Italy Grana Padano is the Number #1 Parmesan; The Lady tells her customers that it’s an “everyday Parm”. For the first time an American cheesemaker has captured the greatness of this Italian hard cheese. It is so good The American Cheese Society has honored this cheese twice in the last five years.

It is aged 18 months and has the same full-body and nuttiness of the Italian version. The Lady loves this cheese and anything The Lady loves…well…you can pretty much count on me loving it as well…interesting how that happens, don’tcha think???

I give BelGioioso’s American Grana 4 Paws out of 4 Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got…but you already knew that…).

Serving Suggestions:  This is a very versatile cheese that can be grated over salads and soups. The Lady likes to grate it into her homemade pizza dough and breads to add an extra level of taste. She makes whole wheat breads and when she adds this cheese, The Man bellies up to the bar to get a hot slice as soon as it comes out of the oven. He claims The Lady’s culinary talents were part of his original attraction to her. She cooked dinner for him early on in their courting days and that closed the deal for The Man. She made spinach salad, BBQ baby back ribs, grits and fresh peach cobbler…a strange combination but it worked; you can’t argue with the results.

Back to American Grana…

You can also create a wonderful risotto dish using this cheese; grate it over asparagus and add it to your favorite lasagna dish. I also found this pan-seared scallops’ recipe on the Eat Wisconsin Cheese website this morning and The Lady plans to make it for dinner. I get scallops for dinner…woohoo!! You can also serve this cheese as a table cheese with fresh fruit and you’ve got an elegant dessert when you splash a little champagne into a glass.

Visit the BelGioioso website for more recipes and suggestions including an Artichoke Dip and Stuffed Vegetable Cannelloni.

Wine Pairings: The general rule of thumb for pairing cheese and wine is “the bigger the cheese is the more robust should be the wine”. Therefore with this “big cheese”, pair it with robust Chianti and other sangiovese-grape wines. If you want to choose an American wine, go with any big California Cab, or an Oregon Pinot Noir.

Beer Pairings: Pair America Grana with moderately hoppy Pale Ales and Amber Ales like Harpoon Ale, Stone Cat Ale, Ipswich Ale, Shoal’s Pale Ale, and Magic Hat Bob’s 1st Ale.

Source: Cow’s Milk…I’m still wondering if sheep and goat are allowed to hang out in the green, green pastures of Wisconsin…

Awards: Second Place 2004 and 2005 – American Cheese Society

 

 

Fontina

Fontina

 

 

 

 

Fontina

BelGioioso Fontina is aged more than sixty days and has an appealing silky texture with a sweet, buttery and slightly earthy taste. This cheese melts beautifully and can work as the base of most fondue recipes. The Lady likes it on sandwiches. She uses it in mac n cheese on occasion as well.

I give Fontina 3 Paws out of 4 Paws.

Serving Suggestions: Fontina, because it melts so well, you can use it in many Italian recipes both that call for pasta and risotto. You can slice it on artisan bread along with tomatoes and basil for a nice appetizer. On a cheese tray, Fontina is always a hit along with fruits and nuts. You can cube it and add it to pasta salad along with Black Cerignolas and capers. You can also use it to make a quick and creamy Alfredo Sauce.

Wine Pairings: Chianti or Rose

Beer Pairings: English Brown Ale or Porter, Flanders Red Ale, Flanders Oud Bruin, Belgian Dark Ale, Pale Lager, Pale Wheat Ale

Source: Cows’ Milk

Awards: 1999 Wisconsin State Fair Seal of Excellence

 

 

Tiramisu Mascarpone

Tiramisu Mascarpone

 

 

 

 

Tiramisu Mascarpone

The Lady LOVES this cheese because it’s the base of her favorite dessert, Tiramisu. She doesn’t make it very often (since the diet, she hasn’t made it once…and that makes The Man very sad) because it takes a lot of time and effort. She puts making tiramisu in the same category as making tamales; when she makes tamales it takes all day. She makes at least one hundred tamales at a time and freezes them. Her friend, Lupe, taught her using an old family recipe from Mexico. Wow…from tiramisu to tamales…now that really is a stretch.

Mascarpone is a rich Italian cream cheese and is used in many dessert recipes.

I give Tiramisu Mascarpone 4 Paws out of 4 Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got).

Serving Suggestions: You can combine this cheese mixture with a coffee liqueur and alternate layers of this concoction with layers of fresh fruit; particularly with strawberries or raspberries. As mentioned above, it is the base for Tiramisu, the dessert. You can use it to stuff waffles or crepes. So many ways to use this cheese…so little time to enjoy those desserts…

 

 

 

The Lady's Favorite Dessert

The Lady's Favorite Dessert

 

 

 

Wine Pairings: Champagne

Beer Pairings: Being a snob, I have to laugh at the concept of beer and tiramisu mascarpone.

Source: Cows’ Milk

 

 

Provolone

Provolone

 

 

 

 

Provolone

If The Man could only eat one cheese the remainder of his days, he would pick Provolone.

In 2007, the American Cheese Society named this cheese “Best of Class”. In addition to this great honor, BelGioioso Provolone has won many other awards over the last two decades.

Depending of its age, it may be sweet (Dolce) as a young cheese to piquant (sharp) in a more aged cheese. It also comes in a variety of shapes and sizes. The Lady brought a bell-shaped piece of Provolone that had a rope for hanging.

In honor of The Man, I give Provolone 4 Paws out of 4 Paws (cause that’s all I’ve got).

Serving Suggestions: The Man loves to put Provolone on a Hoagie roll with slices of various cured Italian Boar’s Head meats. He also melts it on his burgers…who knew? The Lady likes to stuff pasta shells with Provolone and top with her homemade marinara sauce. On a cheese platter, it goes well with pears, figs, cashews and olives.

Wine Pairings: Chardonnay

Beer Pairings: Robust Ales

Source: Cows’ Milk

 

There will be no reviews tomorrow…tomorrow will be reserved for voting to send this feline foodie to Wisconsin with The Lady. IF the voting does not go my way, I will still consider a stowaway contingency plan…

And I sign off with a smoochy hello to Mathilda…

Provolone

Provolone

Tiramisu Mascarpone

Tiramisu Mascarpone

Fontina

Fontina

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