It’s an old cheese and one that almost died out like so many farmhouse
cheeses in the face of large scale industrialised cheese making slurping up all
the milk supplies in the 1950’s. Caerphilly was particularly susceptible to industrial
takeover as it matures much faster than Cheddar and that made it a perfect contender
for a fast cash flow product. Industrially produced Caerphilly was by and large
a pretty poor and dry, tasteless, and chalk-like imitation of the original, and not
surprisingly most folks went off it pretty quickly and it just slowly and quietly slipped
away into obscurity heading for extinction.
Enter the Trethowan’s in 1996 - Todd and his wife Kim, joined later by his brother Maugan. While not Welsh they did
have a Welsh grandmother and she had made the traditional Caerphilly many years
ago, hence they knew about it and set about bringing back the style of a much
more mature and creamier cheese. They set up their dairy at Gorwydd (Gor-with) Farm
in Wales and pretty soon where winning awards hand over fist. Caerphilly can be
designated as a “territorial” cheese and about 10% of cheeses in the UK are in
this category today. No it doesn’t mean that they push all other cheeses off
their shelf in the market (although that would put a different spin on the so
called “cheese wars” wouldn't it) rather that they are associated with a
certain district or place of origin - like "terroir" if you will.
As soon as I saw the Gorwydd Farm cheeses and their awards I knew it had to be good stuff so I bought a wedge from their stall in
good old Borough Market. You can probably see from the main photograph that there
are 3 distinct layers to the cheese. The centre which has a slight tensile texture
and a fresh taste with a hint of lemon. The layer next to the rind is all creamy
and buttery, eat a slice including the rind and you get a delicious earthiness
to complete the picture.
The Trethowan’s have now moved their dairy to the “West Country” in the UK but their Caerphilly remains every bit as good as the Welsh
original.
7 comments:
Interesting posting. I do like English cheeses, but over here it is so expensive, and we do not have that many. TED seems to have something special and very tasty every weekend. Lucky him :-)
If Ted's getting into welsh cheeses then try some Y Fenni, which is blended with mustard and ale, or St Illtyd which has herbs and garlic.
Da iawn.
Sounds delicious. I'd love to give it a try.
I have no idea if it would be around here.
A fascinating read as always, I'll be hunting down that cheese to see if I can get it locally....
Ted, your lesson about this Welsh cheese was both informative and a fun read. The Doll introduces you to some wonderful foods!
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