Posts Tagged ‘French Cheese’

Saint Maure Cheese: A Must Have On Your Shopping List

Friday, February 4th, 2011

A lot of us are not familiar with Saint Maure Cheese. This is another top quality French cheese that was first made by a Loire Valley dairyman. Saint Maure de Touraine Cheese, commonly called as “Sainte Maure”, is a log shaped goat cheese from Touraine, France. It is said to have been created during the Arab invasions in the 8th and 9th centuries, when goat breeding was first introduced in the Touraine region. This soft French cheese has a distinctive complex flavor. What makes this cheese unique is that it is an aged goat milk cheese. We are familiar with fresh goat milk cheese that is soft and spreadable. However, most French would prefer this older type.

The aging comes with more complex flavor to this cheese. It has a walnut aroma and a slightly salty but nutty taste. It’s made from goat’s milk and is soft with a natural rind. The rind should be thin, smooth with blue-gray molding that is completely natural. The traditional Saint Maure cheese will be produced with a blade of straw or a wooden stick placed through the cheese log from end to end. It is moist and creamy in texture. It is pure white colored and if the rind is not ash coated, it will be tan in color that becomes increasingly darker colored as it ages.

Buying Saint Maure goat cheese will certainly bring creaminess in your delectable, mouth-watering dishes. You can eat it in plain, place it in sandwiches or you can perfectly add this to your mixed green salads. Make this as a cream to your fried-fish fillet or top it to your side dishes. You can also use this cylindrical ash colored French goat cheese to make delicious puffy pastry appetizers. Without doubt, this is one of the very best French cheeses available in the market today. Making this cheese part of your shopping list will definitely be a smart choice. If you can’t find at your local gourmet store, try finding a good cheese shop or check out at Ideal Cheese website, they have available best quality Saint Maure Cheese. You might also want try their cheese board selection of the month. There are so many superb cheeses like Saint Maure cheese; it’s just waiting to be tasted by you. So what are you waiting for, try one now and get the ultimate French goat cheese experience.

Brie De Meaux: Soft and Creamy French Cheese with a Place in History

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

If you are wondering what kind of cheese the French have been eating since before you were born, Brie De Meaux is the closest you will to the real thing. Its light pungent taste that is a mix of intensely mushroomy and grassy notes has captured the hearts of everyone since the Middle Ages.

In the 19th century, the Brie De Meaux was considered as the cheese of the kings, as it was often preferred by Diplomats because it tastes rich and luxurious in the mouth, but not cloyingly buttery. Brie De Meaux was said to have helped make world peace – in one of the many heated Vienna proceedings, the Frenchman Talleyrand proposed a friendly competition (to lighten the tension between  parties) to find out which country had the world’s best cheese.

An English Lord argued that the English Stilton was the best, while a Swiss gentleman peddled for Switzerland’s Emmenthal. Talleyrand remained reserved until one man arrived with his nominee, the Brie De Meaux. One historian recorded the Brie De Meaux to have rendered its cream to the knife; it was a feast, and no one dared argue from then on.

But before that incident in the Congress of Vienna, the Brie De Meaux has already marked its place in history. The emperor Charlemagne is chronicled to have tasted the Brie De Meaux in the year 774. Not only that, facing death in the aftermath of the French Revolution, Louis XVI is reputed to have asked as his final wish for one last taste of the Brie De Meaux before his execution.

As its name implies, the Brie De Meaux originated from the region of Brie about 50 kilometers east of Paris. It used to be strictly a Parisian cheese, but has now become far more widespread due the spread of railways. But the AOC has made sure that the Brie De Meaux is produced only in certain provinces surrounding Paris in order to ensure consistency and quality.

The Brie De Meaux is made from raw and unpasteurized cow’s milk. The secret of its creamy and soft texture is the massive 23 liters of milk that are used to make each wheel of Brie De Meaux cheese. Although the cheese is heated during the renneting stage, it is never actually cooked. And faithful to twelve centuries of tradition, the Brie De Meaux is molded by hand on a “pelle a brie”, or a perforated ladle.

Brie De Meaux is smooth and creamy on the tongue, richly flavored with hints of hazelnut and fruit. The best way to serve the Brie De Meaux is to let it come into room temperature to enjoy a full range of flavors. If you were looking for the right pair to your red Bordeaux or Champagne, you will find a perfect match in the Brie De Meaux. So go and get one today!

French Cheese

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

One of the most popular and well loved cheeses, is the French cheese. 56 of these cheeses are covered by the ‘Protected Designation of Origin’ (protecting the names of these regional foods, as well as assuring that those foods have been legitimately created in their related/promoted country), French cheese is looked upon as a fine luxury, a cheese enjoyed by millions around the world.

French Cheeses are produced under four categories:

Fermier – The French cheese is created and matured on the actual farm, where the milk is produced

Artisanal – The French cheese is produced on a farm, but in much smaller quantities. Milk is used from the farm of origin, but milk may also be bought in from other farms.

Cooperative – A main dairy will join and share production of French cheeses, with multiple milk producers in the area. Much larger Cooperatives, producing very large quantities of cheeses, may be looked upon as ‘Factory Made’.

Industriel – French cheese created in an actual factory, where the milk may be bought in from farms all over France.

One of the 52 protected French cheeses

Bleu d'Auvergne - One of the 52 protected French cheeses. Artisanal produced.

The Ideal Cheese Blog will bring you more on French cheese, as well as examples of French cheeses from the four production categories, very soon.