… and is saved by a stitch in time … well a Stichelton in time actually … but we’ll get back to that.
Blue cheese – yeah love it or hate it, irrespective, every
country that considers itself to have a cheese making history lays claim to
having “invented” blue cheese. In reality like so many things that us clever
humans lay claim to, it’s really down to nature (umm fermentation, bread etc)
and we just learnt how to exploit it and produce it in quantity. Blue cheese,
like most things was discovered by accident, when cheeses stored in naturally
temperate and moisture-controlled caves developed blue mould, because many
varieties of harmless mould find these environments très favourable
for habitation.
Typically, all blue cheeses start life like any other cheese (curds and whey) with cultures of the mould Penicillium added during the process so that the final product is spotted or veined throughout with blue or blue-grey mould.
Typically, all blue cheeses start life like any other cheese (curds and whey) with cultures of the mould Penicillium added during the process so that the final product is spotted or veined throughout with blue or blue-grey mould.
Once upon a time of course all cheeses were made with
unpasteurised milk, but over time, aided and abetted by the (totally incorrect)
belief of successive government officials that all microbes were bad and must
be eradicated it became a dictate that the milk must be pasteurised. Statistics
of course do not support this myopic view, and in fact almost all milk related
food poisoning occurs from pasteurised milk as it’s down to the storage and
handling, not the source …
Here in the UK the big boss blue cheese has always been
Stilton – it’s a quintessential British interpretation of a blue cheese. However,
it has been made from pasteurised milk since 1996. Now it’s time to introduce
Randolph Hodgson, who was probably once considered a very hippy dude with a
food technology degree. He had a passion which led him to establish Neal’s Yard
Dairy, which pretty much saved the fast disappearing world of UK artisan and
farmhouse unpasteurised cheeses.
Stichelton has been resurrected by Randolph in collaboration
with cheese-maker Joe Schneider and is in effect a Stilton but can’t be called
that because it is made from unpasteurised milk, which is bureaucracy gone mad
if you ask me. For my money (and my friend Stefano’s money as well) it’s King
of the British Blues. It starts with a mild and mellow flavour and then builds
to strong, sharp yet creamy, rich lingering ending. Large wedges of it go back
to Italy with Stefano each time he visits London.
Besides eating it in its natural form, blue cheese when
added to dishes gives them that certain "je ne sais quoi" … like the duck confit, cavalo nero,
mushroom, caramelised onion, and toasted almond warm salad that the Doll
whipped up recently.
7 comments:
Loved it years ago, not so much now.
Mouth-watering!
I do learn new things when Ted is on the job. I also love crumbles of blue cheese on my salad and my steaks and even an occasional burger. Yum.
Yummy 😊
I can't recall ever trying blue cheeses. I tend to go for gouda, Swiss, mozzarella, or cheddar.
Ah, Ted, we learn so much from you. Don't you wonder who was the first person brave enough to bite into a nasty, mouldy cheese?
Love blue cheese ...
All the best Jan
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