The Wall Street Journal published a great article on cheese in America worth taking a look at called The A to Z Guide to Cheese Plus Pungent Pairings . It features an interesting combination of world cheeses with amusing descriptions to go with them, like "
Then it proposes, with photos, some cheeseplate combinations of the selections they feature. Quite interesting combinations, not your usual ones either, which is the point of the article. There are some American cheese I would really like to try but can not get here in France, but there are some beautiful Italian and Spanish ones that if you look hard you can find here and in the UK.
This aticle proves that cheese has definately 'arrived' in the US and just like wine Americans are jumping into it with both feet! And as a side note, Culture Magazine reported that before banning them, the US Food & Drug Administration has decided to "reconsider the safety criteria" for raw milk cheeses ! Great news for all.
Monday, 14 March 2016
Saturday, 12 March 2016
The internet is an amazing thing. You can find all kinds of useful and useless information, anytime, anywhere. Following a link from a podcast about the International Cheese Competition, I read a very interesting article, albeit a bit old the other day regarding terroir and cheese. It was in the Feb 2002 issue of Wine Business Monthly and is called The Terroir of Cheese by Maria Lorraine Binchet.
It is one of the best and most focused discussion of the subject of terroir and cheese I have read. It describes the main differences between terroir in wine and in cheese and then goes indepth on the subject relative to cheese from the land, to the animals, to the process and the producers, all who add their special piece to the terroir of a fromage. Well worth the read!
It is one of the best and most focused discussion of the subject of terroir and cheese I have read. It describes the main differences between terroir in wine and in cheese and then goes indepth on the subject relative to cheese from the land, to the animals, to the process and the producers, all who add their special piece to the terroir of a fromage. Well worth the read!
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