Monday, January 31, 2011

Three more cheese recommendations

As I taste the various cheeses I've bought, from time to time I will put in recommendations and descriptions into this blog. Three cheeses I've had some recent tastes of are described in this posting. Two are blue cheeses and the third is a goat's milk cheese, all from the United States, though the third has a name that would suggest it was from Spain.

As I said in a posting on December 18th, I was told at Cowgirl Creamery that the Jasper Hill Bayley Hazen Blue was very similar to English Stilton. And in fact, it has a nice "earthy" taste superimposed on the "tang" you expect on a blue cheese, exactly like Stilton. It's probably the first USA-produced cheese I've had that I'd compare to Stilton, and a new favorite of mine.

Rogue Creamery's Smokey Blue is another, quite different, American blue cheese. It combines the nice taste of a smoked cheese with the "tang" of a typical blue cheese. I've been getting it at Whole Foods Market, but it can be bought at a number of places, including online (click on the Rogue Creamery link in this post).

And something completely different, also purchased at WFM: Cabra La Mancha is produced by a company named FireFly Farms, a fairly-local company (located in Maryland). It's a goat's milk cheese, but despite that, the cheese I think it most resembles is Meadow Creek Dairy's Grayson (which is made from cow's milk). Both have strong aromas and strong tastes — perhaps too strong for some people, but I love them. And the aromas, tastes, and textures are quite similar. Both are similar to the Italian Taleggio, but more strongly flavored and with a more powerful aroma than even a Taleggio. Oddly, I don't notice a lot of the characteristic goat-milk flavor in FireFly Farms' Cabra La Mancha.

All three of these are cheeses I really like, with the Bayley Hazen Blue particularly recommended.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

A couple of finds

Today I was traveling around DC looking to see what I could spot in teas and cheeses, and was pleased to find a couple of cheeses I was not expecting. I'd read of the existence of a blue version of the English Cheshire cheese, but had not been able to find it for sale in this country except by Internet order (and that involves paying for shipping, so I tend to avoid that for things like this). But today I saw "Appleby Cheshire," visibly a blue cheese, on sale at Dean & DeLuca in Georgetown. Now, Dean & DeLuca tends to be overpriced, and I could see other cheeses in the case that I regularly buy at Whole Foods Market at prices a few dollars per pound higher than WFM charges, but I had no option if I wanted to try it. So I bought some — actually, more than I wanted to, because I usually want to buy something like that in ¼-pound amounts, and the man at the counter didn't want to try to cut ¼ pound from a piece of slightly more than a third of a pound that he had there, since it tends to be a crumbly cheese, and therefore I had to buy the whole piece. Then after that I was in Eastern Market, which has a cheese shop called Bowers, and I saw a white Stilton with apricots. (White Stilton, actually has little to do with blue Stilton, which I think is one of the greatest cheeses in the world; however, I've had white Stilton with various fruits in it and it works very well, so I wanted this. I had not been able to buy those fruit-mixed white Stiltons for a while — Giant used to carry them, but stopped.) So that was another buy I had to make! (I also bought some tea today, but nothing I want to describe here today.)

Monday, January 17, 2011

Eclectic food choice?

When I was younger (I'm in my 60s now) I'd sometimes thought that I'd like to open an "eclectic" restaurant. Not like a Chinese or an Italian place, with one and only one country's food showcased, but a place where a group can come in and one have a Chinese dish and another a German or a Mexican one. Well, I never got the capital to open a restaurant, and I'm too old to start a new business now. But there is now the nearest thing I've found to my eclectic restaurant idea: the prepared food bar at Whole Foods Market. I hadn't planned my restaurant to be served buffet style, or priced by weight, so it's still not quite the same, but thinking about my experience yesterday, when I was trying to decide between Moroccan chicken with lemons and olives, on the one hand, and beef chili (Tex-Mex?) on the other, I realized that WFM really provides a nice eclectic-choice spread.

Now if they can get people who can cook like this, and I've had, in the past, things like German Sauerbraten and St. Louis style pork spareribs, why can't a restaurant? I can'd do the new-business thing at my age, but I wish someone might!

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

The affineurs

In France, the cheeses tend to be aged by specialists (affineurs). And some of these affineurs are very well known for their expertise. (The name of Hervé Mons keeps coming up as I read cheese articles on the Web; I mentioned his name in connection with his Tomme des Bois Noirs.) In this country, the affineurs tend to have corporate names rather than personal ones, and the use of specialist affineurs is not as common. But anything put out by Jasper Hill Farm is good, and Rogue Creamery is another specializef affineur that puts out a good product.

These are names to look for.