Kind Of Cheeses
What
do you know about cheese? Don't worry, this time i will give you some
explanation about kind of cheeses in the world.
Argentine
Cheeses
Edam:
Originally an imitation of Dutch Edam balls, Argentine "Magnasco"
Edam has taken on an identity of its own. It is dryer and harder than
Dutch Edam and good on crackers and with red wine.
Reggianito:
Similar to Italian Parmigiano Reggiano. Mostly used for grating.
Sardo:
Another grating cheese, similar to Italian Romano.
Austrian
Cheeses
Emmental:
Same characteristics as Swiss Emmental.
Canadian
Cheeses
Cheddar:
Same characteristics as English Cheddar.
Danish
Cheeses
Blue
Castello: A blue-veined cheese with an extremely buttery taste. The
surface of the cheese is rindless, thus the entire cheese is edible.
Cream
Havarti: Arguably Denmark's most famous cheese, Cream Havarti is a
deliciously mild, very creamy, natural, semisoft cheese laced with
small to mid-sized holes. Cream Havarti is both a table cheese and a
dessert cheese to be served with fruit and wine. Flavored Cream
Havartis are also available, with ingredients such as dill, jalapeno
pepper or garlic and herbs.
Fontina:
Danish Fontina is pale yellow and semisoft with a mild, slightly
sweet flavor. A derivitive of its Italian namesake and a great table
cheese that goes well with a light wine, Fontina is also a good
sandwich cheese.
Saga:
Original Saga is a cross between blue cheese and brie; a creamy,
blue-veined cheese with a white-mold rind. It is very mild for a
blue-veined cheese. Saga is an excellent dessert cheese that should
be served with fruit and wine. It is also an excellent cheese in
salads or as a snack on a cracker. Saga is now made in America as
well as in Denmark.
English
Cheeses
Cheddar:
Cheddar cheeses were originally made in England; however, today they
are manufactured in quite a number of countries. Fully cured, Cheddar
is a hard, natural cheese. The rind, if any, is artificial, most
often times wax. The color of the wax used for coating does not
indicate a level of quality. Normally, the color of Cheddar ranges
from white to pale yellow. Some Cheddars however have a color added,
giving the cheese a yellow-orange color. Cheddar is always made from
cow's milk and has a slightly crumbly texture if properly cured. If
the cheese is too young, the texture is smooth. Cheddar gets a
sharper taste the longer it matures. The important thing in
purchasing Cheddar is to consider the age of the cheese. Of course,
the older it is, the more it will cost.
Cheshire:
One of the oldest English cheeses, allegedly invented during the 12th
century. Cheshire is firm in texture and a bit more crumbly than
Cheddar. Cheshire is rich, mellow and slightly salty with an
excellent aftertaste, its flavor sharpens as it ages.
Devon
Cream: Strawberry's famous partner, Devon Cream has a much wider
application than just strawberries and cream. It is thick and rich,
and needs to be spooned. This product is served over fruit, hot
scones, fish or vegetables.
Double
Gloucester: A natural hard cheese. Double Gloucester has a mild and
rich flavor with a smooth texture and a creamy yellow color. This
cheese is excellent with fruit and beer.
Leicester:
A natural hard cheese. Leicester has a rich, mild flavor with a flaky
texture and a deep orange color. This cheese is excellent with fruit
and beer.
Stilton:
Historically referred to as "The King Of Cheeses," Stilton
is a blue-mold cheese with a rich and mellow flavor and a piquant
aftertaste. It has narrow blue-green veins and a wrinkled rind which
is not edible. Stilton is milder than Roquefort or Gorgonzola and is
equally excellent for crumbling over salads or as a dessert cheese
served with a Port Wine.
Wensleydale:
Traditionally blue, because the cheese is lightly pressed, allowing
the mould to penetrate. And blue Wensleydales are still available.
But today it is usually a creamy white, crumbly cheese, with a fine
curd and minimal texturing, thus a high moisture content. White
Wensleydale is usually eaten young, at about a month old. Wensleydale
is produced in Cheshire.
Finnish
Cheeses
Finlandia
Swiss: Similar characteristics to Switzerland Emmental. Aged over 100
days, it is sharp, rindless and delicious.
Lappi:
Lappi is a semisoft, semisweet cheese that slices easily and is
excellent in recipes and for melting. It comes from Finland's Lapland
region.
Turunmaa:
Similar to Danish Cream Havarti, Turunmaa is a deliciously mild, very
creamy, natural, semisoft cheese laced with small to mid-sized holes.
Like Cream Havarti, it is both a table cheese and a breakfast cheese
to be served with fruit and bread.
French
Cheeses
Brie:
Brie is the best known French cheese and is aptly nicknamed "The
Queen Of Cheeses". Several hundred years ago, Brie was one of
the tributes which the subjects had to pay to the French kings. In
France, Brie is very different from the cheese exported to the United
States. "Real" French Brie is unstabilized and is at its
peak of flavor when the surface turns slightly brown. As long as the
cheese is still pure white, the cheese is not mature. Cutting
unstabilized Brie before it is ripe will stop the maturing process
and the cheese will never develop properly. Exported Brie, however,
is stabilized and never matures. Stabilized Brie has a much longer
shelf life and is not susceptible to bacteriological infections.
Brie, one of the great dessert cheeses, comes as either a 1 or 2
kilogram wheel, and is packaged in a wooden box. In order to fully
enjoy the experience, Brie must be served at room temperature.
Camembert:
Another soft-ripened white mold cheese from France, Camembert, like
Brie, is soft and creamy with an edible crust. A wheel of Camembert,
however, is only 8 ounces and comes in its own wooden box.
Chevres:
These cheeses are made from goat's milk. They come in many sizes and
shapes such as round patties, log-shapes, drum-shapes, pyramids,
round loaves, long loaves, etc.; their textures vary from soft, but
firm like cream cheese, to extremely hard. Chevres are excellent
dessert cheeses, often served as snacks, or with before dinner
drinks. Goat cheese is often served as an ingredient in many fine
dishes.
Comte:
Comte is a natural, hard cheese with similar characteristics to
Switzerland Gruyere.
Coulommiers:
Similar to Camembert, a wheel of Coulommiers is slightly larger (12
ounces) and the cheese has a nuttier flavor with a thicker crust.
Emmental:
Same characteristics as Swiss Emmental.
Mimolette:
A semi-hard cow's milk cheese produced in Flanders and Normandy. It
comes in spheres of about 7-8 pounds, it has an orange rind and
interior. A firm texture with some small holes and a mild favor.
Morbier:
A semisoft cow's milk cheese from Franche-Comte. It has a creamy
brown crust, the interior is two layers of glossy, yellowish-ivory
paste separated by a thin flavorless layer of ash. This separates the
morning milking from the evening milking. It is a creamy cheese with
a flavor of nuts and fruit and an aroma of fresh hay.
Munster:
French Munster is one of the few cheeses which ripen from the inside
out. Munster is dark yellow with a strong flavor. It should be served
with dark bread and beer. French Munster has nothing in common with
Domestic Munster, which is a white, mild cheese.
Pont
L'Eveque: This semisoft, soft-ripened cheese from the Normandy region
has a pronounced flavor, although its taste is not as strong as its
smell. It has a firm body, yellow color and an edible crust. The
crust has ridges because it is cured on straw mats. Pont L'Eveque is
an excellent dessert cheese that goes very well with a robust wine.
Pouligny-Saint-Pierre:
An unpasturized goat's cheese from Berry, it is soft to hard
depending on the age. Also depending on age its color runs from a
very white, creamy and fragile to a hard dry interior surrounded by a
dark beige crust. All have a piquant flavor and goaty aroma.
Reblochon:
From the French Alps, Reblochon is a semisoft, pale yellow, creamy
cheese with a nutty flavor. Reblochon is a dessert cheese that goes
well with red wine.
Roquefort:
The most famous blue-mold cheese in the world, authentic Roquefort
comes from caves near the Spanish border and is made from sheep's
milk. Roquefort is sharp, peppery, piquant and distinct. The blue
mold is added to the curd by mixing it with powdered bread containing
the Pennicillium Roqueforti mold. The French eat Roquefort as a
dessert cheese, although most Americans prefer it in salads or dips.
Saint-Marcellin:
A soft, rindless cow's milk cheese from Dauphine, it is disk shaped
wrapped in chestnut leaves and dipped in wine or eau-de-vie. It
typically has a beige crust with blue mold and a soft beige creamy
interior. It has an intensely rustic, nutty, fruity flavor.
Saint-Nectaire:
A semi-soft cow's milk cheese, disk shaped from Auvergne. It has a
smooth reddish rind, ivory to straw colored interior, soft and supple
texture. It is an earthy cheese with a fruity flavor and a grassy
aroma.
Saint-Paulin:
St. Paulin (also known as Port Salut, a licensed name) is a mild and
very pleasing dessert or table cheese originally made by Trappist
Monks. St. Paulin is creamy and butter-like, yet firm enough for
slicing. Genuine Port Salut has an edible, orange rind. However,
beware imitations that use a plastic, inedible rind. St. Paulin goes
well with fruit and light wine.
Tomme
de Savoie: A semi firm, dish shaped cow's milk cheese from Savoie in
the French Alps. It has a distinct thick gray-brown rind with a beige
or straw colored paste. It has a slightly salty, mild but savory
taste with an aroma reminiscent of a cheese cellar.
German
Cheeses
Emmental:
Same characteristics as Swiss Emmental.
Jermi
Tortes: Jermi tortes are handmade, with alternating layers of cheese
and exquisite fillings such as Norwegian Salmon, Walnut, French
Herbs, etc. Jermi Tortes are dessert cheeses, excellent on fine bread
or crackers.
Limburger:
A soft-ripened cheese famous for its pungent odor, Limburger is a
strong cheese that goes well with red wine or beer. Limburger has a
thin crust, a soft texture, and is nearly white inside. During the
two-month curing process, the cheese is constantly brushed with brine
until it has absorbed all salt.
Munster:
See French Munster.
Tilsit:
A natural hard cheese, German Tilsit has a stronger flavor than its
Scandinavian cousins. It has tiny hole formation and a firm texture
suitable for slicing. Tilsit is an excellent sandwich cheese, good
with robust wine or beer.
Greek
Cheeses
Feta:
Genuine Greek Feta is made from sheep's milk, with a distinct strong,
slightly acidic flavor. Feta is crumbly in texture and white in
color. Feta is traditionally sold in glass jars, although modern
packaging techniques have become more commonplace. Feta needs to be
covered in brine at all times otherwise it will dry out and mold fast
and needs to be refrigerated at all times. Feta is a true eating
cheese, although most Americans think of it as a salad topping.
Kasseri:
Pale yellow in color, with a mild buttery flavor and a springy,
kneaded texture. Kasseri is a versatile, multi-purpose cheese made
from sheep's milk.
Kefalotyri:
This hard, pale, golden yellow cheese has a tange flavor and a sharp
aroma reminiscent of Italian Pecorino Romano. Harder and saltier than
Kasseri, Kefalotyri is generally served grated over cooked dishes.
Mizithra:
A cheese made from whey of Feta and Kefalotyri, Mizithra is available
both fresh and aged. Fresh Mizithra is soft, similar to cottage
cheese. Aged Mizithra is shaped like an ostrich egg, and is firm and
pungent, rather like Italian Ricotta Salata. The aged variety makes
an excellent grating cheese.
Holland
Cheeses
Edam:
Edam is a semisoft to hard natural cheese, depending on age. Edam is
similar in flavor to Gouda, but slightly dryer in texture and less
creamy. Edam is traditionally shaped into 2 or 4 pound balls coated
in red, yellow or black wax. Because of its shape and size, Edam
makes an excellent gift basket centerpiece.
Gouda:
Gouda is a semisoft to hard natural cheese, depending on age. It is
pale yellow and slightly sweet and nutty. Gouda is considered to be
one of the world's great cheeses. It is both a table cheese and a
dessert cheese, excellent with fruit and wine.
Leyden:
Leyden is a part-skim cheese laced with caraway or cumin seeds. It is
semisoft to hard and bland in flavor. Its seeds give Leyden most of
its taste.
Maasdam:
Holland's answer to Jarlsberg, marketed under brand names such as
Leerdammer, Westberg, etc.
Smoked
Gouda: Smoked slowly in ancient brick ovens over smoldering hickory
chip embers, this sausage shaped cheese is perfect for impromptu
picnics, party platters or midnight snacks. Sensational with beer,
this hardy cheese has an edible brown rind and a creamy, yellow
interior.
Irish
Cheeses
Baylough:
A mixed herd of Fresians and distinctive Red and White Dutch cows
provides the full-cream milk for Baylough, a hard-pressed waxed
cheese which can mature for many months. Varieties: Oak-smoked,
Garlic and Herbs, Fresh Garlic.
Coolea:
The hills of Collea give their name to the Williams family's
acclaimed raw milk gouda-style cheese. Young, mild Coolea is 6-8
weeks old; some is flavored with nettles or herbs and garlic.
Long-matured Coolea, piquant with a lingering finish, is becoming
more and more sought-after .
Dunbarra:
A soft cheese with an edible white rind, firmer than Brie yet
distictively creamy. Hand-made by Dubliner Barra McFeely, this new
cheese has already won three first prizes.
Gubbeen:
Gubbeen's gentle flavors reflect the great care taken by Tom and Gina
Ferguson in farming their herd of cows and curing the cheese. A fresh
tasting, pliant textured cheese with a peach pink washed rind.
Knockalara:
Knockalara is a fresh feta-style cheese made on the Waterford farm by
Wolfgang and Agnes Schliebitz. Its light tang marries beatifully with
fruity olive oil, so it's ideal in salads. Knockalara comes either
plain or preserved in herb-flavored olive oil.
Orla:
On the Manch estate in Co Cork, Iris Diebrok and Oliver Jungwirth
farm an organic flock of dairy sheep. Iris uses the milk for her
award-winning semi-hard rind-washed cheese. Orla is matured for 2-6
months.
Italian
Cheeses
Bel
Paese: A semisoft cheese, Bel Paese is very similar to French . St.
Paulin
Fontal:
Fontal is similar to Fontina Val d'Aosta, and in fact was called
Fontina until the milk farmers of Val d'Aosta obtained exclusive
rights to the name in 1951.
Fontina
Val d'Aosta: Genuine Fontina comes from the Val d'Aosta region of
Italy, in the Alps near the French and Swiss borders. One of the few
cheeses imported into America that is made from raw (unpasteurized)
milk, it is a smooth, straw-colored cheese with a brown rind. Fontina
has a delicate, nutty, buttery sweet flavor. Fontina is the primary
ingredient in Italian fonduta and is a pristine table or dessert
cheese.
Gorgonzola:
A blue-veined cheese made of cows milk, Gorgonzola is a soft table
cheese. It is an antique cheese of great popular tradition with a
compact, rough, hard, reddish crust and a firm but mellow paste
interior which melts on the tongue. Its color ranges from white to
straw-yellow with an unmistakable marbled green or bluish-green mold.
The taste ranges from mild to sharp, depending on age. Gorgonzola is
also excellent in salads and dips.
Grana:
This is the generic name for Parmigiano Reggiano-type cheeses.
Mascarpone:
This cheese is virtually solidified cream, mildly coagulated and
whipped into a velvety consistency. It hails from the Lombardy region
and is served with fresh fruit or sweetened with sugar and used as a
pastry ingredient, such as for Tiramisu.
Mozzarella
di Bufala: "Buffalo" Mozzarella is made in the South of
Italy from a mixture of water buffalo and cow's milk. This cheese is
pure white, hand-formed into small balls. It is soft and rubbery
and stored in a whey brine. It is best served with sliced tomatoes
and fresh basil, drizzled with extra virgin olive oil and sprinkled
with salt and pepper.
Parmigiano
Reggiano: A very hard natural cheese, a full wheel of Parmigiano
Reggiano weighs 75 lbs. and must be cut by a saw. Parmigiano
Reggiano's flavor is unmistakably piquant and true cheese
connoisseurs know when they are served an inferior imitation.
Primarily a grating cheese, Parmigiano Reggiano is a great topping
for soups, pasta dishes, veal, chicken, or salads. Buy this cheese as
a wedge and grate it yourself so you know you are getting the real
thing.
Provolone:
Provolone has a slightly smoky flavor and is mellow and compact with
a smooth, paste-like texture. Provolone has an inedible crust and has
strings to hang from rafters. Aged long enough, Provolone can be
grated. However, it is better known as a table or sandwich cheese.
Ricotta:
Ricotta is made from whey collected from making other cheeses and
re-cooked. It is white, creamy and mild and is primarily used as an
ingredient in lasagna.
Ricotta
Salata: When fresh Ricotta goes through its natural aging process, a
hard, pungent cheese suitable for eating or grating results. Like
fresh Ricotta, Ricotta Salata is almost white in color.
Romano:
A very hard cheese made from part-skim sheep's (Pecorino), goat's
(Caprino) or cow's (Vecchino) milk. More mild than Parmigiano
Reggiano, it is a very popular grating cheese that sharpens as it
matures.
Taleggio:
This semisoft, uncooked cheese from the region around Bergamo gains
flavor and an accompanying odor as the cheese ages. The crust is
pinkish-gray and the paste is white, supple and fruity. Taleggio is
an excellent dessert cheese that goes very well with a robust wine.
Norwegian
Cheeses
Gjetost:
Gjetost (pronounced "Yay-Toast") is a hard cheese made from
boiled goat's milk whey either blended with cow's milk or from 100%
goat's milk. This cheese has a sweetish caramel-like taste and is
dark brown in color. Gjetost is a non-perishable dessert cheese that
must be sliced paper-thin and placed on Norwegian flatbread.
Norwegian children eat Gjetost in place of candy
Jarlsberg:
The world's most famous "Baby Swiss", Jarlsberg has the
consistency, texture and hole formation of Swiss Emmental, but its
flavor is more nut-like and sweeter. A full wheel of Jarlsberg weighs
about 20 lbs., one tenth the weight of a wheel of Emmental. Jarlsberg
is an excellent all-around performer that can be used as a table
cheese, dessert cheese or sandwich cheese. Serve it with wine, beer
or aquavit.
Spanish
Cheeses
Cabrales:
A renowned blue cheese from Northern Spain, Cabrales is made from
blended cow's, goat's and sheep's milk. It is matured in
naturally-formed caves and has a creamy texture, a complex flavor and
a powerful bouquet.
Garrotxa:
A semisoft cheese made from pasteurized goat's milk in Catalonia. It
comes in grey-rined felt textured disks, it has a bone white
interior. It has a mild flavor - nutty with herbal hints.
Iberico:
A hard, oily cheese made from blended cow's, goat's and sheep's milk.
It is mild yet tasty, aromatic and very popular. Good for cooking and
for eating, it goes well with Spanish red wines.
Mahon:
An aged cheese produced from cow's milk on Minorca, the outermost of
the three Spanish Balearic Islands. Ripened for six months to two
years the eight inch squares weighing 5 to 6 pounds, it is buttery
sharp, slightly salty with a sweet and nutty aroma.
Manchego:
This historic cheese is produced in the La Mancha region from
pasteurized sheep's milk,. It has a black, gray or buff colored rind
with a crosshatch pattern, the interior ranges from stark white to
yellowish, depending on age. It has an even distribution of holes and
a mild, slightly briny, nutty flavor.
Roncal:
A hard cheese from Navarre produced from sheep's milk and aged for a
minimum of three months. It has a hard beige to gray rind with beige
interior which turns to amber with age. It has a rich, olivey, nutty
flavor.
Tetilla:
A semisoft cheese produced from cow's milk in the Galicia region, it
comes in squat cone shaped like a woman's breast (hence the name)
about five inches in diameter. It has a greenish beige rind and a
white interior. It has a mild and tangy flavor.
Tronchon:
A semisoft cheese made from blended cow's, goat's and sheep's milk.
It comes in rindless wheels with a dimple on top, a by-product of the
manufacturing process. The interior is bone white and has many small
holes.
Swedish
Cheeses
Fontina:
See Danish Fontina
Graddost:
Sweden's most popular cheese, Graddost is deliciously mild and very
creamy. It is laced with small to mid-sized holes and makes an
excellent dessert cheese to be served with fruit and wine.
Herrgard:
Sweden's second most popular cheese, Herrgard comes in large wheels
and has a few small holes. It has similar characteristics to Cheddar
and is pale yellow in color.
Switzerland
Cheeses
Appenzeller:
A natural, hard cheese that is similar to Emmental, although with
smaller and fewer holes. It is cured in white wine and spices that
give it a unique piquant flavor.
Emmental:
More commonly reffered to as "Swiss Cheese", Emmental is
immitated by many cheese producing countries. Emmental is considered
to be one of the most difficult cheeses to successfully manufacture
because of its complicated, hole-forming fermentation process.
Emmental can be used as a table cheese, dessert cheese or sandwich
cheese.
Gruyere:
Famous for its use in Swiss Fondue, Gruyere is a hard cheese that is
similar to Emmental but with smaller hole formation. Its texture is
chewy and it develops small cracks as it ages. In addition to its
role as a Fondue cheese, Gruyere is also an excellent sandwich cheese
that melts evenly.
Raclette:
A hard cheese with a subtle flavor, good aftertaste and firm texture.
Raclette is pale yellow inside an inedible crust. Raclette is famous
for a Swiss dish made by melting thin slices over broiled potatoes.
Sap
Sago: A tiny, green, 2 ounce cheese wrapped in foil, Sap Sago is a
very hard grating cheese with a sharp flavor and a pungent aroma due
to the use of a powder made from clover leaves added to the cheese
during manufacture. Sap Sago is not an eating cheese, but is good as
a food topping and in cooking.
0 comments:
Post a Comment