We have dedicated threads on where to buy cheese, how to serve cheese, cheese storage methods, and tips for making homemade cheese. We also have plenty of threads about a specific cheese someone has discovered. As far as I can tell, there is no macro thread describing the great, artisanal cheeses we enjoy, so that’s what I hope this one will become. With, perhaps, some discussion of beverages to go with them.
I’ll start by describing four cheeses I had last night for New Year’s Eve, all purchased at Pastoral after spending 45 delightful minutes exploring and tasting with a most helpful and generous staff member.
Delice de Borgogne, FranceMy favorite cheese of the night, and among my favorites of all times. This is a super-rich triple-cream cow’s milk cheese, with a texture like whipped butter and a ripe, crème fraiche kind of taste. The cheese is salty, and lingers on the palate for what seems like forever, or until you take a sip of champagne. Champagne cut right through this terrific cheese and got me ready for the next serving - I thought the match was perfect.
Hillis Peak, OregonAn aged goat milk cheese that I liked, but it was expensive and my least favorite of the night. A good cheese though, semi-firm and nutty, with what I picked up as especially strong notes of hazelnuts and macadamias. This is produced near the Rogue River, and – in the spirit of “what grows together goes together” - I bet it would indeed be great with the rich and nutty Rogue Dead Guy Ale.
Fleur du Marquis, FranceA delicious sheeps’ milk cheese, short-aged in a crust of dried herbs and spices. The Pastoral staff suggested not eating the intense rind, but I enjoyed the quite-bitter offset to the salty, creamy Delice we had just had. The rind is very bitter, and the inside of the cheese provided strong tastes of wet cigarettes, tar, rubber and smoke. This was a complex cheese that I think would go best with leathery red wines that are big-flavored but light-bodied.
Hooligan, ConnecticutWow. Prepare to smell like stinky, sweaty feet for days after eating this cheese. I loved it yesterday, and I’m still enjoying the scent of my fingers even after several hand washings. I hope Hammond doesn’t think that finger-smellers are as bad as
finger-lickers. Classic stinky cheese descriptions definitely apply to this one. If you’ve had an epoisses, the barnyard, wet dog, manure profile will be familiar. The texture of this one, however, is semi-firm rather than oozy-gooey epoisses. I think sweet wine would be best with this. Or dark, malty beer.
I’m just starting to explore the world of great cheese, and I’d love to hear about other people’s discoveries.
(edited to correct spelling in title) (and again to correct same spelling in body. blame new years day hangover)
Last edited by
Kennyz on January 1st, 2009, 9:45 am, edited 2 times in total.
...defended from strong temptations to social ambition by a still stronger taste for tripe and onions." Screwtape in
The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis
Fuckerberg on Food