Originally posted by Pulcinella
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The Cheese Board
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostSince early childhood I have adored Norwegian Gjetost, sometimes known as Brown Cheese in Norway. It is made from the whey of goats’ and cows’ milk. Delicious sliced thinly with a cheese slicer, I love it on toast at any time of day. It has a distinctive sweet, caramel-like flavour, unlike any other cheese. Funnily enough, Mrs K grew up in Norway and speaks Norsk but she cannot abide the taste of my beloved Gjetost.
...I went to Hardanger in 1976 before university on a scheme where you spent 3 months working on a fruit farm. Board and lodging provided and 100 Krone* weekly pocket money IIRC.
Brunost or Gouda in a big block sliced with an implement then new to me - an ostehøvel. I still have the one I acquired during my stay as I was so impressed with the concept.
*Then about £10
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostSince early childhood I have adored Norwegian Gjetost, sometimes known as Brown Cheese in Norway. It is made from the whey of goats’ and cows’ milk. Delicious sliced thinly with a cheese slicer, I love it on toast at any time of day. It has a distinctive sweet, caramel-like flavour, unlike any other cheese. Funnily enough, Mrs K grew up in Norway and speaks Norsk but she cannot abide the taste of my beloved Gjetost.
On a happy note, although the cheeseshop shut its doors many many years ago, the business itself continues as market stalls, now run by the next generation, and comes to town once a week. It specialises in locally made cheese, and also offers less usual continental types.
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View Post
I remember it well...
...I went to Hardanger in 1976 before university on a scheme where you spent 3 months working on a fruit farm. Board and lodging provided and 100 Krone* weekly pocket money IIRC.
Brunost or Gouda in a big block sliced with an implement then new to me - an ostehøvel. I still have the one I acquired during my stay as I was so impressed with the concept.
*Then about £10
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I'm sadly not a fan of Parmesan (horrid experience in a staff canteen ages ago!) but, being a Lancashire lad, I've found that this from Aldi behaves very similarly in dishes I use it for.
I can cope with parmesan shavings; it's the texture and smell of the grated stuff as it melts as a topping or is used in sauces that I can't stand. Those disgusting Kraft tubes! Aargh!
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostI'm sadly not a fan of Parmesan (horrid experience in a staff canteen ages ago!)It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
I sympathise (what else can one do faced with other people's tastes?). I served up some freshly cut Parmesan on a cheese board and the expected smile if delight was in fact met with a shaking of the head and a curt, 'No'. It might need some getting used to but the very intense, nutty taste is quite a favourite with me. When the lump of cheese loses its freshness, I do grate it but it's nothing special then.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
When I had a proper oven and people to eat them I would sometimes do the parmesan crisps thing - little portions of grated cheese on a baking sheet melted and just beginning to brown round the edge. When cold they made a good crispy nibble to go with an aperitif.
Not exactly What I'm cooking/What I've just cooked but, following the comments about Parmesan, what I had for a light lunch today. My box of cheeses, alluded to elsewhere, included a wedge of pecorino - not a cheese I've ever bought, but similarly used for grating. I looked up what might go with fresh pecorino: suggestions, pear, walnuts, dried fruit. So, on the basis of 'what I had', lunch was a piece of pecorino, a pear quartered and cored, a handful of raw almonds and a handful of dried mixed fruit. Having no decent bread, I cut two slices of my indifferent wholemeal loaf and fried them in 'butter' till they were brown and crisp. Not bad with a glass of rosso.
Verdict on pecorino: slightly sharper and lighter than a Parmigiano Reggiano, a sort of 'mid-orangeish brown' taste to Parmesan's darker mid-reddish brown. Very tasty.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
Sounds good.
Not exactly What I'm cooking/What I've just cooked but, following the comments about Parmesan, what I had for a light lunch today. My box of cheeses, alluded to elsewhere, included a wedge of pecorino - not a cheese I've ever bought, but similarly used for grating. I looked up what might go with fresh pecorino: suggestions, pear, walnuts, dried fruit. So, on the basis of 'what I had', lunch was a piece of pecorino, a pear quartered and cored, a handful of raw almonds and a handful of dried mixed fruit. Having no decent bread, I cut two slices of my indifferent wholemeal loaf and fried them in 'butter' till they were brown and crisp. Not bad with a glass of rosso.
Verdict on pecorino: slightly sharper and lighter than a Parmigiano Reggiano, a sort of 'mid-orangeish brown' taste to Parmesan's darker mid-reddish brown. Very tasty.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
pecorino
Pecorino is the family of Italian sheep's milk cheeses that includes Pecorino Romano, Pecorino Toscano, Pecorino Sardo, and Pecorino Siciliano. The word Pecorino is derived from the word "pecora", meaning sheep in Italian. Pecorino is a firm, salty
When Covid hit Italy in 2020, the pecorino industry careened towards life support. But thanks to the ingenuity of several producers, the cheese is now perhaps better than ever.
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Originally posted by french frank View Postlunch was a piece of pecorino, a pear
I see that up until the 17th century the French retained the 'English' manner of having the pudding before the cheese -
https://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/entre_la_poire_et_le_fromage#:~:text=Locution%20ad verbiale,-adverbe&text=(Familier)%20Sur%20la%20fin%20du,fait %20qu'on%20parle%20librement.&text=(Hors%20de%20co ntexte)%2C%20(,la%20poire%20et%20le%20fromage
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« Entre la poire et le fromage… » Cette expression vous est peut-être méconnue. Elle est de moins en moins utilisée et tend à disparaître… Aujourd’hui, l’expression signifie « entre deux événements ». Mais cela n’a pas toujours été le cas, et cette expression prend racine dans l’histoire même de la France !« Vers la fi
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
Sounds good.
Not exactly What I'm cooking/What I've just cooked but, following the comments about Parmesan, what I had for a light lunch today. My box of cheeses, alluded to elsewhere, included a wedge of pecorino - not a cheese I've ever bought, but similarly used for grating. I looked up what might go with fresh pecorino: suggestions, pear, walnuts, dried fruit. So, on the basis of 'what I had', lunch was a piece of pecorino, a pear quartered and cored, a handful of raw almonds and a handful of dried mixed fruit. Having no decent bread, I cut two slices of my indifferent wholemeal loaf and fried them in 'butter' till they were brown and crisp. Not bad with a glass of rosso.
Verdict on pecorino: slightly sharper and lighter than a Parmigiano Reggiano, a sort of 'mid-orangeish brown' taste to Parmesan's darker mid-reddish brown. Very tasty.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... not forgetting pecorino stagionato - and especially pecorino di fossa
Yr other links will be avidly consumed. Esp the idea of cheese after pudding. I always thought the order had something to do with what was drunk during the course of the meal.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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That BBC article was very interesting - another bit of R3 community serendipity. Using caves for maturing and storing cheese isn't unusual, but seems to be associated with certain cheeses rather than being universal.
The reference to the caves under the restaurant being originally used by the Romans for storing pozzolano(volcanic ash, rather than sand as the article says) links to an article I read recently in connection with the topical RAAC concerns, where various investigations have considered why Roman concrete is so longlasting. One answer apparently is the inclusion of said volcanic material which makes the concrete very resistant to salt water.
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