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Getting Schooled in Mexican Cheese

Getting Schooled in Mexican Cheese
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  • Getting Schooled in Mexican Cheese

    Post #1 - April 29th, 2012, 9:27 am
    Post #1 - April 29th, 2012, 9:27 am Post #1 - April 29th, 2012, 9:27 am
    Getting Schooled in Mexican Cheese

    Mexican food is probably my favorite food type, and I’ve made a point of learning as much as I can about it.

    For years, I’ve bemoaned the rather pedestrian Mexican cheeses that come across my plate. I mean, is there anything drabber, more insipid than the packaged Chihuahua cheese that gets sprinkled over local frijoles or salads? Perhaps I’m missing something subtle, but to me such cheese seems just empty white calories without flavor.

    I speculated upon why Mexico, which gave the world mole, tomatoes and chilies, seemed unable to develop a finer fromage.

    Unlike, say, Wisconsin or Quebec, Mexico seems that it may not have had the advantage of a strong cheese heritage from folks like the Swiss or French. And to the best of my knowledge, indigenous peoples – Mayan, Aztec, Guaycura – did not produce cheese or any cultured milk products from the animals that lived in North America before Columbus came. However, the Spanish and even the French did pass through, and they may have left some lasting cheese-making know-how. I just couldn’t find much evidence of that.

    Mexico, being a relatively warm country (particularly in the Northern states that border the US and the deserts of Baja), may also have been lacking in the climate for aging cheese, but that potential drawback is now easily overcome with refrigeration and temperature-controlled caves, so there seemed potential for some good stuff. Again, I just hadn’t seen it.

    I’ve had some decent asadero at Maxwell Street Market, but it was merely decent. I talked to a few Mexicans about the lack of truly fine Mexican cheese in the U.S., and they seemed to think that perhaps American regulations (USDA, etc.) might be responsible for restricting the flow of high-quality Mexican cheese into this country.

    Based on these speculations and the lack of strong evidence to the contrary, I had, somewhat arrogantly, written off Mexican cheese.

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    So I was taken aback, mildly shocked really, to have a platter of excellent cheeses set before me at the Guaycura Hotel in Todos Santos, Baja California Sur, Mexico. I ate (way too much of):

    * Fresh goat cheese, made by “an old man lives nearby and who’s been doing it for 40 years,” could compare well with a French chevre, very light and creamy yet clearly goat-y in a good way.

    * Extra Anejo was a cow cheese with stinging funk and lingering depth; it had the texture of a bandaged cheddar, somewhat dry and with concentrated flavor.

    * Double cream cow cheese was also dense and barnyard-y; it brought to mind an almost-runny Vacherin, with a lot of powerful taste balanced by milkiness.

    So now I know there’s some fine cheese south of the border…you may just have to go there to eat it. And although I would probably want to leap-frog Chihuahua, home-grown varieties of that cheese may be better than we get in the US. I’m now way open to that possibility.
    "Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins
  • Post #2 - April 30th, 2012, 12:22 pm
    Post #2 - April 30th, 2012, 12:22 pm Post #2 - April 30th, 2012, 12:22 pm
    So when the Spanish came, they did not bring to Mexico manchego or Iberico type cheese and there is no Mexican equivalent of that?
    Toria

    "I like this place and willingly could waste my time in it" - As You Like It,
    W. Shakespeare
  • Post #3 - April 30th, 2012, 4:57 pm
    Post #3 - April 30th, 2012, 4:57 pm Post #3 - April 30th, 2012, 4:57 pm
    The Wikipedia article on Mexican cheese is actually pretty solid. It suggests that there might really be less to Mexican cheese than one might suspect given the Iberian roots and famous French (baking) and Middle European (beer, music) influences. Things change, of course, and localities with the right conditions and people can do great things with a limited historical cheese/wine/beer/whatever culture in no time. That might explain Hammond's knockout cheeses in the context of what seems to be a rather mild historical cheese repertoire in Mexico.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheeses_of_Mexico
  • Post #4 - April 30th, 2012, 6:52 pm
    Post #4 - April 30th, 2012, 6:52 pm Post #4 - April 30th, 2012, 6:52 pm
    toria wrote:So when the Spanish came, they did not bring to Mexico manchego or Iberico type cheese and there is no Mexican equivalent of that?



    I'm not nearly as negative towards Mexican cheeses as my fellow Oak Parker. For a very good introduction to the standard Mex cheese pantheon, a visit to the flea market on W. Division helps. Hey, I'm happy with a cheese quesadilla a lot.

    Anyways, what you do not see, at least I'm not aware, is not just manchego, but any Mexican cheeses made from sheep's milk. Lamb is not that unheard of in Mexican cooking, and kid is even more found, but why no sheep and goat's cheeses?
    Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.
  • Post #5 - April 30th, 2012, 11:56 pm
    Post #5 - April 30th, 2012, 11:56 pm Post #5 - April 30th, 2012, 11:56 pm
    Vital Information wrote:
    toria wrote:Anyways, what you do not see, at least I'm not aware, is not just manchego, but any Mexican cheeses made from sheep's milk. Lamb is not that unheard of in Mexican cooking, and kid is even more found, but why no sheep and goat's cheeses?


    One of the outstanding cheeses I mentioned was an excellent fresh goat cheese, but I haven't seen any Mexican goat cheese of that quality around these parts...though that doesn't mean they aren't out there, somewhere.
    "Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins
  • Post #6 - July 27th, 2012, 7:56 pm
    Post #6 - July 27th, 2012, 7:56 pm Post #6 - July 27th, 2012, 7:56 pm
    Or take, for example, Oaxacan cheese, a fresh dairy product I’d had many times in the U.S. only to be turned off by its bland nothingness; in Oaxaca, itself, however, where the fresh cheese is actually fresh, I was knocked out by the depth and dimension of Oaxacan cheese, which like all un-aged cheese reflects the grasses the cows ate, the time of year, the place.

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    "Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins

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