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-
-Project Gutenberg's The Complete Book of Cheese, by Robert Carlton Brown
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Complete Book of Cheese
-
-Author: Robert Carlton Brown
-
-Release Date: December 7, 2004 [EBook #14293]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE COMPLETE BOOK OF CHEESE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Starner, Ronald Holder and the PG Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- <h2><!-- Page 1 --><a name="Page_1"
- id="Page_1"></a> <!-- Contents moved to page 3 -->
- <!-- Page 2 --><a name="Page_2"
- id="Page_2"></a> BOB BROWN</h2>
-
- <h1>The Complete Book<br />
- of Cheese</h1>
-
- <p><i>Illustrations by</i> Eric Blegvad</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/002.gif"
- width="450"
- height="314"
- alt="Illustration: cheese store" />
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Gramercy Publishing Company</i><br />
- <br />
- <i>New York</i><br />
- 1955
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 3 --><a name="Page_3"
- id="Page_3"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><i>Author of</i><br />
- <br />
- THE WINE COOK BOOK<br />
- <br />
- AMERICA COOKS<br />
- <br />
- 10,000 SNACKS<br />
- <br />
- SALADS AND HERBS<br />
- <br />
- THE SOUTH AMERICAN COOK BOOK<br />
- <br />
- SOUPS, SAUCES AND GRAVIES<br />
- <br />
- THE VEGETABLE COOK BOOK<br />
- <br />
- LOOK BEFORE YOU COOK!<br />
- <br />
- THE EUROPEAN COOK BOOK<br />
- <br />
- THE WINING AND DINING QUIZ<br />
- <br />
- MOST FOR YOUR MONEY<br />
- <br />
- OUTDOOR COOKING<br />
- <br />
- FISH AND SEAFOOD COOK BOOK<br />
- <br />
- THE COUNTRY COOK BOOK</p>
-
- <p><i>Co-author of Food and Drink Books by</i> The Browns</p>
-
- <p>LET THERE BE BEER!<br />
- <br />
- HOMEMADE HILARITY</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 4 --><a name="Page_4"
- id="Page_4"></a> &nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/004.gif"
- width="225"
- height="104"
- alt="Illustration:TO" />
- </div>
-
- <h3>PHIL</h3>
-
- <h3>ALPERT</h3>
-
- <h3><i>Turophile Extraordinary</i></h3>
-
- <p><!-- Page 5 --><a name="Page_5"
- id="Page_5"></a> &nbsp;</p><!-- Blank page -->
-
- <p><!-- Page 6 --><a name="Page_6"
- id="Page_6"></a> &nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/006.gif"
- width="250"
- height="282"
- alt="Contents" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="toc">
- <p><b>&nbsp;1. <a href="#Page_7">I Remember
- Cheese</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>&nbsp;2. <a href="#Page_11">The Big
- Cheese</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>&nbsp;3. <a href="#Page_17">Foreign
- Greats</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>&nbsp;4. <a href="#Page_37">Native
- Americans</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>&nbsp;5. <a href="#Page_50">Sixty-five Sizzling
- Rabbits</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>&nbsp;6. <a href="#Page_84">The Fondue</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>&nbsp;7. <a href="#Page_99">Souffl&eacute;s, Puffs
- and Ramekins</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>&nbsp;8. <a href="#Page_111">Pizzas, Blintzes, Pastes
- and Cheese Cake</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>&nbsp;9. <a href="#Page_129">Au Gratin, Soups, Salads
- and Sauces</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>10. <a href="#Page_144">Appetizers, Crackers,
- Sandwiches, Savories, Snacks, Spreads and
- Toasts</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>11. <a href="#Page_154">"Fit for Drink"</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b>12. <a href="#Page_158">Lazy Lou</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b><a href="#Page_166">APPENDIX&mdash;The A-B-Z of
- Cheese</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b><a href="#AtoZ_A">A</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_B">B</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_C">C</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_D">D</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_E">E</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_F">F</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_G">G</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_H">H</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_I">I</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_J">J</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_K">K</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_L">L</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_M">M</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_N">N</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_O">O</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_P">P</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_Q">Q</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_R">R</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_S">S</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_T">T</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_U">U</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_V">V</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_W">W</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_Y">Y</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;
- <a href="#AtoZ_Z">Z</a> &nbsp; &nbsp;</b></p>
-
- <p><b><a href="#Page_316">INDEX OF RECIPES</a></b></p>
-
- <p><b><a href="#Page_320">ABOUT THE AUTHOR</a></b></p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 7 --><a name="Page_7"
- id="Page_7"></a> &nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 8 --><a name="Page_8"
- id="Page_8"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/008.gif"
- width="450"
- height="326"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- One</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>I Remember Cheese</h2>
-
- <p>Cheese market day in a town in the north of Holland. All the
- cheese-fanciers are out, thumping the cannon-ball Edams and the
- millstone Goudas with their bare red knuckles, plugging in with
- a hollow steel tool for samples. In Holland the business of
- judging a crumb of cheese has been taken with great seriousness
- for centuries. The abracadabra is comparable to that of the
- wine-taster or tea-taster. These Edamers have the trained ear
- of music-masters and, merely by knuckle-rapping, can tell down
- to an air pocket left by a gas bubble just how mature the
- interior is.</p>
-
- <p>The connoisseurs use gingerbread as a mouth-freshener; and
- I, too, that sunny day among the Edams, kept my gingerbread
- handy and made my way from one fine cheese to another, trying
- out generous plugs from the heaped cannon balls that looked
- like the ammunition dump at Antietam.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 9 --><a name="Page_9"
- id="Page_9"></a> I remember another market day, this time in
- Lucerne. All morning I stocked up on good Schweizerk&auml;se
- and better Gruy&egrave;re. For lunch I had cheese salad. All
- around me the farmers were rolling two-hundred-pound
- Emmentalers, bigger than oxcart wheels. I sat in a little
- caf&eacute;, absorbing cheese and cheese lore in equal
- quantities. I learned that a prize cheese must be chock-full
- of equal-sized eyes, the gas holes produced during
- fermentation. They must glisten like polished bar glass. The
- cheese itself must be of a light, lemonish yellow. Its
- flavor must be nutlike. (Nuts and Swiss cheese complement
- each other as subtly as Gorgonzola and a ripe banana.) There
- are, I learned, "blind" Swiss cheeses as well, but the
- million-eyed ones are better.</p>
-
- <p>But I don't have to hark back to Switzerland and Holland for
- cheese memories. Here at home we have increasingly taken over
- the cheeses of all nations, first importing them, then
- imitating them, from Swiss Engadine to what we call Genuine
- Sprinz. We've naturalized Scandinavian Blues and smoked browns
- and baptized our own Saaland Pfarr in native whiskey. Of fifty
- popular Italian types we duplicate more than half, some fairly
- well, others badly.</p>
-
- <p>We have our own legitimate offspring too, beginning with the
- Pineapple, supposed to have been first made about 1845 in
- Litchfield County, Connecticut. We have our own creamy
- Neufch&acirc;tel, New York Coon, Vermont Sage, the delicious
- Liederkranz, California Jack, Nuworld, and dozens of others,
- not all quite so original.</p>
-
- <p>And, true to the American way, we've organized
- cheese-eating. There's an annual cheese week, and a cheese
- month (October). We even boast a mail-order Cheese-of-the-Month
- Club. We haven't yet reached the point of sophistication,
- however, attained by a Paris cheese club that meets regularly.
- To qualify for membership you have to identify two hundred
- basic cheeses, and you have to do it blindfolded.</p>
-
- <p>This is a test I'd prefer not to submit to, but in my
- amateur way I have during the past year or two been sharpening
- my <!-- Page 10 --><a name="Page_10"
- id="Page_10"></a>cheese perception with whatever varieties I
- could encounter around New York. I've run into briny
- Caucasian Cossack, Corsican Gricotta, and exotics like
- Rarush Durmar, Travnik, and Karaghi La-la. Cheese-hunting is
- one of the greatest&mdash;and least competitively
- crowded&mdash;of sports. I hope this book may lead others to
- give it a try.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 11 --><a name="Page_11"
- id="Page_11"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/011.gif"
- width="450"
- height="315"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Two</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>The Big Cheese</h2>
-
- <p>One of the world's first outsize cheeses officially weighed
- in at four tons in a fair at Toronto, Canada, seventy years
- ago. Another monstrous Cheddar tipped the scales at six tons in
- the New York State Fair at Syracuse in 1937.</p>
-
- <p>Before this, a one-thousand-pounder was fetched all the way
- from New Zealand to London to star in the Wembley Exposition of
- 1924. But, compared to the outsize Syracusan, it looked like a
- Baby Gouda. As a matter of fact, neither England nor any of her
- great dairying colonies have gone in for mammoth jobs, except
- Canada, with that four-tonner shown at Toronto.</p>
-
- <p>We should mention two historic king-size Chesters. You can
- find out all about them in <i>Cheddar Gorge,</i> edited by Sir
- John Squire. The first of them weighed 149 pounds, and was the
- largest made, up to the year 1825. It was proudly presented to
- H.R.H. the Duke of York. (Its heft almost tied the 147-pound
- Green <!-- Page 12 --><a name="Page_12"
- id="Page_12"></a>County wheel of Wisconsin Swiss presented
- by the makers to President Coolidge in 1928 in appreciation
- of his raising the protective tariff against genuine Swiss
- to 50 percent.) While the cheese itself weighed a mite under
- 150, His Royal Highness, ruff, belly, knee breeches, doffed
- high hat and all, was a hundred-weight heavier, and thus
- almost dwarfed it.</p>
-
- <p>It was almost a century later that the second
- record-breaking Chester weighed in, at only 200 pounds. Yet it
- won a Gold Medal and a Challenge Cup and was presented to the
- King, who graciously accepted it. This was more than Queen
- Victoria had done with a bridal gift cheese that tipped the
- scales at 1,100 pounds. It took a whole day's yield from 780
- contented cows, and stood a foot and eight inches high,
- measuring nine feet, four inches around the middle. The
- assembled donors of the cheese were so proud of it that they
- asked royal permission to exhibit it on a round of country
- fairs. The Queen assented to this ambitious request, perhaps
- prompted by the exhibition-minded Albert. The publicity-seeking
- cheesemongers assured Her Majesty that the gift would be
- returned to her just as soon as it had been exhibited. But the
- Queen didn't want it back after it was show-worn. The donors
- began to quarrel among themselves about what to do with the
- remains, until finally it got into Chancery where so many lost
- causes end their days. The cheese was never heard of again.</p>
-
- <p>While it is generally true that the bigger the cheese the
- better, (much the same as a magnum bottle of champagne is
- better than a pint), there is a limit to the obesity of a
- block, ball or brick of almost any kinds of cheese. When they
- pass a certain limit, they lack homogeneity and are not nearly
- so good as the smaller ones. Today a good magnum size for an
- exhibition Cheddar is 560 pounds; for a prize Provolone, 280
- pounds; while a Swiss wheel of only 210 will draw crowds to any
- food-shop window.</p>
-
- <p>Yet by and large it's the monsters that get into the Cheese
- Hall of Fame and come down to us in song and story. For
- example, that four-ton Toronto affair inspired a cheese poet,
- James McIntyre, who doubled as the local undertaker.</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <!-- Page 13 --><a name="Page_13"
- id="Page_13"></a> <span>We have thee, mammoth
- cheese,<br /></span> <span>Lying quietly at your
- ease;<br /></span> <span>Gently fanned by evening
- breeze,<br /></span> <span>Thy fair form no flies
- dare seize.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>All gaily dressed soon you'll go<br /></span>
- <span>To the greatest provincial show,<br /></span>
- <span>To be admired by many a beau<br /></span>
- <span>In the city of Toronto.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>May you not receive a scar as<br /></span>
- <span>We have heard that Mr. Harris<br /></span>
- <span>Intends to send you off as far as<br /></span>
- <span>The great world's show at Paris.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Of the youth beware of these,<br /></span>
- <span>For some of them might rudely
- squeeze<br /></span> <span>And bite your cheek; then
- song or glees<br /></span> <span>We could not sing, oh,
- Queen of Cheese.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>An ode to a one hundred percent American mammoth was
- inspired by "The Ultra-Democratic, Anti-Federalist Cheese of
- Cheshire." This was in the summer of 1801 when the patriotic
- people of Cheshire, Massachusetts, turned out en masse to
- concoct a mammoth cheese on the village green for presentation
- to their beloved President Jefferson. The unique demonstration
- occurred spontaneously in jubilant commemoration of the
- greatest political triumph of a new country in a new
- century&mdash;the victory of the Democrats over the
- Federalists. Its collective making was heralded in Boston's
- <i>Mercury and New England Palladium</i>, September 8,
- 1801:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span><i>The Mammoth Cheese</i></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>AN EPICO-LYRICO BALLAD</span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>From meadows rich, with clover red,<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">A thousand heifers come;<br /></span>
- <span><!-- Page 14 --><a name="Page_14"
- id="Page_14"></a> The tinkling bells the tidings
- spread,<br /></span> <span>The milkmaid muffles up
- her head,<br /></span> <span class="i2">And wakes
- the village hum.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>In shining pans the snowy flood<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">Through whitened canvas
- pours;<br /></span> <span>The dyeing pots of otter
- good<br /></span> <span>And rennet tinged with madder
- blood<br /></span> <span class="i2">Are sought among
- their stores.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>The quivering curd, in panniers
- stowed,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Is loaded on the
- jade,<br /></span> <span>The stumbling beast supports
- the load,<br /></span> <span>While trickling whey
- bedews the road<br /></span> <span class="i2">Along the
- dusty glade.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>As Cairo's slaves, to bondage bred,<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">The arid deserts roam,<br /></span>
- <span>Through trackless sands undaunted
- tread,<br /></span> <span>With skins of water on their
- head<br /></span> <span class="i2">To cheer their
- masters home,<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>So here full many a sturdy swain<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">His precious baggage
- bore;<br /></span> <span>Old misers e'en forgot their
- gain,<br /></span> <span>And bed-rid cripples, free
- from pain,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Now took the
- road before.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>The widow, with her dripping mite<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">Upon her saddle horn,<br /></span>
- <span>Rode up in haste to see the sight<br /></span>
- <span>And aid a charity so right,<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">A pauper so forlorn.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>The circling throng an opening drew<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">Upon the verdant-grass<br /></span>
- <span>To let the vast procession through<br /></span>
- <span><!-- Page 15 --><a name="Page_15"
- id="Page_15"></a>To spread their rich repast in
- view,<br /></span> <span class="i2">And Elder J. L.
- pass.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Then Elder J. with lifted eyes<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">In musing posture stood,<br /></span>
- <span>Invoked a blessing from the skies<br /></span>
- <span>To save from vermin, mites and
- flies,<br /></span> <span class="i2">And keep the
- bounty good.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Now mellow strokes the yielding pile<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">From polished steel
- receives,<br /></span> <span>And shining nymphs stand
- still a while,<br /></span> <span>Or mix the mass with
- salt and oil,<br /></span> <span class="i2">With sage
- and savory leaves.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Then sextonlike, the patriot troop,<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">With naked arms and
- crown,<br /></span> <span>Embraced, with hardy hands,
- the scoop,<br /></span> <span>And filled the vast
- expanded hoop,<br /></span> <span class="i2">While
- beetles smacked it down.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Next girding screws the ponderous
- beam,<br /></span> <span class="i2">With heft immense,
- drew down;<br /></span> <span>The gushing whey from
- every seam<br /></span> <span>Flowed through the
- streets a rapid stream,<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">And shad came up to town.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>This spirited achievement of early democracy is commemorated
- today by a sign set up at the ancient and honorable town of
- Cheshire, located between Pittsfield and North Adams, on Route
- 8.</p>
-
- <p>Jefferson's speech of thanks to the democratic people of
- Cheshire rings out in history: "I look upon this cheese as a
- token of fidelity from the very heart of the people of this
- land to the great cause of equal rights to all men."</p>
-
- <p>This popular presentation started a tradition. When Van
- Buren succeeded to the Presidency, he received a similar
- mammoth <!-- Page 16 --><a name="Page_16"
- id="Page_16"></a>cheese in token of the high esteem in which
- he was held. A monstrous one, bigger than the Jeffersonian,
- was made by New Englanders to show their loyalty to
- President Jackson. For weeks this stood in state in the hall
- of the White House. At last the floor was a foot deep in the
- fragments remaining after the enthusiastic Democrats had
- eaten their fill.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 17 --><a name="Page_17"
- id="Page_17"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/017.gif"
- width="450"
- height="268"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Three</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>Foreign Greats</h2>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span><i>Ode to Cheese</i><br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza"></div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>God of the country, bless today Thy
- cheese,<br /></span> <span>For which we give Thee
- thanks on bended knees.<br /></span> <span>Let them be
- fat or light, with onions blent,<br /></span>
- <span>Shallots, brine, pepper, honey; whether
- scent<br /></span> <span>Of sheep or fields is in them,
- in the yard<br /></span> <span>Let them, good Lord, at
- dawn be beaten hard.<br /></span> <span>And let their
- edges take on silvery shades<br /></span> <span>Under
- the moist red hands of dairymaids;<br /></span>
- <span>And, round and greenish, let them go to
- town<br /></span> <span>Weighing the shepherd's folding
- mantle down;<br /></span> <span>Whether from Parma or
- from Jura heights,<br /></span> <span>Kneaded by august
- hands of Carmelites,<br /></span> <span>Stamped with
- the mitre of a proud abbess.<br /></span>
- <span>Flowered with the perfumes of the grass of
- Bresse,<br /></span> <span>From hollow Holland, from
- the Vosges, from Brie,<br /></span> <span>From
- Roquefort, Gorgonzola, Italy!<br /></span> <span>
- <!-- Page 18 --><a name="Page_18"
- id="Page_18"></a> Bless them, good Lord! Bless
- Stilton's royal fare,<br /></span> <span>Red
- Cheshire, and the tearful cream
- Gruy&egrave;re.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="auth">FROM JETHRO BITHELL'S
- TRANSLATION<br /></span> <span class="auth">OF A POEM
- BY M. Thomas Braun<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><i>Symphonie des Fromages</i></p>
-
- <p>A giant Cantal, seeming to have been chopped open with
- an ax, stood aside of a golden-hued Chester and a Swiss
- Gruy&egrave;re resembling the wheel of a Roman chariot
- There were Dutch Edams, round and blood-red, and
- Port-Saluts lined up like soldiers on parade. Three Bries,
- side by side, suggested phases of the moon; two of them,
- very dry, were amber-colored and "full," and the third, in
- its second quarter, was runny and creamy, with a "milky
- way" which no human barrier seemed able to restrain. And
- all the while majestic Roqueforts looked down with princely
- contempt upon the other, through the glass of their crystal
- covers.</p>
-
- <p class="author">Emile Zola</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>In 1953 the United States Department of Agriculture
- published Handbook No. 54, entitled <i>Cheese Varieties and
- Descriptions,</i> with this comment: "There probably are only
- about eighteen distinct types or kinds of natural cheese." All
- the rest (more than 400 names) are of local origin, usually
- named after towns or communities. A list of the best-known
- names applied to each of these distinct varieties or groups is
- given:</p>
-
- <div class="center">
- <table summary="cheese varieties"
- cellpadding="6">
- <tr>
- <td align="left">Brick</td>
-
- <td align="left">Gouda</td>
-
- <td align="left">Romano</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">Camembert</td>
-
- <td align="left">Hand</td>
-
- <td align="left">Roquefort</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">Cheddar</td>
-
- <td align="left">Limburger</td>
-
- <td align="left">Sapsago</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">Cottage</td>
-
- <td align="left">Neufch&acirc;tel</td>
-
- <td align="left">Swiss</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">Cream</td>
-
- <td align="left">Parmesan</td>
-
- <td align="left">Trappist</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">Edam</td>
-
- <td align="left">Provolone</td>
-
- <td align="left">Whey cheeses (Mysost and Ricotta)</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 19 --><a name="Page_19"
- id="Page_19"></a> May we nominate another dozen to form our
- own Cheese Hall of Fame? We begin our list with a partial
- roll call of the big Blues family and end it with members of
- the monastic order of Port-Salut Trappist that includes
- Canadian Oka and our own Kentucky thoroughbred.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>The Blues that Are Green</b></p>
-
- <p>Stilton, Roquefort and Gorgonzola form the triumvirate that
- rules a world of lesser Blues. They are actually green, as
- green as the mythical cheese the moon is made of.</p>
-
- <p>In almost every, land where cheese is made you can sample a
- handful of lesser Blues and imitations of the invincible three
- and try to classify them, until you're blue in the face. The
- best we can do in this slight summary is to mention a few of
- the most notable, aside from our own Blues of Minnesota,
- Wisconsin, Oregon and other states that major in cheese.</p>
-
- <p>Danish Blues are popular and splendidly made, such as
- "Flower of Denmark." The Argentine competes with a pampas-grass
- Blue all its own. But France and England are the leaders in
- this line, France first with a sort of triple triumvirate
- within a triumvirate&mdash;Septmoncel, Gex, and Sassenage, all
- three made with three milks mixed together: cow, goat and
- sheep. Septmoncel is the leader of these, made in the Jura
- mountains and considered by many French caseophiles to outrank
- Roquefort.</p>
-
- <p>This class of Blue or marbled cheese is called fromage
- persill&eacute;, as well as fromage bleu and pate bleue.
- Similar mountain cheeses are made in Auvergne and Aubrac and
- have distinct qualities that have brought them fame, such as
- Cantal, bleu d'Auvergne Guiole or Laguiole, bleu de Salers, and
- St. Flour. Olivet and Queville come within the color scheme,
- and sundry others such as Champol&eacute;on, Journiac, Queyras
- and Sarraz.</p>
-
- <p>Of English Blues there are several celebrities beside
- Stilton and Cheshire Stilton. Wensleydale was one in the early
- days, and still <!-- Page 20 --><a name="Page_20"
- id="Page_20"></a>is, together with Blue Dorset, the deepest
- green of them all, and esoteric Blue Vinny, a choosey cheese
- not liked by everybody, the favorite of Thomas Hardy.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Brie</b></p>
-
- <p>Sheila Hibben once wrote in <i>The New Yorker:</i></p>
-
- <p>I can't imagine any difference of opinion about Brie's being
- the queen of all cheeses, and if there is any such difference,
- I shall certainly ignore it. The very shape of Brie&mdash;so
- uncheese-like and so charmingly fragile&mdash;is exciting. Nine
- times out of ten a Brie will let you down&mdash;will be all
- caked into layers, which shows it is too young, or at the
- over-runny stage, which means it is too old&mdash;but when you
- come on the tenth Brie, <i>coulant</i> to just the right,
- delicate creaminess, and the color of fresh, sweet butter, no
- other cheese can compare with it.</p>
-
- <p>The season of Brie, like that of oysters, is simple to
- remember: only months with an "R," beginning with September,
- which is the best, bar none.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Caciocavallo</b></p>
-
- <p>From Bulgaria to Turkey the Italian "horse cheese," as
- Caciocavallo translates, is as universally popular as it is at
- home and in all the Little Italics throughout the rest of the
- world. Flattering imitations are made and named after it, as
- follows:</p>
-
- <div class="center">
- <table summary="list of imitations of Caciocavallo cheese"
- cellpadding="2">
- <tr>
- <td align="left">BULGARIA:</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>Kascaval</b></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">GREECE:</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>Kashcavallo</b> and <b>Caskcaval</b></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">HUNGARY:</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>Parenica</b></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">RUMANIA:</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>Pentele</b> and <b>Kascaval</b></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">SERBIA:</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>Katschkawalj</b></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">SYRIA:</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>Cashkavallo</b>
- <!-- Page 21 --><a name="Page_21"
- id="Page_21"></a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">TRANSYLVANIA:</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>Kascaval</b> (as in Rumania)</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">TURKEY:</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>Cascaval Penir</b></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">YUGOSLAVIA:</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>Kackavalj</b></td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </div>
-
- <p>A horse's head printed on the cheese gave rise to its
- popular name and to the myth that it is made of mare's milk. It
- is, however, curded from cow's milk, whole or partly skimmed,
- and sometimes from water buffalo; hard, yellow and so buttery
- that the best of it, which comes from Sorrento, is called
- <i>Cacio burro,</i> butter cheese. Slightly salty, with a spicy
- tang, it is eaten sliced when young and mild and used for
- grating and seasoning when old, not only on the usual Italian
- pastes but on sweets.</p>
-
- <p>Different from the many grating cheeses made from little
- balls of curd called <i>grana</i>, Caciocavallo is a <i>pasta
- fileta</i>, or drawn-curd product. Because of this it is
- sometimes drawn out in long thick threads and braided. It is a
- cheese for skilled artists to make sculptures with, sometimes
- horses' heads, again bunches of grapes and other fruits, even
- as Provolone is shaped like apples and pears and often worked
- into elaborate bas-relief designs. But ordinarily the horse's
- head is a plain tenpin in shape or a squat bottle with a knob
- on the side by which it has been tied up, two cheeses at a
- time, on opposite sides of a rafter, while being smoked lightly
- golden and rubbed with olive oil and butter to make it all the
- more buttery.</p>
-
- <p>In Calabria and Sicily it is very popular, and although the
- best comes from Sorrento, there is keen competition from
- Abruzzi, Apulian Province and Molise. It keeps well and doesn't
- spoil when shipped overseas.</p>
-
- <p>In his <i>Little Book of Cheese</i> Osbert Burdett
- recommends the high, horsy strength of this smoked Cacio over
- tobacco smoke after dinner:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Only monsters smoke at meals, but a monster assured me
- that Gorgonzola best survives this malpractice. Clearly,
- some pungency is necessary, and confidence suggests rather
- Cacio which would survive anything, the monster said.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 22 --><a name="Page_22"
- id="Page_22"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Camembert</b></p>
-
- <p>Camembert is called "mold-matured" and all that is genuine
- is labeled <i>Syndicat du Vrai Camembert</i>. The name in full
- is <i>Syndicat des Fabricants du Veritable Camembert de
- Normandie</i> and we agree that this is "a most useful
- association for the defense of one of the best cheeses of
- France." Its extremely delicate piquance cannot be matched,
- except perhaps by Brie.</p>
-
- <p>Napoleon is said to have named it and to have kissed the
- waitress who first served it to him in the tiny town of
- Camembert. And there a statue stands today in the market place
- to honor Marie Harel who made the first Camembert.</p>
-
- <p>Camembert is equally good on thin slices of apple,
- pineapple, pear, French "flute" or pumpernickel. As-with Brie
- and with oysters, Camembert should be eaten only in the "R"
- months, and of these September is the best.</p>
-
- <p>Since Camembert rhymes with beware, if you can't get the
- <i>v&eacute;ritable</i> don't fall for a domestic imitation or
- any West German abomination such as one dressed like a
- valentine in a heart-shaped box and labeled
- "Camembert&mdash;Cheese Exquisite." They are equally tasteless,
- chalky with youth, or choking with ammoniacal gas when old and
- decrepit.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Cheddar</b></p>
-
- <p>The English <i>Encyclopedia of Practical Cookery</i>
- says:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Cheddar cheese is one of the kings of cheese; it is pale
- coloured, mellow, salvy, and, when good, resembling a
- hazelnut in flavour. The Cheddar principle pervades the
- whole cheesemaking districts of America, Canada and New
- Zealand, but no cheese imported into England can equal the
- Cheddars of Somerset and the West of Scotland.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Named for a village near Bristol where farmer Joseph Harding
- first manufactured it, the best is still called Farmhouse
- Cheddar, <!-- Page 23 --><a name="Page_23"
- id="Page_23"></a>but in America we have practically none of
- this. Farmhouse Cheddar must be ripened at least nine months
- to a mellowness, and little of our American cheese gets as
- much as that. Back in 1695 John Houghton wrote that it
- "contended in goodness (if kept from two to five years,
- according to magnitude) with any cheese in England."</p>
-
- <p>Today it is called "England's second-best cheese," second
- after Stilton, of course.</p>
-
- <p>In early days a large cheese sufficed for a year or two of
- family feeding, according to this old note: "A big Cheddar can
- be kept for two years in excellent condition if kept in a cool
- room and turned over every other day."</p>
-
- <p>But in old England some were harder to preserve: "In Bath...
- I asked one lady of the larder how she kept Cheddar cheese. Her
- eyes twinkled: 'We don't keep cheese; we eats it.'"</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Cheshire</b></p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>A Cheshireman sailed into Spain<br /></span>
- <span>To trade for merchandise;<br /></span> <span>When
- he arrived from the main<br /></span> <span>A Spaniard
- him espies.<br /></span> <span>Who said, "You English
- rogue, look here!<br /></span> <span>What fruits and
- spices fine<br /></span> <span>Our land produces twice
- a year.<br /></span> <span>Thou has not such in
- thine."<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>The Cheshireman ran to his hold<br /></span>
- <span>And fetched a Cheshire cheese,<br /></span>
- <span>And said, "Look here, you dog,
- behold!<br /></span> <span>We have such fruits as
- these.<br /></span> <span>Your fruits are ripe but
- twice a year,<br /></span> <span>As you yourself do
- say,<br /></span> <span>But such as I present you
- here<br /></span> <span>Our land brings twice a
- day."</span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="center">Anonymous</span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <!-- Page 24 --><a name="Page_24"
- id="Page_24"></a>
-
- <p>Let us pass on to cheese. We have some glorious cheeses,
- and far too few people glorying in them. The Cheddar of the
- inn, of the chophouse, of the average English home, is a
- libel on a thing which, when authentic, is worthy of great
- honor. Cheshire, divinely commanded into existence as to
- three parts to precede and as to one part to accompany
- certain Tawny Ports and some Late-Bottled Ports, can be a
- thing for which the British Navy ought to fire a salute on
- the principle on which Colonel Brisson made his regiment
- salute when passing the great Burgundian vineyard.</p>
-
- <p class="author">T. Earle Welby,<br />
- IN "THE DINNER KNELL"</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Cheshire is not only the most literary cheese in England,
- but the oldest. It was already manufactured when Caesar
- conquered Britain, and tradition is that the Romans built the
- walled city of Chester to control the district where the
- precious cheese was made. Chester on the River Dee was a
- stronghold against the Roman invasion.</p>
-
- <p>It came to fame with The Old Cheshire Cheese in Elizabethan
- times and waxed great with Samuel Johnson presiding at the
- Fleet Street Inn where White Cheshire was served "with radishes
- or watercress or celery when in season," and Red Cheshire was
- served toasted or stewed in a sort of Welsh Rabbit. (<i>See</i>
- <a href="#Page_50">Chapter 5</a>.)</p>
-
- <p>The Blue variety is called Cheshire-Stilton, and Vyvyan
- Holland, in <i>Cheddar Gorge</i> suggests that "it was no doubt
- a cheese of this sort, discovered and filched from the larder
- of the Queen of Hearts, that accounted for the contented grin
- on the face of the Cheshire Cat in Alice in Wonderland."</p>
-
- <p>All very English, as recorded in Victor Meusy's couplet:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span><i>Dans le Chester sec et rose</i><br /></span>
- <span><i>A longues dents, l'Anglais
- mord.</i><br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>In the Chester dry and pink<br /></span>
- <span>The long teeth of the English sink.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 25 --><a name="Page_25"
- id="Page_25"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Edam and Gouda</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><i>Edam in Peace and War</i></p>
-
- <p>There also coming into the river two Dutchmen, we sent a
- couple of men on board and brought three Holland cheeses,
- cost 4d. a piece, excellent cheeses.</p>
-
- <p class="author">Pepys' <i>Diary</i>, March 2,1663</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Commodore Coe, of the Montevidian Navy, defeated Admiral
- Brown of the Buenos Ayrean Navy, in a naval battle, when he
- used Holland cheese for cannon balls.</p>
-
- <p class="author"><i>The Harbinger</i> (Vermont), December
- 11, 1847</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The crimson cannon balls of Holland have been heard around
- the world. Known as "red balls" in England and
- <i>katzenkopf,</i> "cat's head," in Germany, they differ from
- Gouda chiefly in the shape, Gouda being round but flattish and
- now chiefly imported as one-pound Baby Goudas.</p>
-
- <p>Edam when it is good is very, very good, but when it is bad
- it is horrid. Sophisticated ones are sent over already
- scalloped for the ultimate consumer to add port, and there are
- crocks of Holland cheese potted with sauterne. Both Edam and
- Gouda should be well aged to develop full-bodied quality, two
- years being the accepted standard for Edam.</p>
-
- <p>The best Edams result from a perfect combination of Breed
- (black-and-white Dutch Friesian) and Feed (the rich pasturage
- of Friesland and Noord Holland).</p>
-
- <p>The Goudas, shaped like English Derby and Belgian Delft and
- Leyden, come from South Holland. Some are specially made for
- the Jewish trade and called Kosher Gouda. Both Edam and Gouda
- are eaten at mealtimes thrice daily in Holland. A Dutch
- breakfast without one or the other on black bread with butter
- and black coffee would be unthinkable. They're also boon
- companions to plum bread and Dutch cocoa.</p>
-
- <p>"Eclair Edams" are those with soft insides.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 26 --><a name="Page_26"
- id="Page_26"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Emmentaler, Gruy&egrave;re and Swiss</b></p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>When the working woman<br /></span> <span>Takes
- her midday lunch,<br /></span> <span>It is a piece of
- Gruy&egrave;re<br /></span> <span>Which for her takes
- the place of roast.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="auth">Victor Meusy<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>Whether an Emmentaler is eminently Schweizerk&auml;se, grand
- Gruy&egrave;re from France, or lesser Swiss of the United
- States, the shape, size and glisten of the eyes indicate the
- stage of ripeness, skill of making and quality of flavor. They
- must be uniform, roundish, about the size of a big cherry and,
- most important of all, must glisten like the eye of a lass in
- love, dry but with the suggestion of a tear.</p>
-
- <p>Gruy&egrave;re does not see eye to eye with the big-holed
- Swiss Saanen cartwheel or American imitation. It has tiny
- holes, and many of them; let us say it is freckled with
- pinholes, rather than pock-marked. This variety is technically
- called a <i>niszler</i>, while one without any holes at all is
- "blind." Eyes or holes are also called vesicles.</p>
-
- <p>Gruy&egrave;re Trauben (Grape Gruy&egrave;re) is aged in
- Neuch&acirc;tel wine in Switzerland, although most
- Gruy&egrave;re has been made in France since its introduction
- there in 1722. The most famous is made in the Jura, and another
- is called Comt&eacute; from its origin in
- Franche-Comt&eacute;.</p>
-
- <p>A blind Emmentaler was made in Switzerland for export to
- Italy where it was hardened in caves to become a grating cheese
- called Raper, and now it is largely imitated there. Emmentaler,
- in fact, because of its piquant pecan-nut flavor and inimitable
- quality, is simulated everywhere, even in Switzerland.</p>
-
- <p>Besides phonies from Argentina and countries as far off as
- Finland, we get a flood of imported and domestic Swisses of all
- sad sorts, with all possible faults&mdash;from too many holes,
- that make a flabby, wobbly cheese, to too few&mdash;cracked,
- dried-up, collapsed <!-- Page 27 --><a name="Page_27"
- id="Page_27"></a>or utterly ruined by molding inside. So it
- will pay you to buy only the kind already marked genuine in
- Switzerland. For there cheese such as Saanen takes six years
- to ripen, improves with age, and keeps forever.</p>
-
- <p>Cartwheels well over a hundred years old are still kept in
- cheese cellars (as common in Switzerland as wine cellars are in
- France), and it is said that the rank of a family is determined
- by the age and quality of the cheese in its larder.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Feta and Casere</b></p>
-
- <p>The Greeks have a name for it&mdash;Feta. Their neighbors
- call it Greek cheese. Feta is to cheese what Hymettus is to
- honey. The two together make ambrosial manna. Feta is soft and
- as blinding white as a plate of fresh Ricotta smothered with
- sour cream. The whiteness is preserved by shipping the cheese
- all the way from Greece in kegs sloshing full of milk, the milk
- being renewed from time to time. Having been cured in brine,
- this great sheep-milk curd is slightly salty and somewhat
- sharp, but superbly spicy.</p>
-
- <p>When first we tasted it fresh from the keg with salty milk
- dripping through our fingers, we gave it full marks. This was
- at the Staikos Brothers Greek-import store on West 23rd Street
- in Manhattan. We then compared Feta with thin wisps of its
- grown-up brother, Casere. This gray and greasy, hard and
- brittle palate-tickler of sheep's milk made us bleat for more
- Feta.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Gorgonzola</b></p>
-
- <p>Gorgonzola, least pretentious of the Blues triumvirate
- (including Roquefort and Stilton) is nonetheless by common
- consent monarch of all other Blues from Argentina to Denmark.
- In England, indeed, many epicures consider Gorgonzola greater
- than Stilton, which is the highest praise any cheese can get
- there. <!-- Page 28 --><a name="Page_28"
- id="Page_28"></a>Like all great cheeses it has been widely
- imitated, but never equaled. Imported Gorgonzola, when
- fruity ripe, is still firm but creamy and golden inside with
- rich green veins running through. Very pungent and highly
- flavored, it is eaten sliced or crumbled to flavor salad
- dressings, like Roquefort.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Habl&eacute; Cr&egrave;me Chantilly</b></p>
-
- <p>The name Habl&eacute; Cr&egrave;me Chantilly sounds French,
- but the cheese is Swedish and actually lives up to the blurb in
- the imported package: "The overall characteristic is
- indescribable and delightful freshness."</p>
-
- <p>This exclusive product of the Walk G&auml;rd Creamery was
- hailed by Sheila Hibben in <i>The New Yorker</i> of May 6,
- 1950, as enthusiastically as Brillat-Savarin would have greeted
- a new dish, or the Planetarium a new star:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Endeavoring to be as restrained as I can, I shall merely
- suggest that the arrival of Cr&egrave;me Chantilly is a
- historic event and that in reporting on it I feel something
- of the responsibility that the contemporaries of Madame
- Harel, the famous cheese-making lady of Normandy, must have
- felt when they were passing judgment on the first
- Camembert.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Miss Hibben goes on to say that only a fromage &agrave; la
- cr&egrave;me made in Quebec had come anywhere near her
- impression of the new Swedish triumph. She quotes the last word
- from the makers themselves: "This is a very special product
- that has never been made on this earth before," and speaks of
- "the elusive flavor of mushrooms" before summing up, "the
- exquisitely textured curd and the unexpectedly fresh flavor
- combine to make it one of the most subtly enjoyable foods that
- have come my way in a long time."</p>
-
- <p>And so say we&mdash;all of us.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 29 --><a name="Page_29"
- id="Page_29"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Hand Cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>Hand cheese has this niche in our Cheese Hall of Fame not
- because we consider it great, but because it is usually
- included among the eighteen varieties on which the hundreds of
- others are based. It is named from having been molded into its
- final shape by hand. Universally popular with Germanic races,
- it is too strong for the others. To our mind, Hand cheese never
- had anything that Allg&auml;uer or Limburger hasn't improved
- upon.</p>
-
- <p>It is the only cheese that is commonly melted into steins of
- beer and drunk instead of eaten. It is usually studded with
- caraway seeds, the most natural spice for curds.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Limburger</b></p>
-
- <p>Limburger has always been popular in America, ever since it
- was brought over by German-American immigrants; but England
- never took to it. This is eloquently expressed in the following
- entry in the English <i>Encyclopedia of Practical
- Cookery</i>:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Limburger cheese is chiefly famous for its pungently
- offensive odor. It is made from skimmed milk, and allowed
- to partially decompose before pressing. It is very little
- known in this country, and might be less so with advantage
- to consumers.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>But this is libel. Butter-soft and sapid, Limburger has
- brought gustatory pleasure to millions of hardy gastronomes
- since it came to light in the province of L&uuml;ttich in
- Belgium. It has been Americanized for almost a century and is
- by now one of the very few cheeses successfully imitated here,
- chiefly in New York and Wisconsin.</p>
-
- <p>Early Wisconsiners will never forget the Limburger Rebellion
- in Green County, when the people rose in protest against the
- Limburger caravan that was accustomed to park in the little
- town <!-- Page 30 --><a name="Page_30"
- id="Page_30"></a>of Monroe where it was marketed. They
- threatened to stage a modern Boston Tea Party and dump the
- odoriferous bricks in the river, when five or six wagonloads
- were left ripening in the sun in front of the town bank. The
- Limburger was finally stored safely underground.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Livarot</b></p>
-
- <p>Livarot has been described as decadent, "The very Verlaine
- of them all," and Victor Meusy personifies it in a poem
- dedicated to all the great French cheeses, of which we give a
- free translation:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>In the dog days<br /></span> <span>In its
- overflowing dish<br /></span> <span>Livarot
- gesticulates<br /></span> <span>Or weeps like a
- child.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>M&uuml;nster</b></p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>At the diplomatic banquet<br /></span> <span>One
- must choose his piece.<br /></span> <span>All is
- politics,<br /></span> <span>A cheese and a
- flag.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>You annoy the Russians<br /></span> <span>If you
- take Chester;<br /></span> <span>You irritate the
- Prussians<br /></span> <span>In choosing
- M&uuml;nster.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="auth">Victor Meusy<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>Like Limburger, this male cheese, often caraway-flavored,
- does not fare well in England. Although over here we consider
- M&uuml;nster far milder than Limburger, the English writer Eric
- Weir in <i>When Madame Cooks</i> will have none of it:</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 31 --><a name="Page_31"
- id="Page_31"></a> I cannot think why this cheese was not
- thrown from the aeroplanes during the war to spread panic
- amongst enemy troops. It would have proved far more
- efficacious than those nasty deadly gases that kill people
- permanently.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Neufch&acirc;tel</b></p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>If the cream cheese be white<br /></span>
- <span>Far fairer the hands that made them.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="auth">Arthur Hugh Clough<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>Although originally from Normandy, Neufch&acirc;tel, like
- Limburger, was so long ago welcomed to America and made so
- splendidly at home here that we may consider it our very own.
- All we have against it is that it has served as the model for
- too many processed abominations.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Parmesan, Romano, Pecorino, Pecorino Romano</b></p>
-
- <p>Parmesan when young, soft and slightly crumbly is eaten on
- bread. But when well aged, let us say up to a century, it
- becomes Rock of Gibraltar of cheeses and really suited for
- grating. It is easy to believe that the so-called "Spanish
- cheese" used as a barricade by Americans in Nicaragua almost a
- century ago was none other than the almost indestructible
- Grana, as Parmesan is called in Italy.</p>
-
- <p>The association between cheese and battling began in B.C.
- days with the Jews and Romans, who fed cheese to their soldiers
- not only for its energy value but as a convenient form of
- rations, since every army travels on its stomach and can't go
- faster than its impedimenta. The last notable mention of cheese
- in war was the name of the <i>Monitor</i>: "A cheese box on a
- raft."</p>
-
- <p>Romano is not as expensive as Parmesan, although it is as
- friable, sharp and tangy for flavoring, especially for soups
- such as <!-- Page 32 --><a name="Page_32"
- id="Page_32"></a>onion and minestrone. It is brittle and
- just off-white when well aged.</p>
-
- <p>Although made of sheep's milk, Pecorino is classed with both
- Parmesan and Romano. All three are excellently imitated in
- Argentina. Romano and Pecorino Romano are interchangeable names
- for the strong, medium-sharp and piquant Parmesan types that
- sell for considerably less. Most of it is now shipped from
- Sardinia. There are several different kinds: Pecorino Dolce
- (sweet), Sardo Tuscano, and Pecorino Romano Cacio, which
- relates it to Caciocavallo.</p>
-
- <p>Kibitzers complain that some of the cheaper types of
- Pecorino are soapy, but fans give it high praise. Gillian F.,
- in her "Letter from Italy" in Osbert Burdett's delectable
- <i>Little Book of Cheese</i>, writes:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Out in the orchard, my companion, I don't remember how,
- had provided the miracle: a flask of wine, a loaf of bread
- and a slab of fresh Pecorino cheese (there wasn't any
- "thou" for either) ... But that cheese was Paradise; and
- the flask was emptied, and a wood dove cooing made you
- think that the flask's contents were in a crystal goblet
- instead of an enamel cup ... one only ... and the cheese
- broken with the fingers ... a cheese of cheeses.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Pont L'Ev&ecirc;que</b></p>
-
- <p>This semisoft, medium-strong, golden-tinted French classic
- made since the thirteenth century, is definitely a dessert
- cheese whose excellence is brought out best by a sound claret
- or tawny port.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Port-Salut</b> (<i>See</i> <b>Trappist</b>)</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Provolone</b></p>
-
- <p>Within recent years Provolone has taken America by storm, as
- Camembert, Roquefort, Swiss, Limburger, Neufch&acirc;tel and
- such <!-- Page 33 --><a name="Page_33"
- id="Page_33"></a>great ones did long before. But it has not
- been successfully imitated here because the original is made
- of rich water-buffalo milk unattainable in the Americas.</p>
-
- <p>With Caciocavallo, this mellow, smoky flavorsome delight is
- put up in all sorts of artistic forms, red-cellophaned apples,
- pears, bells, a regular zoo of animals, and in all sorts of
- sizes, up to a monumental hundred-pound bas-relief imported for
- exhibition purposes by Phil Alpert.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Roquefort</b></p>
-
- <p>Homage to this <i>fromage!</i> Long hailed as <i>le roi</i>
- Roquefort, it has filled books and booklets beyond count. By
- the miracle of <i>Penicillium Roqueforti</i> a new cheese was
- made. It is placed historically back around the eighth century
- when Charlemagne was found picking out the green spots of
- Persill&eacute; with the point of his knife, thinking them
- decay. But the monks of Saint-Gall, who were his hosts,
- recorded in their annals that when they regaled him with
- Roquefort (because it was Friday and they had no fish) they
- also made bold to tell him he was wasting the best part of the
- cheese. So he tasted again, found the advice excellent and
- liked it so well he ordered two <i>caisses</i> of it sent every
- year to his palace at Aix-la-Chapelle. He also suggested that
- it be cut in half first, to make sure it was well veined with
- blue, and then bound up with a wooden fastening.</p>
-
- <p>Perhaps he hoped the wood would protect the cheeses from
- mice and rats, for the good monks of Saint-Gall couldn't be
- expected to send an escort of cats from their chalky caves to
- guard them&mdash;even for Charlemagne. There is no telling how
- many cats were mustered out in the caves, in those early days,
- but a recent census put the number at five hundred. We can
- readily imagine the head handler in the caves leading a night
- inspection with a candle, followed by his chief taster and a
- regiment of cats. While the Dutch and other makers of cheese
- also employ cats to patrol <!-- Page 34 --><a name="Page_34"
- id="Page_34"></a>their storage caves, Roquefort holds the
- record for number. An interesting point in this connection
- is that as rats and mice pick only the prime cheeses, a
- gnawed one is not thrown away but greatly prized.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Sapsago, Schabziger or Swiss Green Cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>The name Sapsago is a corruption of Schabziger, German for
- whey cheese. It's a hay cheese, flavored heavily with melilot,
- a kind of clover that's also grown for hay. It comes from
- Switzerland in a hard, truncated cone wrapped in a piece of
- paper that says:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&nbsp; &nbsp; To be used grated only<br />
- &nbsp; &nbsp; Genuine Swiss Green Cheese<br />
- &nbsp; &nbsp; Made of skimmed milk and herbs</p>
-
- <p>To the housewives! Do you want a change in your meals?
- Try the contents of this wrapper! Delicious as spreading
- mixed with butter, excellent for flavoring eggs, macaroni,
- spaghetti, potatoes, soup, etc. Can be used in place of any
- other cheese. <i>Do not take too much, you might spoil the
- flavor</i>.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>We put this wrapper among our papers, sealed it tight in an
- envelope, and to this day, six months later, the scent of
- Sapsago clings 'round it still.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Stilton</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><i>Honor for Cheeses</i></p>
-
- <p>Literary and munching circles in London are putting
- quite a lot of thought into a proposed memorial to Stilton
- cheese. There is a Stilton Memorial Committee, with Sir
- John Squire at the head, and already the boys are
- fighting.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 35 --><a name="Page_35"
- id="Page_35"></a> One side, led by Sir John, is all for
- a monument.</p>
-
- <p>This, presumably, would not be a replica of Stilton
- itself, although Mr. Epstein could probably hack out a
- pretty effective cheese-shaped figure and call it
- "Dolorosa."</p>
-
- <p>The monument-boosters plan a figure of Mrs. Paulet, who
- first introduced Stilton to England. (Possibly a group
- showing Mrs. Paulet holding a young Stilton by the hand and
- introducing it, while the Stilton curtsies.)</p>
-
- <p>T.S. Eliot does not think that anyone would look at a
- monument, but wants to establish a Foundation for the
- Preservation of Ancient Cheeses. The practicability of this
- plan would depend largely on the site selected for the
- treasure house and the cost of obtaining a curator who
- could, or would, give his whole time to the work.</p>
-
- <p>Mr. J.A. Symonds, who is secretary of the committee,
- agrees with Mr. Eliot that a simple statue is not the best
- form.</p>
-
- <p>"I should like," he says, "something
- irrelevant&mdash;gargoyles, perhaps."</p>
-
- <p>I think that Mr. Symonds has hit on something there.</p>
-
- <p>I would suggest, if we Americans can pitch into this
- great movement, some gargoyles designed by Mr. Rube
- Goldberg.</p>
-
- <p>If the memorial could be devised so as to take on an
- international scope, an exchange fellowship might be
- established between England and America, although the
- exchange, in the case of Stilton, would have to be all on
- England's side.</p>
-
- <p>We might be allowed to furnish the money, however, while
- England furnishes the cheese.</p>
-
- <p>There is a very good precedent for such a bargain
- between the two countries.</p>
-
- <p class="author">Robert Benchley, in<br />
- <i>After 1903&mdash;What?</i></p>
- </div>
-
- <p>When all seems lost in England there is still Stilton, an
- endless after-dinner conversation piece to which England points
- with pride. For a sound appreciation of this cheese see Clifton
- Fadiman's introduction to this book.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 36 --><a name="Page_36"
- id="Page_36"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Taleggio and Bel Paese</b></p>
-
- <p>When the great Italian cheese-maker, Galbini, first exported
- Bel Paese some years ago, it was an eloquent ambassador to
- America. But as the years went on and imitations were made in
- many lands, Galbini deemed it wise to set up his own factory in
- <i>our</i> beautiful country. However, the domestic Bel Paese
- and a minute one-pounder called Bel Paesino just didn't have
- that old Alpine zest. They were no better than the German copy
- called Sch&ouml;nland, after the original, or the French Fleur
- des Alpes.</p>
-
- <p>Mel Fino was a blend of Bel Paese and Gorgonzola. It perked
- up the market for a full, fruity cheese with snap. Then Galbini
- hit the jackpot with his Taleggio that fills the need for the
- sharpest, most sophisticated pungence of them all.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Trappist, Port-Salut, or Port du Salut, and Oka</b></p>
-
- <p>In spite of its name Trappist is no rat-trap commoner.
- Always of the elect, and better known as Port-Salut or Port du
- Salut from the original home of the Trappist monks in their
- chief French abbey, it is also set apart from the ordinary
- Canadians under the name of Oka, from the Trappist monastery
- there. It is made by Trappist monks all over the world,
- according to the original secret formula, and by Trappist
- Cistercian monks at the Abbey of Gethsemani Trappist in
- Kentucky.</p>
-
- <p>This is a soft cheese, creamy and of superb flavor. You
- can't go wrong if you look for the monastery name stamped on,
- such as Harz&eacute; in Belgium, Mont-des-Cats in Flanders,
- Sainte Anne d'Auray in Brittany, and so forth.</p>
-
- <p>Last but not least, a commercial Port-Salut entirely without
- benefit of clergy or monastery is made in Milwaukee under the
- Lion Brand. It is one of the finest American cheeses in which
- we have ever sunk a fang.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 37 --><a name="Page_37"
- id="Page_37"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/037.gif"
- width="450"
- height="310"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Four</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>Native Americans</h2>
-
- <p><b>American Cheddars</b></p>
-
- <p>The first American Cheddar was made soon after 1620 around
- Plymouth by Pilgrim fathers who brought along not only cheese
- from the homeland but a live cow to continue the supply. Proof
- of our ability to manufacture Cheddar of our own lies in the
- fact that by 1790 we were exporting it back to England.</p>
-
- <p>It was called Cheddar after the English original named for
- the village of Cheddar near Bristol. More than a century ago it
- made a new name for itself, Herkimer County cheese, from the
- section of New York State where it was first made best.
- Herkimer still equals its several distinguished competitors,
- Coon, Colorado Blackie, California Jack, Pineapple, Sage,
- Vermont Colby and Wisconsin Longhorn.</p>
-
- <p>The English called our imitation Yankee, or American,
- Cheddar, while <!-- Page 38 --><a name="Page_38"
- id="Page_38"></a> here at home it was popularly known as
- yellow or store cheese from its prominent position in every
- country store; also apple-pie cheese because of its affinity
- for the all-American dessert.</p>
-
- <p>The first Cheddar factory was founded by Jesse Williams in
- Rome, New York, just over a century ago and, with Herkimer
- County Cheddar already widely known, this established "New
- York" as the preferred "store-boughten" cheese.</p>
-
- <p>An account of New York's cheese business in the pioneer
- Wooden Nutmeg Era is found in Ernest Elmo Calkins' interesting
- book, <i>They Broke the Prairies</i>. A Yankee named Silvanus
- Ferris, "the most successful dairyman of Herkimer County," in
- the first decades of the 1800's teamed up with Robert Nesbit,
- "the old Quaker Cheese Buyer." They bought from farmers in the
- region and sold in New York City. And "according to the
- business ethics of the times," Nesbit went ahead to cheapen the
- cheese offered by deprecating its quality, hinting at a bad
- market and departing without buying. Later when Ferris arrived
- in a more optimistic mood, offering a slightly better price,
- the seller, unaware they were partners, and ignorant of the
- market price, snapped up the offer.</p>
-
- <p>Similar sharp-trade tactics put too much green cheese on the
- market, so those honestly aged from a minimum of eight months
- up to two years fetched higher prices. They were called "old,"
- such as Old Herkimer, Old Wisconsin Longhorn, and Old
- California Jack.</p>
-
- <p>Although the established Cheddar ages are three, fresh,
- medium-cured, and cured or aged, commercially they are divided
- into two and described as mild and sharp. The most popular are
- named for their states: Colorado, Illinois, Kentucky, New York,
- Ohio, Vermont and Wisconsin. Two New York Staters are called
- and named separately, Coon and Herkimer County. Tillamook goes
- by its own name with no mention of Oregon. Pineapple, Monterey
- Jack and Sage are seldom listed as Cheddars at all, although
- they are basically that.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 39 --><a name="Page_39"
- id="Page_39"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Brick</b></p>
-
- <p>Brick is the one and only cheese for which the whole world
- gives America credit. Runners-up are Liederkranz, which rivals
- say is too close to Limburger, and Pineapple, which is only a
- Cheddar under its crisscrossed, painted and flavored rind. Yet
- Brick is no more distinguished than either of the hundred
- percent Americans, and in our opinion is less worth bragging
- about.</p>
-
- <p>It is a medium-firm, mild-to-strong slicing cheese for
- sandwiches and melting in hot dishes. Its texture is elastic
- but not rubbery, its taste sweetish, and it is full of little
- round holes or eyes. All this has inspired enthusiasts to liken
- it to Emmentaler. The most appropriate name for it has long
- been "married man's Limburger." To make up for the mildness
- caraway seed is sometimes added.</p>
-
- <p>About Civil War time, John Jossi, a dairyman of Dodge
- County, Wisconsin, came up with this novelty, a rennet cheese
- made of whole cow's milk. The curd is cut like Cheddar, heated,
- stirred and cooked firm to put in a brick-shaped box without a
- bottom and with slits in the sides to drain. When this is set
- on the draining table a couple of bricks are also laid on the
- cooked curd for pressure. It is this double use of bricks, for
- shaping and for pressing, that has led to the confusion about
- which came first in originating the name.</p>
-
- <p>The formed "bricks" of cheese are rubbed with salt for three
- days and they ripen slowly, taking up to two months.</p>
-
- <p>We eat several million pounds a year and 95 percent of that
- comes from Wisconsin, with a trickle from New York.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Colorado Blackie Cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>A subtly different American Cheddar is putting Colorado on
- our cheese map. It is called Blackie from the black-waxed rind
- and it resembles Vermont State cheese, although it is flatter.
- This <!-- Page 40 --><a name="Page_40"
- id="Page_40"></a>is a proud new American product, proving
- that although Papa Cheddar was born in England his American
- kinfolk have developed independent and valuable characters
- all on their own.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Coon Cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>Coon cheese is full of flavor from being aged on shelves at
- a higher temperature than cold storage. Its rind is darker from
- the growth of mold and this shade is sometimes painted on more
- ordinary Cheddars to make them look like Coon, which always
- brings a 10 percent premium above the general run.</p>
-
- <p>Made at Lowville, New York, it has received high praise from
- a host of admirers, among them the French cook, Clementine, in
- Phineas Beck's <i>Kitchen</i>, who raised it to the par of
- French immortals by calling it Fromage de Coon. Clementine used
- it "with scintillating success in countless French recipes
- which ended with the words <i>gratiner au four et servir tres
- chaud</i>. She made <i>baguettes</i> of it by soaking sticks
- three-eights-inch square and one and a half inches long in
- lukewarm milk, rolling them in flour, beaten egg and bread
- crumbs and browning them instantaneously in boiling oil."</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Herkimer County Cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>The standard method for making American Cheddar was
- established in Herkimer County, New York, in 1841 and has been
- rigidly maintained down to this day. Made with rennet and a
- bacterial "starter," the curd is cut and pressed to squeeze out
- all of the whey and then aged in cylindrical forms for a year
- or more.</p>
-
- <p>Herkimer leads the whole breed by being flaky, brittle,
- sharp and nutty, with a crumb that will crumble, and a soft,
- mouth-watering pale orange color when it is properly aged.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 41 --><a name="Page_41"
- id="Page_41"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Isigny</b></p>
-
- <p>Isigny is a native American cheese that came a cropper. It
- seems to be extinct now, and perhaps that is all to the good,
- for it never meant to be anything more than another Camembert,
- of which we have plenty of imitation.</p>
-
- <p>Not long after the Civil War the attempt was made to perfect
- Isigny. The curd was carefully prepared according to an
- original formula, washed and rubbed and set aside to come of
- age. But when it did, alas, it was more like Limburger than
- Camembert, and since good domestic Limburger was then a dime a
- pound, obviously it wouldn't pay off. Yet in shape the newborn
- resembled Camembert, although it was much larger. So they cut
- it down and named it after the delicate French Creme
- d'lsigny.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Jack, California Jack and Monterey Jack</b></p>
-
- <p>Jack was first known as Monterey cheese from the California
- county where it originated. Then it was called Jack for short,
- and only now takes its full name after sixty years of
- popularity on the West Coast. Because it is little known in the
- East and has to be shipped so far, it commands the top Cheddar
- price.</p>
-
- <p>Monterey Jack is a stirred curd Cheddar without any annatto
- coloring. It is sweeter than most and milder when young, but it
- gets sharper with age and more expensive because of storage
- costs.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Liederkranz</b></p>
-
- <p>No native American cheese has been so widely ballyhooed, and
- so deservedly, as Liederkranz, which translates "Wreath of
- Song."</p>
-
- <p>Back in the gay, inventive nineties, Emil Frey, a young
- delicatessen <!-- Page 42 --><a name="Page_42"
- id="Page_42"></a> keeper in New York, tried to please some
- bereft customers by making an imitation of Bismarck
- Schlossk&auml;se. This was imperative because the imported
- German cheese didn't stand up during the long sea trip and
- Emil's customers, mostly members of the famous Liederkranz
- singing society, didn't feel like singing without it. But
- Emil's attempts at imitation only added indigestion to their
- dejection, until one day&mdash;<i>fabelhaft!</i> One of
- those cheese dream castles in Spain came true. He turned out
- a tawny, altogether golden, tangy and mellow little marvel
- that actually was an improvement on Bismarck's old
- Schlossk&auml;se. Better than Brick, it was a deodorized
- Limburger, both a man's cheese and one that cheese-conscious
- women adored.</p>
-
- <p>Emil named it "Wreath of Song" for the Liederkranz
- customers. It soon became as internationally known as tabasco
- from Texas or Parisian Camembert which it slightly resembles.
- Borden's bought out Frey in 1929 and they enjoy telling the
- story of a G.I. who, to celebrate V-E Day in Paris, sent to his
- family in Indiana, only a few miles from the factory at Van
- Wert, Ohio, a whole case of what he had learned was "the finest
- cheese France could make." And when the family opened it, there
- was Liederkranz.</p>
-
- <p>Another deserved distinction is that of being sandwiched in
- between two foreign immortals in the following recipe:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Schnitzelbank Pot</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 ripe Camembert cheese<br />
- 1 Liederkranz<br />
- &#8539; pound imported Roquefort<br />
- &frac14; pound butter<br />
- 1 tablespoon flour<br />
- 1 cup cream<br />
- &frac12; cup finely chopped olives<br />
- &frac14; cup canned pimiento<br />
- A sprinkling of cayenne</p>
-
- <p>Depending on whether or not you like the edible rind of
- Camembert and Liederkranz, you can leave it on, scrape any
- thick part off, or remove it all. Mash the soft creams
- together with the Roquefort, butter and flour, using a
- silver fork. Put the mix into
- <!-- Page 43 --><a name="Page_43"
- id="Page_43"></a> an enameled pan, for anything with a
- metal surface will turn the cheese black in cooking.</p>
-
- <p>Stir in the cream and keep stirring until you have a
- smooth, creamy sauce. Strain through sieve or cheesecloth,
- and mix in the olives and pimiento thoroughly. Sprinkle
- well with cayenne and put into a pot to mellow for a few
- days, or much longer.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The name <i>Schnitzelbank</i> comes from "school bench," a
- game. This snappy-sweet pot is specially suited to a beer party
- and stein songs. It is also the affinity-spread with rye and
- pumpernickel, and may be served in small sandwiches or on
- crackers, celery and such, to make appetizing tidbits for
- cocktails, tea, or cider.</p>
-
- <p>Like the trinity of cheeses that make it, the mixture is
- eaten best at room temperature, when its flavor is fullest. If
- kept in the refrigerator, it should be taken out a couple of
- hours before serving. Since it is a natural cheese mixture,
- which has gone through no process or doping with preservative,
- it will not keep more than two weeks. This mellow-sharp mix is
- the sort of ideal the factory processors shoot at with their
- olive-pimiento abominations. Once you've potted your own,
- you'll find it gives the same thrill as garnishing your own
- Liptauer.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Minnesota Blue</b></p>
-
- <p>The discovery of sandstone caves in the bluffs along the
- Mississippi, in and near the Twin Cities of Minnesota, has
- established a distinctive type of Blue cheese named for the
- state. Although the Roquefort process of France is followed and
- the cheese is inoculated in the same way by mold from bread, it
- can never equal the genuine imported, marked with its red-sheep
- brand, because the milk used in Minnesota Blue is cow's milk,
- and the caves are sandstone instead of limestone. Yet this is
- an excellent, Blue cheese in its own right.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 44 --><a name="Page_44"
- id="Page_44"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Pineapple</b></p>
-
- <p>Pineapple cheese is named after its shape rather than its
- flavor, although there are rumors that some pineapple flavor is
- noticeable near the oiled rind. This flavor does not penetrate
- through to the Cheddar center. Many makers of processed cheese
- have tampered with the original, so today you can't be sure of
- anything except getting a smaller size every year or two, at a
- higher price. Originally six pounds, the Pineapple has shrunk
- to nearly six ounces. The proper bright-orange, oiled and
- shellacked surface is more apt to be a sickly lemon.</p>
-
- <p>Always an ornamental cheese, it once stood in state on the
- side-board under a silver bell also made to represent a
- pineapple. You cut a top slice off the cheese, just as you
- would off the fruit, and there was a rose-colored,
- fine-tasting, mellow-hard cheese to spoon out with a special
- silver cheese spoon or scoop. Between meals the silver top was
- put on the silver holder and the oiled and shellacked rind kept
- the cheese moist. Even when the Pineapple was eaten down to the
- rind the shell served as a dunking bowl to fill with some
- salubrious cold Fondue or salad.</p>
-
- <p>Made in the same manner as Cheddar with the curd cooked
- harder, Pineapple's distinction lies in being hung in a net
- that makes diamond-shaped corrugations on the surface,
- simulating the sections of the fruit. It is a pioneer American
- product with almost a century and a half of service since Lewis
- M. Norton conceived it in 1808 in Litchfield County,
- Connecticut. There in 1845 he built a factory and made a
- deserved fortune out of his decorative ingenuity with what
- before had been plain, unromantic yellow or store cheese.</p>
-
- <p>Perhaps his inspiration came from cone-shaped Cheshire in
- old England, also called Pineapple cheese, combined with the
- hanging up of Provolones in Italy that leaves the looser
- pattern of the four sustaining strings.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 45 --><a name="Page_45"
- id="Page_45"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Sage, Vermont Sage and Vermont State</b></p>
-
- <p>The story of Sage cheese, or green cheese as it was called
- originally, shows the several phases most cheeses have gone
- through, from their simple, honest beginnings to
- commercialization, and sometimes back to the real thing.</p>
-
- <p>The English <i>Encyclopedia of Practical Cookery</i> has an
- early Sage recipe:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This is a species of cream cheese made by adding sage
- leaves and greening to the milk. A very good receipt for it
- is given thus: Bruise the tops of fresh young red sage
- leaves with an equal quantity of spinach leaves and squeeze
- out the juice. Add this to the extract of rennet and stir
- into the milk as much as your taste may deem sufficient.
- Break the curd when it comes, salt it, fill the vat high
- with it, press for a few hours, and then turn the cheese
- every day.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><i>Fancy Cheese in America, lay</i> Charles A. Publow,
- records the commercialization of the cheese mentioned above, a
- century or two later, in 1910:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Sage cheese is another modified form of the Cheddar
- variety. Its distinguishing features are a mottled green
- color and a sage flavor. The usual method of manufacture is
- as follows: One-third of the total amount of milk is placed
- in a vat by itself and colored green by the addition of
- eight to twelve ounces of commercial sage color to each
- 1,000 pounds of milk. If green corn leaves (unavailable in
- England) or other substances are used for coloring, the
- amounts will vary accordingly. The milk is then made up by
- the regular Cheddar method, as is also the remaining
- two-thirds, in a separate vat. At the time of removing the
- whey the green and white curds are mixed. Some prefer,
- however, to mix the curds at the time of milling, as a more
- distinct color is secured. After milling, the sage extract
- flavoring is sprayed over the curd with an atomizer. The
- curd is then <!-- Page 46 --><a name="Page_46"
- id="Page_46"></a>salted and pressed into the regular
- Cheddar shapes and sizes.</p>
-
- <p>A very satisfactory Sage cheese is made at the New York
- State College of Agriculture by simply dropping green
- coloring, made from the leaves of corn and spinach, upon
- the curd, after milling. An even green mottling is thus
- easily secured without additional labor. Sage flavoring
- extract is sprayed over the curd by an atomizer. One-half
- ounce of flavoring is usually sufficient for a hundred
- pounds of curd and can be secured from dairy supply
- houses.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>A modern cheese authority reported on the current (1953)
- method:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Instead of sage leaves, or tea prepared from them, at
- present the cheese is flavored with oil of Dalmatian wild
- sage because it has the sharpest flavor. This piny oil,
- thujone, is diluted with water, 250 parts to one, and
- either added to the milk or sprayed over the curds,
- one-eighth ounce for 500 quarts of milk.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>In scouting around for a possible maker of the real thing
- today, we wrote to Vrest Orton of Vermont, and got this
- reply:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Sage cheese is one of the really indigenous and best
- native Vermont products. So far as I know, there is only
- one factory making it and that is my friend, George
- Crowley's. He makes a limited amount for my Vermont Country
- Store. It is the fine old-time full cream cheese, flavored
- with real sage.</p>
-
- <p>On this hangs a tale. Some years ago I couldn't get
- enough sage cheese (we never can) so I asked a Wisconsin
- cheesemaker if he would make some. Said he would but
- couldn't at that time&mdash;because the alfalfa wasn't
- ripe. I said, "What in hell has alfalfa got to do with sage
- cheese?" He said, "Well, we flavor the sage cheese with a
- synthetic sage flavor and then throw in some pieces of
- chopped-up alfalfa to make it look green."</p>
-
- <p>So I said to hell with that and the next time I saw
- George Crowley I told him the story and George said, "We
- don't use synthetic flavor, alfalfa or anything like
- that."</p>
-
- <p>"<!-- Page 47 --><a name="Page_47"
- id="Page_47"></a> Then what do you use, George?" I
- inquired.</p>
-
- <p>"We use real sage."</p>
-
- <p>"Why?"</p>
-
- <p>"Well, because it's cheaper than that synthetic
- stuff."</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The genuine Vermont Sage arrived. Here are our notes on
- it:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Oh, wilderness were Paradise enow! My taste buds come to
- full flower with the Sage. There's a slight burned savor
- recalling smoked cheese, although not related in any way.
- Mildly resinous like that Near East one packed in pine,
- suggesting the well-saged dressing of a turkey. A round
- mouthful of luscious mellowness, with a bouquet&mdash;a
- snapping reminder to the nose. And there's just a
- soup&ccedil;on of new-mown hay above the green freckles of
- herb to delight the eye and set the fancy free. So this is
- the <i>v&eacute;ritable vert</i>, green cheese&mdash;the
- moon is made of it! <i>Vert v&eacute;ritable.</i> A general
- favorite with everybody who ever tasted it, for generations
- of lusty crumblers.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Old-Fashioned Vermont State Store Cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>We received from savant Vrest Orton another letter, together
- with some Vermont store cheese and some crackers.</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This cheese is our regular old-fashioned store
- cheese&mdash;it's been in old country stores for
- generations and we have been pioneers in spreading the word
- about it. It is, of course, a natural aged cheese, no
- processing, no fussing, no fooling with it. It's made the
- same way it was back in 1870, by the old-time Colby method
- which makes a cheese which is not so dry as Cheddar and
- also has holes in it, something like Swiss. Also, it ages
- faster.</p>
-
- <p>Did you know that during the last part of the nineteenth
- century and part of the twentieth, Vermont was the leading
- cheesemaking state in the Union? When I was a lad, every
- town in Vermont had one or more cheese factories. Now there
- are only two left&mdash;not counting any that make process.
- Process isn't cheese!</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 48 --><a name="Page_48"
- id="Page_48"></a> The crackers are the old-time store
- cracker&mdash;every Vermonter used to buy a big barrel
- once a year to set in the buttery and eat. A classic
- dish is crackers, broken up in a bowl of cold milk, with
- a hunk of Vermont cheese like this on the side. Grand
- snack, grand midnight supper, grand anything. These
- crackers are not sweet, not salt, and as such make a
- good base for anything&mdash;swell with clam chowder,
- also with toasted cheese....</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Tillamook</b></p>
-
- <p>It takes two pocket-sized, but thick, yellow volumes to
- record the story of Oregon's great Tillamook. <i>The Cheddar
- Box</i>, by Dean Collins, comes neatly boxed and bound in
- golden cloth stamped with a purple title, like the rind of a
- real Tillamook. Volume I is entitled <i>Cheese Cheddar</i>, and
- Volume II is a two-pound Cheddar cheese labeled Tillamook and
- molded to fit inside its book jacket. We borrowed Volume I from
- a noted <i>litt&eacute;rateur</i>, and never could get him to
- come across with Volume II. We guessed its fate, however, from
- a note on the flyleaf of the only tome available: "This is an
- excellent cheese, full cream and medium sharp, and a unique set
- of books in which Volume II suggests Bacon's: 'Some books are
- to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed
- and digested.'"</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p><b>Wisconsin Longhorn</b></p>
-
- <p>Since we began this chapter with all-American Cheddars, it
- is only fitting to end with Wisconsin Longhorn, a sort of
- national standard, even though it's not nearly so fancy or
- high-priced as some of the regional natives that can't approach
- its enormous output. It's one of those all-purpose round
- cheeses that even taste round in your mouth. We are specially
- partial to it.</p>
-
- <p>Most Cheddars are named after their states. Yet, putting all
- of <!-- Page 49 --><a name="Page_49"
- id="Page_49"></a>these thirty-seven states together, they
- produce only about half as much as Wisconsin alone.</p>
-
- <p>Besides Longhorn, in Wisconsin there are a dozen regional
- competitors ranging from White Twin Cheddar, to which no
- annatto coloring has been added, through Green Bay cheese to
- Wisconsin Redskin and Martha Washington Aged, proudly set forth
- by P.H. Kasper of Bear Creek, who is said to have "won more
- prizes in forty years than any ten cheesemakers put
- together."</p>
-
- <p>To help guarantee a market for all this excellent apple-pie
- cheese, the Wisconsin State Legislature made a law about it,
- recognizing the truth of Eugene Field's jingle:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Apple pie without cheese<br /></span> <span>Is
- like a kiss without a squeeze.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>Small matter in the Badger State when the affinity is made
- legal and the couple lawfully wedded in Statute No. 160,065.
- It's still in force:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><i>Butter and cheese to be served.</i> Every person,
- firm or corporation duly licensed to operate a hotel or
- restaurant shall serve with each meal for which a charge of
- twenty-five cents or more is made, at least two-thirds of
- an ounce of Wisconsin butter and two-thirds of an ounce of
- Wisconsin cheese.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Besides Longhorn, Wisconsin leads in Limburger. It produces
- so much Swiss that the state is sometimes called
- Swissconsin.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 50 --><a name="Page_50"
- id="Page_50"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/050.gif"
- width="340"
- height="350"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Five</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>Sixty-five Sizzling Rabbits</h2>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>That nice little smoky room at the "Salutation," which
- is even now continually presenting itself to my
- recollection, with all its associated train of pipes,
- egg-hot, welsh-rabbits, metaphysics and poetry.</p>
-
- <p class="author">Charles Lamb,<br />
- IN A LETTER TO COLERIDGE</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Unlike the beginning of the classical Jugged Hare recipe:
- "First catch your hare!" we modern Rabbit-hunters start off
- with "First catch your Cheddar!" And some of us go so far as to
- smuggle in formerly forbidden <i>fromages</i> such as
- Gruy&egrave;re, Neufch&acirc;tel, Parmesan, and mixtures
- thereof. We run the gamut <!-- Page 51 --><a name="Page_51"
- id="Page_51"></a> of personal preferences in selecting the
- Rabbit cheese itself, from old-time American, yellow or
- store cheese, to Coon and Canadian-smoked, though all of it
- is still Cheddar, no matter how you slice it.</p>
-
- <p>Then, too, guests are made to run the gauntlet of
- all-American trimmings from pin-money pickles to peanut butter,
- succotash and maybe marshmallows; we add mustard, chill, curry,
- tabasco and sundry bottled red devils from the grocery store,
- to add pep and piquance to the traditional cayenne and black
- pepper. This results in Rabbits that are out of focus, out of
- order and out of this world.</p>
-
- <p>Among modern sins of omission, the Worcestershire sauce is
- left out by braggarts who aver that they can take it or leave
- it. And, in these degenerate days, when it comes to
- substitutions for the original beer or stale pale ale, we find
- the gratings of great Cheddars wet down with mere California
- sherry or even ginger ale&mdash;yet so far, thank goodness, no
- Cokes. And there's tomato juice out of a can into the Rum Turn
- Tiddy, and sometimes celery soup in place of milk or cream.</p>
-
- <p>In view of all this, we can only look to the standard
- cookbooks for salvation. These are mostly compiled by women,
- our thoughtful mothers, wives and sweethearts who have saved
- the twin Basic Rabbits for us. If it weren't for these Fanny
- Farmers, the making of a real aboriginal Welsh Rabbit would be
- a lost art&mdash;lost in sporting male attempts to improve upon
- the original.</p>
-
- <p>The girls are still polite about the whole thing and
- protectively pervert the original spelling of "Rabbit" to
- "Rarebit" in their culinary guides. We have heard that once a
- club of ladies in high society tried to high-pressure the
- publishers of Mr. Webster's dictionary to change the old
- spelling in their favor. Yet there is a lot to be said for this
- more genteel and appetizing rendering of the word, for the
- Welsh masterpiece is, after all, a very rare bit of
- cheesemongery, male or female.</p>
-
- <p>Yet in dealing with "Rarebits" the distaff side seldom sets
- down more than the basic Adam and Eve in a whole Paradise of
- Rabbits: No. 1, <!-- Page 52 --><a name="Page_52"
- id="Page_52"></a> the wild male type made with beer, and No.
- 2, the mild female made with milk. Yet now that the chafing
- dish has come back to stay, there's a flurry in the Rabbit
- warren and the new cooking encyclopedias give up to a dozen
- variants. Actually there are easily half a gross of valid
- ones in current esteem.</p>
-
- <p>The two basic recipes are differentiated by the liquid
- ingredient, but both the beer and the milk are used only one
- way&mdash;warm, or anyway at room temperature. And again for
- the two, there is but one traditional cheese&mdash;Cheddar,
- ripe, old or merely aged from six months onward. This is also
- called American, store, sharp, Rabbit, yellow, beer, Wisconsin
- Longhorn, mouse, and even rat.</p>
-
- <p>The seasoned, sapid Cheddar-type, so indispensable, includes
- dozens of varieties under different names, regional or
- commercial. These are easily identified as
- sisters-under-the-rinds by all five senses:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><b>sight:</b> Golden yellow and mellow to the eye. It's
- one of those round cheeses that also tastes round in the
- mouth.</p>
-
- <p><b>hearing:</b> By thumping, a cheese-fancier, like a
- melon-picker, can tell if a Cheddar is rich, ripe and ready
- for the Rabbit. When you hear your dealer say, "It's six
- months old or more," enough said.</p>
-
- <p><b>smell:</b> A scent as fresh as that of the daisies
- and herbs the mother milk cow munched "will hang round it
- still." Also a slight beery savor.</p>
-
- <p><b>touch:</b> Crumbly&mdash;a caress to the fingers.</p>
-
- <p><b>taste:</b> The quintessence of this fivefold test.
- Just cuddle a crumb with your tongue and if it tickles the
- taste buds it's prime. When it melts in your mouth, that's
- proof it will melt in the pan.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Beyond all this (and in spite of the school that plumps for
- the No. 2 temperance alternative) we must point out that beer
- has a <!-- Page 53 --><a name="Page_53"
- id="Page_53"></a>special affinity for Cheddar. The French
- have clearly established this in their names for Welsh
- Rabbit, <i>Fromage Fondue &agrave; la Bi&egrave;re</i> and
- <i>Fondue &agrave; l'Anglaise</i>.</p>
-
- <p>To prepare such a cheese for the pan, each Rabbit hound may
- have a preference all his own, for here the question comes up
- of how it melts best. Do you shave, slice, dice, shred, mince,
- chop, cut, scrape or crumble it in the fingers? This will vary
- according to one's temperament and the condition of the cheese.
- Generally, for best results it is coarsely grated. When it
- comes to making all this into a rare bit of Rabbit there
- is:</p>
-
- <p><b>The One and Only Method</b></p>
-
- <p>Use a double boiler, or preferably a chafing dish, avoiding
- aluminum and other soft metals. Heat the upper pan by simmering
- water in the lower one, but don't let the water boil up or
- touch the top pan.</p>
-
- <p>Most, but not all, Rabbits are begun by heating a bit of
- butter or margarine in the pan in which one cup of roughly
- grated cheese, usually sharp Cheddar, is melted and mixed with
- one-half cup of liquid, added gradually. (The butter isn't
- necessary for a cheese that should melt by itself.)</p>
-
- <p>The two principal ingredients are melted smoothly together
- and kept from curdling by stirring steadily in one direction
- only, over an even heat. The spoon used should be of hard wood,
- sterling silver or porcelain. Never use tin, aluminum or soft
- metal&mdash;the taste may come off to taint the job.</p>
-
- <p>Be sure the liquid is at room temperature, or warmer, and
- add it gradually, without interrupting the stirring. Do not let
- it come to the bubbling point, and never let it boil.</p>
-
- <p>Add seasonings only when the cheese is melted, which will
- take two or three minutes. Then continue to stir in the same
- direction without an instant's letup, for maybe ten minutes or
- more, until the Rabbit is smooth. The consistency and velvety
- <!-- Page 54 --><a name="Page_54"
- id="Page_54"></a>smoothness depend a good deal on whether or
- not an egg, or a beaten yolk, is added.</p>
-
- <p>The hotter the Rabbit is served, the better. You can sizzle
- the top with a salamander or other branding iron, but in any
- case set it forth as nearly sizzling as possible, on toast
- hellishly hot, whether it's browned or buttered on one side or
- both.</p>
-
- <p>Give a thought to the sad case of the "little dog whose name
- was Rover, and when he was dead he was dead all over."
- Something very similar happens with a Rabbit that's allowed to
- cool down&mdash;when it's cold it's cold all over, and you
- can't resuscitate it by heating.</p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- BASIC WELSH RABBIT
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>No. 1 (with beer)</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 3 cups grated old Cheddar<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon English dry mustard<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- A dash of cayenne<br />
- 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce<br />
- 2 egg yolks, lightly beaten with<br />
- &frac12; cup light beer or ale<br />
- 4 slices hot buttered toast</p>
-
- <p>Over boiling water melt butter and cheese together,
- stirring steadily with a wooden (or other tasteless) spoon
- in one direction only. Add seasonings and do not interrupt
- your rhythmic stirring, as you pour in a bit at a time of
- the beer-and-egg mixture until it's all used up.</p>
-
- <p>It may take many minutes of constant stirring to achieve
- the essential creamy thickness and then some more to slick
- it out as smooth as velvet.</p>
-
- <p>Keep it piping hot but don't let it bubble, for a boiled
- Rabbit is a spoiled Rabbit. Only unremitting stirring (and
- the best of cheese) will keep it from curdling, getting
- stringy or rubbery. <!-- Page 55 --><a name="Page_55"
- id="Page_55"></a> Pour the Rabbit generously over crisp,
- freshly buttered toast and serve instantly on hot
- plates.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Usually crusts are cut off the bread before toasting, and
- some aesthetes toast one side only, spreading the toasted side
- with cold butter for taste contrast. Lay the toast on the hot
- plate, buttered side down, and pour the Rabbit over the porous
- untoasted side so it can soak in. (This is recommended in Lady
- Llanover's recipe, which appears on page 52 of this book.)</p>
-
- <p>Although the original bread for Rabbit toast was white,
- there is now no limit in choice among whole wheat, graham,
- rolls, muffins, buns, croutons and crackers, to infinity.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>No. 2 (with milk)</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>For a rich milk Rabbit use &frac12; cup thin cream,
- evaporated milk,<br />
- whole milk or buttermilk, instead of beer as in No. 1.
- Then, to<br />
- keep everything bland, cut down the mustard by half or
- leave<br />
- it out, and use paprika in place of cayenne. As in No. 1,
- the<br />
- use of Worcestershire sauce is optional, although our
- feeling is<br />
- that any spirited Rabbit would resent its being left
- out.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Either of these basic recipes can be made without eggs, and
- more cheaply, although the beaten egg is a guarantee against
- stringiness. When the egg is missing, we are sad to record that
- a teaspoon or so of cornstarch generally takes its place.</p>
-
- <p>Rabbiteers are of two minds about fast and slow heating and
- stirring, so you'll have to adjust that to your own experience
- and rhythm. As a rule, the heat is reduced when the cheese is
- almost melted, and speed of stirring slows when the eggs and
- last ingredients go in.</p>
-
- <p>Many moderns who have found that monosodium glutamate steps
- up the flavor of natural cheese, put it in at the start, using
- one-half teaspoon for each cup of grated Cheddar. When it comes
- to pepper you are fancy-free. As both black and white
- <!-- Page 56 --><a name="Page_56"
- id="Page_56"></a>pepper are now held in almost equal esteem,
- you might equip your hutch with twin hand-mills to do the
- grinding fresh, for this is always worth the trouble.
- Tabasco sauce is little used and needs a cautious hand, but
- some addicts can't leave it out any more than they can swear
- off the Worcestershire.</p>
-
- <p>The school that plumps for malty Rabbits and the other that
- goes for milky ones are equally emphatic in their choice. So
- let us consider the compromise of our old friend Frederick
- Philip Stieff, the Baltimore <i>homme de bouche</i>, as he set
- it forth for us years ago in <i>10,000 Snacks</i>: "The idea of
- cooking a Rabbit with beer is an exploded and dangerous theory.
- Tap your keg or open your case of ale or beer and serve
- <i>with</i>, not in your Rabbit."</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>The Stieff
- Recipe</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; BASIC MILK RABBIT</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>(<i>completely surrounded by a lake of malt
- beverages</i>)</p>
-
- <p>2 cups grated sharp cheese<br />
- 3 heaping tablespoons butter<br />
- 1&frac12; cups milk<br />
- 4 eggs<br />
- 1 heaping tablespoon mustard<br />
- 2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce<br />
- Pepper, salt and paprika to taste&mdash;then add more of
- each.</p>
-
- <p>Grease well with butter the interior of your double
- boiler so that no hard particles of cheese will form in the
- mixture later and contribute undesirable lumps.</p>
-
- <p>Put cheese, well-grated, into the double boiler and add
- butter and milk. From this point vigorous stirring should
- be indulged in until Rabbit is ready for serving.</p>
-
- <p>Prepare a mixture of Worcestershire sauce, mustard,
- pepper, salt and paprika. These should be beaten until
- light and then slowly poured into the double boiler.
- Nothing now remains to be done except to stir and cook down
- to proper consistency over a fairly slow flame. The finale
- has not arrived until you can drip the rabbit from the
- spoon and spell the word <i>finis</i> on the surface.
- <!-- Page 57 --><a name="Page_57"
- id="Page_57"></a> Pour over two pieces of toast per
- plate and send anyone home who does not attack it at
- once.</p>
-
- <p>This is sufficient for six gourmets or four
- gourmands.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><i>Nota bene</i>: A Welsh Rabbit, to be a success, should
- never be of the consistency whereby it may be used to tie up
- bundles, nor yet should it bounce if inadvertently dropped on
- the kitchen floor.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Lady Llanover's Toasted Welsh
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Cut a slice of the real Welsh cheese made of sheep's and
- cow's milk; toast it at the fire on both sides, but not so
- much as to drop (melt). Toast on one side a piece of bread
- less than &frac14; inch thick, to be quite crisp, and
- spread it very thinly with fresh, cold butter on the
- toasted side. (It must not be saturated.) Lay the toasted
- cheese upon the untoasted bread side and serve immediately
- on a very hot plate. The butter on the toast can, of
- course, be omitted. (It is more frequently eaten without
- butter.)</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>From this original toasting of the cheese many Englishmen
- still call Welsh Rabbit "Toasted Cheese," but Lady Llanover
- goes on to point out that the Toasted Rabbit of her Wales and
- the Melted or Stewed Buck Rabbit of England (which has become
- our American standard) are as different in the making as the
- regional cheeses used in them, and she says that while doctors
- prescribed the toasted Welsh as salubrious for invalids, the
- stewed cheese of Olde England was "only adapted to strong
- digestions."</p>
-
- <p>English literature rings with praise for the toasted cheese
- of Wales and England. There is Christopher North's eloquent
- "threads of unbeaten gold, shining like gossamer filaments
- (that may be pulled from its tough and tenacious
- substance)."</p>
-
- <p>Yet not all of the references are complimentary.</p>
-
- <p>Thus Shakespeare in <i>King Lear</i>:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <!-- Page 58 --><a name="Page_58"
- id="Page_58"></a> <span>Look, look a
- mouse!<br /></span> <span>Peace, peace;&mdash;this
- piece of toasted cheese will do it.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>And Sydney Smith's:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Old friendships are destroyed by toasted cheese, and
- hard salted meat has led to suicide.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>But Rhys Davis in <i>My Wales</i> makes up for such
- rudenesses:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><i>The Welsh Enter Heaven</i></p>
-
- <p>The Lord had been complaining to St. Peter of the dearth
- of good singers in Heaven. "Yet," He said testily, "I hear
- excellent singing outside the walls. Why are not those
- singers here with me?"</p>
-
- <p>St. Peter said, "They are the Welsh. They refuse to come
- in; they say they are happy enough outside, playing with a
- ball and boxing and singing such songs as '<i>Suspan
- Fach</i>'"</p>
-
- <p>The Lord said, "I wish them to come in here to sing Bach
- and Mendelssohn. See that they are in before sundown."</p>
-
- <p>St. Peter went to the Welsh and gave them the commands
- of the Lord. But still they shook their heads. Harassed,
- St. Peter went to consult with St. David, who, with a
- smile, was reading the works of Caradoc Evans.</p>
-
- <p>St. David said, "Try toasted cheese. Build a fire just
- inside the gates and get a few angels to toast cheese in
- front of it" This St. Peter did. The heavenly aroma of the
- sizzling, browning cheese was wafted over the walls and,
- with loud shouts, a great concourse of the Welsh came
- sprinting in. When sufficient were inside to make up a male
- voice choir of a hundred, St Peter slammed the gates.
- However, it is said that these are the only Welsh in
- Heaven.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>And, lest we forget, the wonderful drink that made Alice
- grow and grow to the ceiling of Wonderland contained not only
- strawberry jam but toasted cheese.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 59 --><a name="Page_59"
- id="Page_59"></a> Then there's the frightening nursery
- rhyme:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>The Irishman loved usquebaugh,<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">The Scot loved ale called
- Bluecap.<br /></span> <span>The Welshman, he loved
- toasted cheese,<br /></span> <span class="i2">And made
- his mouth like a mousetrap.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>The Irishman was drowned in
- usquebaugh,<br /></span> <span class="i2">The Scot was
- drowned in ale,<br /></span> <span>The Welshman he near
- swallowed a mouse<br /></span> <span class="i2">But he
- pulled it out by the tail.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>And, perhaps worst of all, Shakespeare, no cheese-lover,
- this tune in <i>Merry Wives of Windsor</i>:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>'Tis time I were choked by a bit of toasted
- cheese.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>An elaboration of the simple Welsh original went English
- with Dr. William Maginn, the London journalist whose facile pen
- enlivened the <i>Blackwoods Magazine</i> era with <i>Ten
- Tales</i>:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Dr. Maginn's Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Much is to be said in favor of toasted cheese for
- supper. It is the cant to say that Welsh rabbit is heavy
- eating. I like it best in the genuine Welsh way,
- however&mdash;that is, the toasted bread buttered on both
- sides profusely, then a layer of cold roast beef with
- mustard and horseradish, and then, on the top of all, the
- superstratum, of Cheshire <i>thoroughly</i> saturated,
- while, in the process of toasting, with genuine porter,
- black pepper, and shallot vinegar. I peril myself upon the
- assertion that this is not a heavy supper for a man who has
- been busy all day till dinner in reading, writing, walking
- or riding&mdash;who has occupied himself between dinner and
- supper in the discussion of a bottle or two of sound wine,
- or any equivalent&mdash;and who proposes to swallow at
- least three tumblers of something hot ere he resigns
- himself to the embrace of Somnus. With these provisos, I
- recommend toasted cheese for supper.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 60 --><a name="Page_60"
- id="Page_60"></a> The popularity of this has come down to us
- in the succinct summing-up, "Toasted cheese hath no
- master."</p>
-
- <p>The Welsh original became simple after Dr. Maginn's supper
- sandwich was served, a century and a half ago; for it was
- served as a savory to sum up and help digest a dinner, in this
- form:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>After-Dinner Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Remove all crusts from bread slices, toast on both sides
- and soak to saturation in hot beer. Melt thin slices of
- sharp old cheese in butter in an iron skillet, with an
- added spot of beer and dry English mustard. Stir steadily
- with a wooden spoon and, when velvety, serve a-sizzle on
- piping hot beer-soaked toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>While toasted cheese undoubtedly was the Number One dairy
- dish of Anglo-Saxons, stewed cheese came along to rival it in
- Elizabethan London. This sophisticated, big-city dish, also
- called a Buck Rabbit, was the making of Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese
- on Fleet Street, where Dr. Johnson later presided. And it must
- have been the pick of the town back in the days when barrooms
- still had sawdust on the floor, for the learned Doctor endorsed
- old Omar Khayyam's love of the pub with: "There is nothing
- which has been contrived by man by which so much happiness is
- produced as by a good tavern." Yet he was no gourmet, as may be
- judged by his likening of a succulent, golden-fried oyster to
- "a baby's ear dropped in sawdust."</p>
-
- <p>Perhaps it is just as well that no description of the
- world's first Golden Buck has come down from him. But we don't
- have to look far for on-the-spot pen pictures by other men of
- letters at "The Cheese," as it was affectionately called. To a
- man they sang praises for that piping hot dish of preserved and
- beatified milk.</p>
-
- <p>Inspired by stewed cheese, Mark Lemon, the leading rhymester
- of <i>Punch</i>, wrote the following poem and dedicated it to
- the memory of Lovelace:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <!-- Page 61 --><a name="Page_61"
- id="Page_61"></a> <span>Champagne will not a
- dinner make,<br /></span> <span class="i2">Nor
- caviar a meal<br /></span> <span>Men gluttonous
- and rich may take<br /></span>
- <span class="i2">Those till they make them
- ill<br /></span> <span class="i4">If I've potatoes
- to my chop,<br /></span> <span class="i4">And
- after chop have cheese,<br /></span>
- <span class="i4">Angels in Pond and Spiers's
- shop<br /></span> <span class="i4">Know no such
- luxuries.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>All that's necessary is an old-time "cheese stewer" or a
- reasonable substitute. The base of this is what was once
- quaintly called a "hot-water bath." This was a sort of
- miniature wash boiler just big enough to fit in snugly half a
- dozen individual tins, made squarish and standing high enough
- above the bath water to keep any of it from getting into the
- stew. In these tins the cheese is melted. But since such a
- tinsmith's contraption is hard to come by in these days of
- fireproof cooking glass, we suggest muffin tins, ramekins or
- even small cups to crowd into the bottom of your double boiler
- or chafing dish. But beyond this we plump for a revival of the
- "cheese stewer" in stainless steel, silver or glass.</p>
-
- <p>In the ritual at "The Cheese," these dishes, brimming over,
- "bubbling and blistering with the stew," followed a pudding
- that's still famous. Although down the centuries the recipe has
- been kept secret, the identifiable ingredients have been
- itemized as follows: "Tender steak, savory oyster, seductive
- kidney, fascinating lark, rich gravy, ardent pepper and
- delicate paste"&mdash;not to mention mushrooms. And after the
- second or third helping of pudding, with a pint of stout,
- bitter, or the mildest and mellowest brown October Ale in a
- dented pewter pot, "the stewed Cheshire cheese."</p>
-
- <p>Cheese was the one and only other course prescribed by
- tradition and appetite from the time when Charles II aled and
- regaled Nell Gwyn at "The Cheese," where Shakespeare is said to
- have sampled this "kind of a glorified Welsh Rarebit, served
- piping hot in the square shallow tins in which it is cooked and
- garnished with sippets of delicately colored toast."</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 62 --><a name="Page_62"
- id="Page_62"></a> Among early records is this report of
- Addison's in <i>The Spectator</i> of September 25,1711:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>They yawn for a Cheshire cheese, and begin about
- midnight, when the whole company is disposed to be drowsy.
- He that yawns widest, and at the same time so naturally as
- to produce the most yawns amongst his spectators, carries
- home the cheese.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Only a short time later, in 1725, the proprietor of
- Simpson's in the Strand inaugurated a daily guessing contest
- that drew crowds to his fashionable eating and drinking place.
- He would set forth a huge portion of cheese and wager champagne
- and cigars for the house that no one present could correctly
- estimate the weight, height and girth of it.</p>
-
- <p>As late as 1795, when Boswell was accompanying Dr. Johnson
- to "The Cheese," records of St. Dunstan's Club, which also met
- there, showed that the current price of a Buck Rabbit was
- tuppence, and that this was also the amount of the usual
- tip.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Ye Original Recipe</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1&frac12; ounces butter<br />
- 1 cup cream<br />
- 1&frac12; cups grated Cheshire cheese (more pungent,
- snappier, richer,<br />
- and more brightly colored than its first cousin,
- Cheddar)</p>
-
- <p>Heat butter and cream together, then stir in the cheese
- and let it stew.</p>
-
- <p>You dunk fingers of toast directly into your individual
- tin, or pour the Stewed Rabbit over toast and brown the top
- under a blistering salamander.</p>
-
- <p>The salamander is worth modernizing, too, so you can
- brand your own Rabbits with your monogram or the design of
- your own Rabbitry. Such a branding iron might be square,
- like the stew tin, and about the size of a piece of
- toast</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>It is notable that there is no beer or ale in this recipe,
- but not lamentable, since all aboriginal cheese toasts were
- washed down <!-- Page 63 --><a name="Page_63"
- id="Page_63"></a>in tossing seas of ale, beer, porter,
- stout, and 'arf and 'arf.</p>
-
- <p>This creamy Stewed Buck, on which the literary greats of
- Johnson's time supped while they smoked their church wardens,
- received its highest praise from an American newspaper woman
- who rhapsodized in 1891: "Then came stewed cheese, on the thin
- shaving of crisp, golden toast in hot silver saucers&mdash;so
- hot that the cheese was the substance of thick cream, the
- flavor of purple pansies and red raspberries commingled."</p>
-
- <p>This may seem a bit flowery, but in truth many fine cheeses
- hold a trace of the bouquet of the flowers that have enriched
- the milk. Alpine blooms and herbs haunt the Gruy&egrave;re,
- Parmesan wafts the scent of Parma violets, the Flower Cheese of
- England is perfumed with the petals of rose, violet, marigold
- and jasmine.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Oven Rabbit</b> (FROM AN OLD
- RECIPE)</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Chop small &frac12; pound of cooking cheese. Put it,
- with a piece of butter the size of a walnut, in a little
- saucepan, and as the butter melts and the cheese gets warm,
- mash them together,</p>
-
- <p>When softened add 2 yolks of eggs, &frac12; teacupful of
- ale, a little cayenne pepper and salt. Stir with a wooden
- spoon one way only, until it is creamy, but do not let it
- boil, for that would spoil it. Place some slices of
- buttered toast on a dish, pour the Rarebit upon them, and
- set inside-the oven about 2 minutes before serving.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Yorkshire Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><i>(originally called Gherkin Buck, from a pioneer
- recipe</i>)</p>
-
- <p>Put into a saucepan &frac12; pound of cheese, sprinkle
- with pepper (black, of course) to taste, pour over &frac12;
- teacup of ale, and convert the whole into a smooth, creamy
- mass, over the fire, stirring continually, for about 10
- minutes.</p>
-
- <p>In 2 more minutes it should be done. (10 minutes
- altogether is the minimum.) Pour it over slices of hot
- toast, place a piece of broiled bacon on the top of each
- and serve as hot as possible.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 64 --><a name="Page_64"
- id="Page_64"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Golden Buck</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>A Golden Buck is simply the Basic Welsh Rabbit with beer
- (No. 1) plus a poached egg on top. The egg, sunny side up,
- gave it its shining name a couple of centuries ago.
- Nowadays some chafing dish show-offs try to gild the Golden
- Buck with dashes of ginger and spice.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Golden Buck II</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This is only a Golden Buck with the addition of bacon
- strips.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>The Venerable Yorkshire
- Buck</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Spread &frac12;-inch slices of bread with mustard and
- brown in hot oven. Then moisten each slice with &frac12;
- glass of ale, lay on top a slice of cheese &frac14;-inch
- thick, and 2 slices of bacon on top of that. Put back in
- oven, cook till cheese is melted and the bacon crisp, and
- serve piping hot, with tankards of cold ale.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Bacon is the thing that identifies any Yorkshire Rabbit.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Yale College Welsh Rabbit</b>
- (MORIARTY'S)</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 jigger of beer<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon salt<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon black pepper<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon mustard<br />
- 1&frac12; cups grated or shaved cheese<br />
- More beer</p>
-
- <p>Pour the jigger of beer into "a low saucepan," dash on
- the seasonings, add the cheese and stir unremittingly,
- moistening from time to time with more beer, a pony or two
- at a time.</p>
-
- <p>When creamy, pour over buttered toast (2 slices for this
- amount) and serve with still more beer.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 65 --><a name="Page_65"
- id="Page_65"></a> There are two schools of postgraduate
- Rabbit-hunters: Yale, as above, with beer both in the Rabbit
- and with it; and the other featured in the Stieff Recipe,
- which prefers leaving it out of the Rabbit, but taps a keg
- to drink with it.</p>
-
- <p>The ancient age of Moriarty's campus classic is registered
- by the use of pioneer black pepper in place of white, which is
- often used today and is thought more sophisticated by some than
- the red cayenne of Rector's Naughty Nineties Chafing Dish
- Rabbit, which is precisely the same as our Basic Recipe No.
- 1.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Border-hopping Bunny, or
- Frijole Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1&frac12; tablespoons butter<br />
- 1&frac12; tablespoons chopped onion<br />
- 2 tablespoons chopped pepper, green or red, or both<br />
- 1&frac12; teaspoon chili powder<br />
- 1 small can kidney beans, drained<br />
- 1&frac12; tablespoons catsup<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon Worcestershire<br />
- Salt<br />
- 2 cups grated cheese</p>
-
- <p>Cook onion and pepper lightly in butter with chili
- powder; add kidney beans and seasonings and stir in the
- cheese until melted.</p>
-
- <p>Serve this beany Bunny peppery hot on tortillas or
- crackers, toasted and buttered.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>In the whole hutch of kitchen Rabbitry the most popular
- modern ones are made with tomato, a little or lots. They hop in
- from everywhere, from Mexico to South Africa, and call for all
- kinds of quirks, down to mixing in some dried beef, and there
- is even a skimpy Tomato Rabbit for reducers, made with farmer
- cheese and skimmed milk.</p>
-
- <p>Although the quaintly named Rum Tum Tiddy was doubtless the
- great-grandpappy of all Tomato Rabbits, a richer, more buttery
- and more eggy one has taken its place as the standard today.
- The following is a typical recipe for this, tried and true,
- since it <!-- Page 66 --><a name="Page_66"
- id="Page_66"></a>has had a successful run through a score of
- the best modern cookbooks, with only slight personal changes
- to keep its juice a-flowing blood-red.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Tomato Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 2 tablespoons flour<br />
- &frac34; cup thin cream or evaporated milk<br />
- &frac34; cup canned tomato pulp, rubbed through a sieve to
- remove seeds<br />
- A pinch of soda<br />
- 3 cups grated cheese<br />
- Pinches of dry mustard, salt and cayenne<br />
- 2 eggs, lightly beaten</p>
-
- <p>Blend flour in melted butter, add cream slowly, and when
- this white sauce is a little thick, stir in tomato
- sprinkled with soda. Keep stirring steadily while adding
- cheese and seasonings, and when cooked enough, stir in the
- eggs to make a creamy texture, smooth as silk. Serve on
- buttered whole wheat or graham bread for a change.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Instead of soda, some antiquated recipes call for "a
- tablespoon of bicarbonate of potash."</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>South African Tomato
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This is the same as above, except that &frac12; teaspoon
- of sugar is used in place of the soda and the Rabbit is
- poured over baked pastry cut into squares and sprinkled
- with parsley, chopped fine, put in the oven and served
- immediately.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Rum Tum Tiddy, Rink Tum
- Ditty, etc.</b> (OLD BOSTON STYLE)</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 tablespoon butter<br />
- 1 onion, minced<br />
- 1 teaspoon salt<br />
- 1 big pinch of pepper<br />
- 2 cups cooked tomatoes<br />
- 1 tablespoon sugar<br />
- 3 cups grated store cheese<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten<br />
- <!-- Page 67 --><a name="Page_67"
- id="Page_67"></a></p>
-
- <p>Slowly fry onion bright golden in butter, season and add
- tomatoes with sugar. Heat just under the bubbling point.
- Don't let it boil, but keep adding cheese and shaking the
- pan until it melts. Then stir in egg gently and serve very
- hot</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Tomato Soup Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 can condensed tomato soup<br />
- 2 cups grated cheese<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon English mustard<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten<br />
- Salt and pepper</p>
-
- <p>Heat soup, stir in cheese until melted, add mustard and
- egg slowly, season and serve hot.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This is a quickie Rum Tum Tiddy, without any onion, a poor,
- housebroken version of the original. It can be called a Celery
- Rabbit if you use a can of celery soup in place of the
- tomato.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Onion Rum Tum Tiddy</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Prepare as in Rum Tum Tiddy, but use only 1&frac12; cups
- cooked tomatoes and add &frac12; cup of mashed boiled
- onions.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Sherry Rum Tum Tiddy</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 tablespoon butter<br />
- 1 small onion, minced<br />
- 1 small green pepper, minced<br />
- 1 can tomato soup<br />
- &frac34; cup milk<br />
- 3 cups grated cheese<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon Worcestershire sauce<br />
- Salt and pepper<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten<br />
- 1 jigger sherry<br />
- Crackers</p>
-
- <p>Prepare as in Rum Tum Tiddy. Stir in sherry last to
- retain its flavor. Crumble crackers into a hot tureen until
- it's about &#8531; full and pour the hot Rum Tum Tiddy over
- them.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 68 --><a name="Page_68"
- id="Page_68"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Blushing Bunny</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This is a sister-under-the-skin to the old-fashioned Rum
- Tum Tiddy, except that her complexion is made a little
- rosier with a lot of paprika in place of plain pepper, and
- the paprika cooked in from the start, of course.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Blushing Bunny is one of those playful English names for
- dishes, like Pink Poodle, Scotch Woodcock (given below), Bubble
- and Squeak <i>(Bubblum Squeakum</i>), and Toad in the Hole.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Scotch Woodcock</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Another variant of Rum Tum Tiddy. Make your Rum Tum
- Tiddy, but before finishing up with the beaten egg, stir in
- 2 heaping tablespoons of anchovy paste and prepare the
- buttered toast by laying on slices of hard-cooked eggs.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>American Woodchuck</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1&frac12; cups tomato pur&eacute;e<br />
- 2 cups grated cheese<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten<br />
- Cayenne<br />
- 1 tablespoon brown sugar<br />
- Salt and pepper</p>
-
- <p>Heat the tomato and stir in the cheese. When partly
- melted stir in the egg and, when almost cooked, add
- seasonings without ever interrupting the stirring. Pour
- over hot toasted crackers or bread.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>No doubt this all-American Tomato Rabbit with brown sugar
- was named after the native woodchuck, in playful imitation of
- the Scotch Woodcock above. It's the only Rabbit we know that's
- sweetened with brown sugar.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Running Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>(<i>as served at the Waldorf-Astoria, First Annual
- Cheeselers Field Day, November 12,1937</i>)
- <!-- Page 69 --><a name="Page_69"
- id="Page_69"></a></p>
-
- <p>Cut finest old American cheese in very small pieces and
- melt in saucepan with a little good beer. Season and add
- Worcestershire sauce. Serve instantly with freshly made
- toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This running cony can be poured over toast like any other
- Rabbit, or over crushed crackers in a hot tureen, as in Sherry
- Rum Tum Tiddy, or served like Fondue, in the original cooking
- bowl or pan, with the spoon kept moving in it in one direction
- only and the Rabbit following the spoon, like a greyhound
- following the stuffed rabbit at the dog races.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Mexican Chilaly</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 tablespoon butter<br />
- 3 tablespoons chopped green pepper 1&frac12; tablespoons
- chopped onion<br />
- 1 cup chopped and drained canned tomatoes, without
- seeds<br />
- 2&frac12; cups grated cheese<br />
- &frac34; teaspoon salt<br />
- Dash of cayenne<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten<br />
- 2 tablespoons canned tomato juice<br />
- Water cress</p>
-
- <p>Cook pepper and onion lightly in butter, add tomato pulp
- and cook 5 minutes before putting over boiling water and
- stirring steadily as you add cheese and seasonings. Moisten
- the egg with the tomato juice and stir in until the Rabbit
- is thick and velvety.</p>
-
- <p>Serve on toast and dress with water cress.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This popular modern Rabbit seems to be a twin to Rum Tum
- Tiddy in spite of the centuries' difference in age.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Fluffy, Eggy Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Stir up a Chilaly as above, but use 2 well-beaten eggs
- to make it more fluffy, and leave out the watercress. Serve
- it hot over cold slices of hard-cooked eggs crowded flat on
- hot buttered toast, to make it extra eggy.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 70 --><a name="Page_70"
- id="Page_70"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Grilled Tomato Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Slice big, red, juicy tomatoes &frac12;-inch thick,
- season with salt, pepper and plenty of brown sugar. Dot
- both sides with all the butter that won't slip off.</p>
-
- <p>Heat in moderate oven, and when almost cooked, remove
- and broil on both sides. Put on hot plates in place of the
- usual toast and pour the Rabbit over them. (The Rabbit is
- made according to either Basic Recipe No. 1 or No. 2.)</p>
-
- <p>Slices of crisp bacon on top of the tomato slices and a
- touch of horseradish help.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Grilled Tomato and Onion
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Slice &frac14;-inch thick an equal number of tomato and
- onion rings. Season with salt, pepper, brown sugar and dots
- of butter. Heat in moderate oven, and when almost cooked
- remove and broil lightly.</p>
-
- <p>On hot plates lay first the onion rings, top with the
- tomato ones and pour the Rabbit over, as in the plain
- Grilled Tomato recipe above.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>For another onion-flavored Rabbit see Celery and Onion
- Rabbit.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>The Devil's Own</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>(<i>a fresh tomato variant</i>)</p>
-
- <p>2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 1 large peeled tomato in 4 thick slices<br />
- 2&frac12; cups grated cheese<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon English mustard<br />
- A pinch of cayenne<br />
- A dash of tabasco sauce<br />
- 2 tablespoons chili sauce<br />
- &frac12; cup ale or beer<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten</p>
-
- <p>Saut&eacute; tomato slices lightly on both sides in 1
- tablespoon butter. Keep warm on hot platter while you make
- the toast and a Basic <!-- Page 71 --><a name="Page_71"
- id="Page_71"></a> Rabbit, pepped up by the extra-hot
- seasonings listed above. Put hot tomato slices on hot
- toast on hot plates; pour the hot mixture over.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Dried Beef or Chipped Beef
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 tablespoon butter<br />
- 1 cup canned tomato, drained, chopped and de-seeded<br />
- &frac14; pound dried beef, shredded<br />
- 2 eggs, lightly beaten<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon pepper<br />
- 2 cups grated cheese</p>
-
- <p>Heat tomato in butter, add beef and eggs, stir until
- mixed well, then sprinkle with pepper, stir in the grated
- cheese until smooth and creamy. Serve on toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>No salt is needed on this jerked steer meat that is called
- both dried beef and chipped beef on this side of the border,
- <i>tasajo</i> on the other side, and <i>xarque</i> when you get
- all the way down to Brazil.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Kansas Jack Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup milk<br />
- 3 tablespoons butter<br />
- 3 tablespoons flour<br />
- 2 cups grated cheese<br />
- 1 cup cream-style corn<br />
- Salt and pepper</p>
-
- <p>Make a white sauce of milk, butter and flour and stir in
- cheese steadily and gradually until melted. Add corn and
- season to taste. Serve on hot buttered toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Kansas has plenty of the makings for this, yet the dish must
- have been easier to make on Baron M&uuml;nchhausen's "Island of
- Cheese," where the cornstalks produced loaves of bread,
- ready-made, instead of ears, and were no doubt crossed with
- long-eared jacks to produce Corn Rabbits quite as
- miraculous.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 72 --><a name="Page_72"
- id="Page_72"></a> After tomatoes, in popularity, come onions
- and then green peppers or canned pimientos as vegetable
- ingredients in modern, Americanized Rabbits. And after that,
- corn, as in the following recipe which appeals to all
- Latin-Americans from Mexico to Chile because it has
- everything.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Latin-American Corn
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 1 green pepper, chopped<br />
- 1 large onion, chopped<br />
- &frac12; cup condensed tomato soup<br />
- 3 cups grated cheese<br />
- 1 teaspoon salt<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon black pepper<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon Worcestershire sauce<br />
- 1 cup canned corn<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten</p>
-
- <p>Fry pepper and onion 5 minutes in butter; add soup,
- cover and cook 5 minutes more. Put over boiling water; add
- cheese with seasonings and stir steadily, slowly adding the
- corn, and when thoroughly blended and creamy, moisten the
- egg with a little of the liquid, stir in until thickened
- and then pour over hot toast or crackers.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Mushroom-Tomato
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>In one pan commence frying in butter 1 cup of sliced
- fresh mushrooms, and in another make a Rabbit by melting
- over boiling water 2 cups of grated cheese with &frac12;
- teaspoon salt and &frac12; teaspoon paprika. Stir steadily
- and, when partially melted, stir in a can of condensed
- tomato soup, previously heated. Then add the fried
- mushrooms slowly, stir until creamy and pour over hot toast
- or crackers.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Celery and Onion
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac12; cup chopped hearts of celery<br />
- 1 small onion, chopped<br />
- 1 tablespoon butter<br />
- 1&frac12; cups grated sharp cheese<br />
- Salt and pepper<br />
- <!-- Page 73 --><a name="Page_73"
- id="Page_73"></a></p>
-
- <p>In a separate pan boil celery and onion until tender.
- Meanwhile, melt cheese with butter and seasonings and stir
- steadily. When nearly done stir the celery and onion in
- gradually, until smooth and creamy.</p>
-
- <p>Pour over buttered toast and brown with a salamander or
- under the grill.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Asparagus Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make as above, substituting a cupful of tender sliced
- asparagus tops for the celery and onion.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Oyster Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 dozen oysters and their liquor<br />
- 1 teaspoon butter<br />
- 2 eggs, lightly beaten<br />
- 1 large pinch of salt<br />
- 1 small pinch of cayenne<br />
- 3 cups grated cheese</p>
-
- <p>Heat oysters until edges curl and put aside to keep warm
- while you proceed to stir up a Rabbit. When cheese is
- melted add the eggs with some of the oyster liquor and keep
- stirring. When the Rabbit has thickened to a smooth cream,
- drop in the warm oysters to heat a little more, and serve
- on hot buttered toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Sea-food Rabbits</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><i>(crab, lobster, shrimp, scallops, clams, mussels,
- abalone, squid, octopi; anything that swims in the sea or
- crawls on the bottom of the ocean)</i></p>
-
- <p>Shred, flake or mince a cupful of any freshly cooked or
- canned sea food and save some of the liquor, if any. Make
- according to Oyster Rabbit recipe above.</p>
-
- <p>Instead of using only one kind of sea food, try several,
- mixed according to taste. Spike this succulent Sea Rabbit
- with horseradish or a dollop of sherry, for a change.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 74 --><a name="Page_74"
- id="Page_74"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>"Bouquet of the Sea"
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>The seafaring Portuguese set the style for this lush
- bouquet of as many different kinds of cooked fish (tuna,
- cod, salmon, etc.) as can be sardined together in the
- whirlpool of melted cheese in the chafing dish. They also
- accent it with tidbits of sea food as above.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Other Fish Rabbit, Fresh or
- Dried</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Any cooked fresh fish, flaked or shredded, from the
- alewife to the whale, or cooked dried herring, finnan
- haddie, mackerel, cod, and so on, can be stirred in to make
- a basic Rabbit more tasty. Happy combinations are hit upon
- in mixing leftovers of several kinds by the cupful. So the
- odd old cookbook direction, "Add a cup of fish," takes on
- new meaning.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Grilled Sardine
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make a Basic Rabbit and pour it over sardines, skinned,
- boned, halved and grilled, on buttered toast.</p>
-
- <p>Similarly cooked fillets of any small fish will make as
- succulent a grilled Rabbit.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Roe Rabbits</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Slice cooked roe of shad or toothsome eggs of other
- fish, grill on toast, butter well and pour a Basic Rabbit
- over. Although shad roe is esteemed the finest, there are
- many other sapid ones of salmon, herring, flounder, cod,
- etc.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Plain Sardine Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make Basic Rabbit with only 2 cups of cheese, and in
- place of the egg yolks and beer, stir in a large tin of
- sardines, skinned, boned and flaked.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 75 --><a name="Page_75"
- id="Page_75"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Anchovy Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make Basic Rabbit, add 1 tablespoon of imported East
- Indian chutney with the egg yolks and beer at the finish,
- spread toast thickly with anchovy paste and butter, and
- pour the Rabbit over.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Smoked sturgeon, whiting,
- eel, smoked salmon, and the like</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Lay cold slices or flakes of any fine smoked fish (and
- all of them are fine) on hot buttered toast and pour a
- Basic Rabbit over the fish.</p>
-
- <p>The best combination we ever tasted is made by laying a
- thin slice of smoked salmon over a thick one of smoked
- sturgeon.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Smoked Cheddar Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>With or without smoked fish, Rabbit-hunters whose
- palates crave the savor of a wisp of smoke go for a Basic
- Rabbit made with smoked Cheddar in place of the usual aged,
- but unsmoked, Cheddar. We use a two-year-old that Phil
- Alpert, Mr. Cheese himself, brings down from Canada and has
- specially smoked in the same savory room where sturgeon is
- getting the works. So his Cheddar absorbs the de luxe
- flavor of six-dollar-per-pound sturgeon and is sold for a
- fraction of that.</p>
-
- <p>And just in case you are fishing around for something
- extra special, serve this smoky Rabbit on oven-browned
- Bombay ducks, those crunchy flat toasts of East Indian
- fish.</p>
-
- <p>Or go Oriental by accompanying this with cups of smoky
- Lapsang Soochong China tea.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Crumby Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 tablespoon butter<br />
- 2 cups grated cheese<br />
- 1 cup stale bread crumbs<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">soaked with</span><br />
- 1 cup milk<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten<br />
- Salt<br />
- Cayenne<br />
- Toasted crackers<br />
- <!-- Page 76 --><a name="Page_76"
- id="Page_76"></a></p>
-
- <p>Melt cheese in butter, stir in the soaked crumbs and
- seasonings. When cooked smooth and creamy, stir in the egg
- to thicken the mixture and serve on toasted crackers, dry
- or buttered, for contrast with the bread.</p>
-
- <p>Some Rabbiteers monkey with this, lacing it with half a
- cup of catsup, making a sort of pink baboon out of what
- should be a white monkey.</p>
-
- <p>There is a cult for Crumby Rabbits variations on which
- extend all the way to a deep casserole dish called Baked
- Rabbit and consisting of alternate layers of stale bread
- crumbs and grated-cheese crumbs. This illegitimate
- three-layer Rabbit is moistened with eggs beaten up with
- milk, and seasoned with salt and paprika.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Crumby Tomato Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 teaspoons butter<br />
- 2 cups grated cheese<br />
- &frac12; cup soft bread crumbs<br />
- 1 cup tomato soup<br />
- Salt and pepper<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten</p>
-
- <p>Melt cheese in butter, moisten bread crumbs with the
- tomato soup and stir in; season, add egg and keep stirring
- until velvety. Serve on toasted crackers, as a contrast to
- the bread crumbs.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Gherkin or Irish
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 2 cups grated cheese<br />
- &frac12; cup milk (or beer)<br />
- A dash of vinegar<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon mustard<br />
- Salt and pepper<br />
- &frac12; cup chopped gherkin pickles</p>
-
- <p>Melt cheese in butter, steadily stir in liquid and
- seasonings. Keep stirring until smooth, then add the
- pickles and serve.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This may have been called Irish after the green of the
- pickle.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 77 --><a name="Page_77"
- id="Page_77"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Dutch Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Melt thin slices of any good cooking cheese in a heavy
- skillet with a little butter, prepared mustard, and a
- splash of beer.</p>
-
- <p>Have ready some slices of toast soaked in hot beer or
- ale and pour the Rabbit over them.</p>
-
- <p>The temperance version of this substitutes milk for beer
- and delicately soaks the toast in hot water instead.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Proof that there is no Anglo-Saxon influence here lies in
- the use of prepared mustard. The English, who still do a lot of
- things the hard way, mix their biting dry mustard fresh with
- water before every meal, while the Germans and French bottle
- theirs, as we do.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Pumpernickel Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This German deviation is made exactly the same as the
- Dutch Rabbit above, but its ingredients are the opposite in
- color. Black bread (pumpernickel) slices are soaked in
- heated dark beer (porter or stout) and the yellow cheese
- melted in the skillet is also stirred up with brunette
- beer.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Since beer is a kind of liquid bread, it is natural for the
- two to commingle in Rabbits whether they are blond Dutch or
- black pumpernickel. And since cheese is only solid milk, and
- the Cheddar is noted for its beery smell, there is further
- affinity here. An old English proverb sums it up neatly: "Bread
- and cheese are the two targets against death."</p>
-
- <p>By the way, the word pumpernickel is said to have been
- coined when Napoleon tasted his first black bread in Germany.
- Contemptuously he spat it out with: "This would be good for my
- horse, Nicole." "<i>Bon pour Nicole</i>" in French.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 78 --><a name="Page_78"
- id="Page_78"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Gruy&egrave;re Welsh Rabbit
- <i>au gratin</i></b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Cut crusts from a half-dozen slices of bread. Toast them
- lightly, lay in a roasting pan and top each with a matching
- slice of imported Gruy&egrave;re &#8540;-inch thick. Pepper
- to taste and cover with bread crumbs. Put in oven 10
- minutes and rush to the ultimate consumer.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>To our American ears anything <i>au gratin</i> suggests
- "with cheese," so this Rabbit <i>au gratin</i> may sound
- redundant. To a Frenchman, however, it means a dish covered
- with bread crumbs.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Swiss Cheese Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac12; cup white wine, preferably
- Neufch&acirc;tel<br />
- &frac12; cup grated Gruy&egrave;re<br />
- 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce<br />
- &frac12; saltspoon paprika<br />
- 2 egg yolks</p>
-
- <p>Stir wine and seasonings together with the cheese until
- it melts, then thicken with the egg yolks, stirring at
- least 3 more minutes until smooth.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Sherry Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>3 cups grated cheese<br />
- &frac12; cup cream or evaporated milk<br />
- &frac12; cup sherry<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon English mustard<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon Worcestershire sauce<br />
- A dash of paprika</p>
-
- <p>Heat cheese over hot water, with or without a bit of
- butter, and when it begins to melt, stir in the cream. Keep
- stirring until almost all of the cheese is melted, then add
- sherry. When smooth <!-- Page 79 --><a name="Page_79"
- id="Page_79"></a> and creamy, stir in the mustard and
- Worcestershire sauce, and after pouring over buttered
- toast dash with paprika for color.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Spanish Sherry Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>3 tablespoons butter<br />
- 3 tablespoons flour<br />
- 1 bouillon cube, mashed<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon dry mustard<br />
- 1&frac12; cups milk<br />
- 1&frac12; cups grated cheese<br />
- 1 jigger sherry</p>
-
- <p>Make a smooth paste of butter, flour, bouillon cube and
- seasonings, and add milk slowly. When well-heated stir in
- the cheese gradually. Continue stirring at least 10
- minutes, and when well-blended stir in the sherry and serve
- on hot, buttered toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Pink Poodle</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 1 tablespoon chopped onion<br />
- 1 tablespoon flour<br />
- 1 jigger California claret<br />
- 1 cup cream of tomato soup<br />
- A pinch of soda<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon dry mustard<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- 1 teaspoon paprika<br />
- A dash of powdered cloves<br />
- 3 cups grated cheese<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten</p>
-
- <p>Cook onion in butter until light golden, then blend in
- flour, wine and soup with the soda and all seasonings. Stir
- in cheese slowly until melted and finish off by thickening
- with the egg and stirring until smooth and velvety. Serve
- on crisp, buttered toast with a dry red wine.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Although wine Rabbits, red or white, are as unusual as Swiss
- ones with Gruy&egrave;re in place of Cheddar, wine is commonly
- drunk with anything from a Golden Buck to a Blushing Bunny. But
- for most of us, a deep draught of beer or ale goes best with an
- even deeper draught of the mellow scent of a Cheddar
- golden-yellow.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 80 --><a name="Page_80"
- id="Page_80"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Savory Eggy Dry
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&#8539; pound butter<br />
- 2 cups grated Gruy&egrave;re<br />
- 4 eggs, well-beaten<br />
- Salt<br />
- Pepper<br />
- Mustard</p>
-
- <p>Melt butter and cheese together with the beaten eggs,
- stirring steadily with wooden spoon until soft and smooth.
- Season and pour over dry toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This "dry" Rabbit, in which the volume of the eggs makes up
- for any lacking liquid, is still served as a savory after the
- sweets to finish a fine meal in some old-fashioned English
- homes and hostelries.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cream Cheese Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This Rabbit, made with a package of cream cheese, is
- more scrambled hen fruit than Rabbit food, for you simply
- scramble a half-dozen eggs with butter, milk, salt, pepper
- and cayenne, and just before the finish work in the cheese
- until smooth and serve on crackers&mdash;water crackers for
- a change.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Reducing Rarebit</b> (Tomato
- Rarebit)<a name="FNanchor_A_1"
- id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1"
- class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>YIELD: 2 servings. 235 calories per serving.</p>
-
- <p>&frac12; pound farmer cheese<br />
- 2 eggs<br />
- 1 level tablespoon powdered milk<br />
- 1 level teaspoon baking powder<br />
- 1 teaspoon gelatin or agar powder<br />
- 4 egg tomatoes, quartered, or<br />
- 2 tomatoes, quartered<br />
- 1 teaspoon caraway seeds<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon garlic powder<br />
- 1 teaspoon parsley flakes<br />
- &frac12; head lettuce and/or 1 cucumber<br />
- &frac14; cup wine vinegar<br />
- Salt and pepper to taste</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 81 --><a name="Page_81"
- id="Page_81"></a></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Fill bottom of double boiler with water to &frac34;
- mark. Sprinkle salt in upper part of double boiler. Boil
- over medium flame. When upper part is hot, put in cheese,
- powdered milk, baking powder, gelatin, caraway seeds and
- pepper and garlic powder to taste. Mix. Break eggs into
- this mixture, cook over low flame, continually stirring.
- Add tomatoes when mixture bubbles and continue cooking and
- stirring until tomatoes have been cooked soft. Remove to
- lettuce and/or cucumber (sliced thin) which has been
- slightly marinated in wine vinegar and sprinkle the parsley
- flakes over the top of the mixture.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="footnote">
- <p><a name="Footnote_A_1"
- id="Footnote_A_1"></a>
- <a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a>
- (from <i>The Low-Calory Cookbook</i> by Bernard Koten,
- published by Random House)</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Curry Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 tablespoon cornstarch<br />
- 2 cups milk<br />
- 2&frac12; cups grated cheese<br />
- 1 tablespoon minced chives<br />
- 2 green onions, minced<br />
- 2 shallots, minced<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon imported curry powder<br />
- 1 tablespoon chutney sauce</p>
-
- <p>Dissolve cornstarch in a little of the milk and scald
- the rest over hot water. Thicken with cornstarch mixture
- and stir in the cheese, chives, onions, shallots, curry and
- chutney while wooden-spooning steadily until smooth and
- sizzling enough to pour over buttered toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>People who can't let well enough alone put cornstarch in
- Rabbits, just as they add soda to spoil the cooking of
- vegetables.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Ginger Ale Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Simply substitute ginger ale for the real thing in the
- No. 1 Rabbit of all time.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Buttermilk Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Substitute buttermilk for plain milk in the No. 2
- Rabbit. To be consistent, use fresh-cured Buttermilk
- Cheese, instead of the usual Cheddar of fresh cow's milk.
- This is milder.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 82 --><a name="Page_82"
- id="Page_82"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Eggnog Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 tablespoons sweet butter<br />
- 2 cups grated mellow Cheddar<br />
- 1&#8531; cups eggnog<br />
- Dashes of spice to taste.</p>
-
- <p>After melting the cheese in butter, stir in the eggnog
- and keep stirring until smooth and thickened. Season or
- not, depending on taste and the quality of eggnog
- employed.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Ever since the innovation of bottled eggnogs fresh from the
- milkman in holiday season, such supremely creamy and flavorful
- Rabbits have been multiplying as fast as guinea pigs.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>All-American Succotash
- Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup milk<br />
- 3 tablespoons butter<br />
- 3 tablespoons flour<br />
- 3 cups grated cheese<br />
- 1 cup creamed succotash, strained<br />
- Salt and pepper</p>
-
- <p>Make a white sauce of milk, butter and flour and stir in
- the cheese steadily and gradually until melted. Add the
- creamed succotash and season to taste.</p>
-
- <p>Serve on toasted, buttered corn bread.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Danish Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 quart warm milk<br />
- 2 cups grated cheese</p>
-
- <p>Stir together to boiling point and pour over piping-hot
- toast in heated bowl. This is an esteemed breakfast dish in
- north Denmark.</p>
-
- <p>As in all Rabbits, more or less cheese may be used, to
- taste.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 83 --><a name="Page_83"
- id="Page_83"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Easy English Rabbit</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Soak bread slices in hot beer. Melt thin slices of
- cheese with butter in iron frying pan, stir in a few
- spoonfuls of beer and a bit of prepared mustard. When
- smoothly melted, pour over the piping-hot, beer-soaked
- toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 84 --> <a name="Page_84"
- id="Page_84"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/084.gif"
- width="450"
- height="311"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Six</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>The Fondue</h2>
-
- <p>There is a conspiracy among the dictionary makers to take
- the heart out of the Fondue. Webster makes it seem no better
- than a collapsed souffl&eacute;, with his definition:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><b>Fondue.</b> Also, erroneously, <i>fondu</i>. A dish
- made of melted cheese, butter, eggs, and, often, milk and
- bread crumbs.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Thorndike-Barnhart further demotes this dish, that for
- centuries has been one of the world's greatest, to "a
- combination of melted cheese, eggs and butter" and explains
- that the name comes from the French <i>fondre</i>, meaning
- melt. The latest snub is delivered by the up-to-date <i>Cook's
- Quiz</i> compiled by TV culinary experts:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>A baked dish with eggs, cheese, butter, milk and bread
- crumbs.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>A baked dish, indeed! Yet the Fondue has added to the gaiety
- <!-- Page 85 --><a name="Page_85"
- id="Page_85"></a>and inebriety of nations, if not of
- dictionaries. It has commanded the respect of the culinary
- great. Savarin, Boulestin, Andr&eacute; Simon, all have
- hailed its heavenly consistency, all have been regaled with
- its creamy, nay velvety, smoothness.</p>
-
- <p>A touch of garlic, a dash of kirsch, fresh ground black
- pepper, nutmeg, black pearl truffles of Bugey, red cayenne
- pepper, the luscious gravy of roast turkey&mdash;such little
- matters help to make an authentic dunking Fondue, not a baked
- Fondue, mind you. Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin a century and a
- half ago brought the original "receipt" with him and spread it
- around with characteristic generosity during the two years of
- his exile in New York after the French Revolution. In his
- monumental <i>Physiologie du Go&ucirc;t</i> he records an
- incident that occurred in 1795:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Whilst passing through Boston ... I taught the
- restaurant-keeper Julien to make a <i>Fondue</i>, or eggs
- cooked with cheese. This dish, a novelty to the Americans,
- became so much the rage, that he (Julien) felt himself
- obliged, by way of thanks, to send me to New York the rump
- of one of those pretty little roebucks that are brought
- from Canada in winter, and which was declared exquisite by
- the chosen committee whom I convoked for the occasion.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>As the great French gourmet, Savarin was born on the Swiss
- border (at Belley, in the fertile Province of Bugey, where
- Gertrude Stein later had a summer home), he no doubt ate
- Gruy&egrave;re three times a day, as is the custom in
- Switzerland and adjacent parts. He sets down the recipe just as
- he got it from its Swiss source, the papers of Monsieur
- Trolliet, in the neighboring Canton of Berne:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Take as many eggs as you wish to use, according to the
- number of your guests. Then take a lump of good
- Gruy&egrave;re cheese, weighing about a third of the eggs,
- and a nut of butter about half the weight of the cheese.
- (Since today's eggs in America weigh about 1&frac12; ounces
- apiece, if you start the Fondue with 8.
- <!-- Page 86 --><a name="Page_86"
- id="Page_86"></a>your lump of good Gruy&egrave;re would
- come to &frac14; pound and your butter to &#8539;
- pound.)</p>
-
- <p>Break and beat the eggs well in a flat pan, then add the
- butter and the cheese, grated or cut in small pieces.</p>
-
- <p>Place the pan on a good fire and stir with a wooden
- spoon until the mixture is fairly thick and soft; put in a
- little or no salt, according to the age of the cheese, and
- a good deal of pepper, for this is one of the special
- attributes of this ancient dish.</p>
-
- <p>Let it be placed on the table in a hot dish, and if some
- of the best wines be produced, and the bottle passed quite
- freely, a marvelous effect will be beheld.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This has long been quoted as the proper way to make the
- national dish of Switzerland. Savarin tells of hearing oldsters
- in his district laugh over the Bishop of Belley eating his
- Fondue with a spoon instead of the traditional fork, in the
- first decade of the 1700's. He tells, too, of a Fondue party he
- threw for a couple of his septuagenarian cousins in Paris
- "about the year 1801."</p>
-
- <p>The party was the result of much friendly taunting of the
- master: "By Jove, Jean, you have been bragging for such a long
- time about your Fondues, you have continually made our mouths
- water. It is high time to put a stop to all this. We will come
- and breakfast with you some day and see what sort of thing this
- dish is."</p>
-
- <p>Savarin invited them for ten o'clock next day, started them
- off with the table laid on a "snow white cloth, and in each
- one's place two dozen oysters with a bright golden lemon. At
- each end of the table stood a bottle of sauterne, carefully
- wiped, excepting the cork, which showed distinctly that it had
- been in the cellar for a long while.... After the oysters,
- which were quite fresh, came some broiled kidneys, a
- <i>terrine</i> of <i>foie gras</i>, a pie with truffles, and
- finally the Fondue. The different ingredients had all been
- assembled in a stewpan, which was placed on the table over a
- chafing dish, heated with spirits of wine.</p>
-
- <p>"Then," Savarin is quoted, "I commenced operations on the
- field of battle, and my cousins did not lose a single one of
- <!-- Page 87 --><a name="Page_87"
- id="Page_87"></a>my movements. They were loud in the praise
- of this preparation, and asked me to let them have the
- receipt, which I promised them...."</p>
-
- <p>This Fondue breakfast party that gave the nineteenth century
- such a good start was polished off with "fruits in season and
- sweets, a cup of genuine mocha, ... and finally two sorts of
- liqueurs, one a spirit for cleansing, and the other an oil for
- softening."</p>
-
- <p>This primitive Swiss Cheese Fondue is now prepared more
- elaborately in what is called:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Neufch&acirc;tel
- Style</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2&frac12; cups grated imported Swiss<br />
- 1&frac12; tablespoons flour<br />
- 1 clove of garlic<br />
- 1 cup dry white wine<br />
- Crusty French "flute" or hard rolls cut into big
- mouthfuls, handy<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">for dunking</span><br />
- 1 jigger kirsch<br />
- Salt<br />
- Pepper<br />
- Nutmeg</p>
-
- <p>The cheese should be shredded or grated coarsely and
- mixed well with the flour. Use a chafing dish for cooking
- and a small heated casserole for serving. Hub the bottom
- and sides of the blazer well with garlic, pour in the wine
- and heat to bubbling, just under boiling. Add cheese
- slowly, half a cup at a time, and stir steadily in one
- direction only, as in making Welsh Rabbit. Use a silver
- fork. Season with very little salt, always depending on how
- salty the cheese is, but use plenty of black pepper,
- freshly ground, and a touch of nutmeg. Then pour in the
- kirsch, stir steadily and invite guests to dunk their
- forked bread in the dish or in a smaller preheated
- casserole over a low electric or alcohol burner on the
- dining table. The trick is to keep the bubbling melted
- cheese in rhythmic motion with the fork, both up and down
- and around and around.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The dunkers stab the hunks of crusty French bread through
- the soft part to secure a firm hold in the crust, for if your
- bread <!-- Page 88 --><a name="Page_88"
- id="Page_88"></a>comes off in dunking you pay a forfeit,
- often a bottle of wine.</p>
-
- <p>The dunking is done as rhythmically as the stirring, guests
- taking regular turns at twirling the fork to keep the cheese
- swirling. When this "chafing dish cheese custard," as it has
- been called in England, is ready for eating, each in turn
- thrusts in his fork, sops up a mouthful with the bread for a
- sponge and gives the Fondue a final stir, to keep it always
- moving in the same direction. All the while the heat beneath
- the dish keeps it gently bubbling.</p>
-
- <p>Such a Neufch&acirc;tel party was a favorite of King Edward
- VII, especially when he was stepping out as the Prince of
- Wales. He was as fond of Fondue as most of the great gourmets
- of his day and preferred it to Welsh Rabbit, perhaps because of
- the wine and kirsch that went into it.</p>
-
- <p>At such a party a little heated wine is added if the Fondue
- gets too thick. When finally it has cooked down to a crust in
- the bottom of the dish, this is forked out by the host and
- divided among the guests as a very special dividend.</p>
-
- <p>Any dry white wine will serve in a pinch, and the
- Switzerland Cheese Association, in broadcasting this classical
- recipe, points out that any dry rum, slivovitz, or brandy,
- including applejack, will be a valid substitute for the kirsch.
- To us, applejack seems specially suited, when we stop to
- consider our native taste that has married apple pie to cheese
- since pioneer times.</p>
-
- <p>In culinary usage fondue means "melting to an edible
- consistency" and this, of course, doesn't refer to cheese
- alone, although we use it chiefly for that.</p>
-
- <p>In France Fondue is also the common name for a simple dish
- of eggs scrambled with grated cheese and butter and served very
- hot on toasted bread, or filled into fancy paper cases, quickly
- browned on top and served at once. The reason for this is that
- all baked Fondues fall as easily and as far as Souffl&eacute;s,
- although the latter are more noted for this failing. There is a
- similarity in the soft fluffiness of both, although the Fondues
- are always more moist. For there is a stiff, stuffed-shirt
- buildup around any Souffl&eacute;,
- <!-- Page 89 --><a name="Page_89"
- id="Page_89"></a>suggesting a dressy dinner, while Fondue
- started as a self-service dunking bowl.</p>
-
- <p>Our modern tendency is to try to make over the original
- French Fondue on the Welsh Rabbit model&mdash;to turn it into a
- sort of French Rabbit. Although we know that both
- Gruy&egrave;re and Emmentaler are what we call Swiss and that
- it is impossible in America to duplicate the rich Alpine flavor
- given by the mountain herbs, we are inclined to try all sorts
- of domestic cheeses and mixtures thereof. But it's best to
- stick to Savarin's "lump of Gruy&egrave;re" just as the
- neighboring French and Italians do. It is interesting to note
- that this Swiss Alpine cooking has become so international that
- it is credited to Italy in the following description we reprint
- from <i>When Madame Cooks</i>, by an Englishman, Eric Weir:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Fondue &agrave;
- l'Italienne</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This is one of those egg dishes that makes one feel
- really grateful to hens. From its name it originated
- probably in Italy, but it has crossed the Alps. I have
- often met it in France, but only once in Italy.</p>
-
- <p>First of all, make a very stiff white sauce with butter,
- flour and milk. The sauce should be stiff enough to allow
- the wooden spoon to stand upright or almost.</p>
-
- <p>Off the fire, add yolks of eggs and 4 ounces of grated
- Gruy&egrave;re cheese. Mix this in well with the white
- sauce and season with salt, pepper and some grated nutmeg.
- Beat whites of egg firm. Add the whites to the preparation,
- stir in, and pour into a pudding basin.</p>
-
- <p>Take a large saucepan and fill half full of water. Bring
- to a boil, and then place the pudding basin so that the top
- of the basin is well out of the water. Allow to boil gently
- for 1&frac12; to 2 hours. Renew the boiling water from time
- to time, as it evaporates, and take care that the water, in
- boiling, does not bubble over the mixture.</p>
-
- <p>Test with a knife, as for a cake, to see if it is
- cooked. When <!-- Page 90 --><a name="Page_90"
- id="Page_90"></a> the knife comes out clean, take the
- basin out of the water and turn the Fondue out on a
- dish. It should be fairly firm and keep the shape of the
- basin.</p>
-
- <p>Sprinkle with some finely chopped ham and serve hot.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The imported Swiss sometimes is cubed instead of grated,
- then marinated for four or five hours in dry white wine, before
- being melted and liquored with the schnapps. This can be
- pleasantly adopted here in:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>All-American Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 pound imported Swiss cheese, cubed<br />
- &frac34; cup scuppernong or other American white
- wine<br />
- 1&frac12; jiggers applejack</p>
-
- <p>After marinating the Swiss cubes in the wine, simply
- melt together over hot water, stir until soft and creamy,
- add the applejack and dunk with fingers of toast or your
- own to a chorus of "All Bound Round with a Woolen
- String."</p>
-
- <p>Of course, this can be treated as a mere vinous Welsh
- Rabbit and poured over toast, to be accompanied by beer.
- But wine is the thing, for the French Fondue is to dry wine
- what the Rabbit is to stale ale or fresh beer.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>We say French instead of Swiss because the French took over
- the dish so eagerly, together with the great Gruy&egrave;re
- that makes it distinctive. They internationalized it, sent it
- around the world with bouillabaisse and onion soup, that
- celestial <i>soupe &agrave; l'oignon</i> on which snowy showers
- of grated Gruy&egrave;re descend.</p>
-
- <p>To put the Welsh Rabbit in its place they called it Fondue
- &agrave; l'Anglaise, which also points up the twinlike
- relationship of the world's two favorite dishes of melted
- cheese. But to differentiate and show they are not identical
- twins, the No. 1 dish remained Fromage Fondue while the second
- was baptized Fromage Fondue &agrave; la Bi&egrave;re.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 91 --><a name="Page_91"
- id="Page_91"></a> Beginning with Savarin the French whisked
- up more rapturous, rhapsodic writing about Gruy&egrave;re
- and its offspring, the Fondue, together with the puffed
- Souffl&eacute;, than about any other imported cheese except
- Parmesan.</p>
-
- <p>Parmesan and Gruy&egrave;re were praised as the two greatest
- culinary cheeses. A variant Fondue was made of the Italian
- cheese.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Parmesan Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>3 tablespoons butter<br />
- 1 cup grated Parmesan cheese<br />
- 4 eggs, lightly beaten<br />
- Salt<br />
- Pepper</p>
-
- <p>Over boiling water melt butter and cheese slowly, stir
- in the eggs, season to taste and stir steadily in one
- direction only, until smooth.</p>
-
- <p>Pour over fingers of buttered toast. Or spoon it up, as
- the ancients did, before there were any forks. It's beaten
- with a fork but eaten catch-as-catch-can, like
- chicken-in-the-rough.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Sapsago Swiss Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 2 tablespoons flour<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- 1&frac12; cups milk<br />
- 2&frac12; cups shredded Swiss cheese<br />
- 2&frac12; tablespoons grated Sapsago<br />
- &frac12; cup dry white wine<br />
- Pepper, black and red, freshly ground<br />
- Fingers of toast</p>
-
- <p>Over boiling water stir the first four ingredients into
- a smooth, fairly thick cream sauce. Then stir in Swiss
- cheese until well melted. After that add the Sapsago,
- finely grated, and wine in small splashes. Stir steadily,
- in one direction only, until velvety. Season sharply with
- the contrasting peppers and serve over fingers of
- toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 92 --><a name="Page_92"
- id="Page_92"></a> This is also nice when served bubbling in
- individual, preheated pastry shells, casseroles or ramekins,
- although this way most of the fun of the dunking party is
- left out. To make up for it, however, cooked slices of
- mushrooms are sometimes added.</p>
-
- <p>At the Cheese Cellar in the New York World's Fair Swiss
- Pavilion, where a continual dunking party was in progress,
- thousands of amateurs learned such basic things as not to
- overcook the Fondue lest it become stringy, and the protocol of
- dunking in turn and keeping the mass in continual motion until
- the next on the Fondue line dips in his cube of bread. The
- success of the dish depends on making it quickly, keeping it
- gently a-bubble and never letting it stand still for a split
- second.</p>
-
- <p>The Swiss, who consume three or four times as much cheese
- per capita as we, and almost twice as much as the French, are
- willing to share Fondue honors with the French Alpine province
- of Savoy, a natural cheese cellar with almost two dozen
- distinctive types of its very own, such as Fat cheese, also
- called Death's Head; La Grande Bornand, a luscious half-dried
- sheep's milker; Chevrotins, small, dry goat milk cheeses; and
- Le Vacherin. The latter, made in both Savoy and Switzerland,
- boasts two interesting variants:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1. <i>Vacherin Fondue or Spiced Fondue:</i> Made about
- the same as Emmentaler, ripened to sharp age, and then
- melted, spices added and the cheese re-formed. It is also
- called Spiced Fondue and sells for about two dollars a
- pound. Named Fondue from being melted, though it's really
- recooked,</p>
-
- <p>2. <i>Vacherin &agrave; la Main:</i> This is a curiosity
- in cheeses, resembling a cold, uncooked Fondue. Made of
- cow's milk, it is round, a foot in diameter and half a foot
- high. It is salted and aged until the rind is hard and the
- inside more runny than the ripest Camembert, so it can be
- eaten with a spoon (like the cooked Fondue) as well as
- spread on bread. The local name for it is <i>Tome de
- Montagne</i>.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 93 --><a name="Page_93"
- id="Page_93"></a> Here is a good assortment of Fondues:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Vacherin-Fribourg
- Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 1 clove garlic, crushed<br />
- 2 cups shredded Vacherin cheese<br />
- 2 tablespoons hot water</p>
-
- <p>This authentic quickie is started by cooking the garlic
- in butter until the butter is melted. Then remove garlic
- and reduce heat. Add the soft cheese and stir with silver
- fork until smooth and velvety. Add the water in little
- splashes, stirring constantly in one direction. Dunk! (In
- this melted Swiss a little water takes the place of a lot
- of wine.)</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>La Fondue Comtois</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This regional specialty of Franche-Comt&eacute; is made
- with white wine. Sauterne, Chablis, Riesling or any Rhenish
- type will serve splendidly. Also use butter, grated
- Gruy&egrave;re, beaten eggs and that touch of garlic.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Chives Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>3 cups grated Swiss cheese<br />
- 3 tablespoons flour<br />
- 2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 1 garlic clove, crushed<br />
- 3 tablespoons finely chopped chives<br />
- 1 cup dry white wine<br />
- Salt<br />
- Freshly ground pepper<br />
- A pinch of nutmeg<br />
- &frac14; cup kirsch</p>
-
- <p>Mix cheese and flour. Melt butter in chafing-dish blazer
- rubbed with garlic. Cook chives in butter 1 minute. Add
- wine and heat just under boiling. Keep simmering as you add
- cheese-and-flour mix gradually, stirring always in one
- direction. Salt <!-- Page 94 --><a name="Page_94"
- id="Page_94"></a>according to age and sharpness of
- cheese; add plenty of freshly ground pepper and the
- pinch of nutmeg.</p>
-
- <p>When everything is stirred smooth and bubbling, toss in
- the kirsch without missing a stroke of the fork and get to
- dunking.</p>
-
- <p>Large, crisp, hot potato chips make a pleasant change
- for dunking purposes. Or try assorted crackers alternating
- with the absorbent bread, or hard rolls.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Tomato Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 tomatoes, skinned, seeded and chopped<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon dried sweet basil<br />
- 1 clove garlic<br />
- 2 tablespoons butter<br />
- &frac12; cup dry white wine<br />
- 2 cups grated Cheddar cheese<br />
- Paprika</p>
-
- <p>Mix basil with chopped tomatoes. Rub chafing dish with
- garlic, melt butter, add tomatoes and much paprika. Cook 5
- to 6 minutes, add wine, stir steadily to boiling point.
- Then add cheese, half a cup at a time, and keep stirring
- until everything is smooth.</p>
-
- <p>Serve on hot toast, like Welsh Rabbit.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Here the two most popular melted-cheese dishes tangle, but
- they're held together with the common ingredient, tomato.</p>
-
- <p>Fondue also appears as a sauce to pour over baked tomatoes.
- Stale bread crumbs are soaked in tomato juice to make:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Tomato Baked Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup tomato juice<br />
- 1 cup stale bread crumbs<br />
- 1 cup grated sharp American cheese<br />
- 1 tablespoon melted butter<br />
- Salt<br />
- 4 eggs, separated and well beaten</p>
-
- <p>Soak crumbs in tomato juice, stir cheese in butter until
- melted, season with a little or no salt, depending on
- saltiness of the <!-- Page 95 --><a name="Page_95"
- id="Page_95"></a> cheese. Mix in the beaten yolks, fold
- in the white and bake about 50 minutes in moderate
- oven.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="cats">
- BAKED FONDUES
- </div>
-
- <p>Although Savarin's dunking Fondue was first to make a
- sensation on these shores and is still in highest esteem among
- epicures, the Fondue America took to its bosom was baked. The
- original recipe came from the super-caseous province of Savoy
- under the explicit title, <i>La Fondue au Fromage</i>.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>La Fondue au Fromage</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make the usual creamy mixture of butter, flour, milk,
- yolks of eggs and Gruy&egrave;re, in thin slices for a
- change. Use red pepper instead of black, splash in a jigger
- of kirsch but no white wine. Finally fold in the egg whites
- and bake in a mold for 45 minutes.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>We adapted this to our national taste which had already
- based the whole business of melted cheese on the Welsh Rabbit
- with stale ale or milk instead of white wine and
- Worcestershire, mustard and hot peppers. Today we have come up
- with this:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>100% American Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 cups scalded milk<br />
- 2 cups stale bread crumbs<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon dry English mustard<br />
- Salt<br />
- Dash of nutmeg<br />
- Dash of pepper<br />
- 2 cups American cheese (Cheddar)<br />
- 2 egg yolks, well beaten<br />
- 2 egg whites, beaten stiff</p>
-
- <p>Soak crumbs in milk, season and stir in the cheese until
- melted. Add the beaten egg yolks and stir until you have a
- smooth mixture. Let this cool while beating the whites
- stiff, leaving them <!-- Page 96 --><a name="Page_96"
- id="Page_96"></a> slightly moist. Fold the whites into
- the cool, custardy mix and bake in a buttered dish until
- firm. (About 50 minutes in a moderate oven.)</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This is more of a baked cheese job than a true Fondue, to
- our way of thinking, and the scalded milk doesn't exactly take
- the place of the wine or kirsch. It is characteristic of our
- bland cookery.</p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- OTHER FONDUES<br />
- PLAIN AND FANCY,<br />
- BAKED AND NOT
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Quickie Catsup Tummy
- Fondiddy</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac34; pound sharp cheese, diced<br />
- 1 can condensed tomato soup<br />
- &frac12; cup catsup<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon mustard<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten</p>
-
- <p>In double boiler melt cheese in soup. Blend thoroughly
- by constant stirring. Remove from heat, lightly whip or
- fold in the catsup and mustard mixed with egg. Serve on
- Melba toast or rusks.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This might be suggested as a novel midnight snack, with a
- cup of cocoa, for a change.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese and Rice
- Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup cooked rice<br />
- 2 cups milk<br />
- 4 eggs, separated and well beaten<br />
- &frac12; cup grated cheese<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- Cayenne, Worcestershire sauce or tabasco sauce, or all
- three</p>
-
- <p>Heat rice (instead of bread crumbs) in milk, stir in
- cheese until melted, add egg yolks beaten lemon-yellow,
- season, fold in stiff egg whites. Serve hot on toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 97 --><a name="Page_97"
- id="Page_97"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Corn and Cheese
- Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup bread crumbs<br />
- 1 large can creamed corn<br />
- 1 small onion, chopped<br />
- &frac12; green pepper, chopped<br />
- 2 cups cottage cheese<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- &frac12; cup milk<br />
- 2 eggs, well beaten</p>
-
- <p>Mix all ingredients together and bake in buttered
- casserole set in pan of hot water. Bake about 1 hour in
- moderate oven, or until set.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup grated Cheddar<br />
- &frac12; cup crumbled Roquefort<br />
- 1 cup pimento cheese<br />
- 3 tablespoons cream<br />
- 3 tablespoons butter<br />
- 1 teaspoon Worcestershire</p>
-
- <p>Stir everything together over hot water until smooth and
- creamy. Then whisk until fluffy, moistening with more cream
- or mayonnaise if too stiff.</p>
-
- <p>Serve on Melba toast, or assorted thin toasted
- crackers.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Brick Fondue</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac12; cup butter<br />
- 2 cups grated Brick cheese<br />
- &frac12; cup warm milk<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- 2 eggs</p>
-
- <p>Melt butter and cheese together, use wire whisk to whip
- in the warm milk. Season. Take from fire and beat in the
- eggs, one at a time. Please note that Fondue protocol calls
- for each egg to be beaten separately in cases like
- this.</p>
-
- <p>Serve over hot toast or crackers.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 98 --><a name="Page_98"
- id="Page_98"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheddar Dunk Bowl</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac34; pound sharp Cheddar cheese<br />
- 3 tablespoons cream<br />
- &#8532; teaspoon dry mustard<br />
- 1&frac12; teaspoons Worcestershire</p>
-
- <p>Grate the cheese powdery fine and mash it together with
- the cream until fluffy. Season and serve in a beautiful
- bowl for dunking in the original style of Savarin, although
- this is a static imitation of the real thing.</p>
-
- <p>All kinds of crackers and colorful dips can be used,
- from celery stalks and potato chips to thin paddles cut
- from Bombay duck.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 99 --><a name="Page_99"
- id="Page_99"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/099.gif"
- width="450"
- height="304"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Seven</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>Souffl&eacute;s, Puffs and Ramekins</h2>
-
- <p>There isn't much difference between Cheese Souffl&eacute;s,
- Puffs and Ramekins. The <i>English Encyclopedia of Practical
- Cookery</i>, the oldest, biggest and best of such works in
- English, lumps Cheese Puffs and Ramekins together, giving the
- same recipes for both, although it treats each extensively
- under its own name when not made with cheese.</p>
-
- <p>Cheese was the basis of the original French Ramequin, cheese
- and bread crumbs or puff paste, baked in a mold, (with puff
- again the principal factor in Souffl&eacute;, from the French
- <i>souffler</i>, puff up).</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 100 --><a name="Page_100"
- id="Page_100"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Basic Souffl&eacute;</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>3 tablespoons butter or margarine<br />
- 4 tablespoons flour<br />
- 1&frac14; cups hot milk, scalded<br />
- 1 teaspoon salt<br />
- A dash of cayenne<br />
- &frac12; cup grated Cheddar cheese, sharp<br />
- 2 egg yolks, beaten lemon-yellow<br />
- 2 egg whites, beaten stiff</p>
-
- <p>Melt butter, stir in flour and milk gradually until
- thick and smooth. Season and add the cheese, continuing the
- cooking and slow stirring until velvety. Remove from heat
- and let cool somewhat; then stir in the egg yolks with a
- light hand and an upward motion. Fold in the stiff whites
- and when evenly mixed pour into a big, round baking dish.
- (Some butter it and some don't.) To make sure the top will
- be even when baked, run a spoon or knife around the
- surface, about 1 inch from the edge of the dish, before
- baking slowly in a moderate oven until puffed high and
- beautifully browned. Serve instantly for fear the
- Souffl&eacute; may fall. The baking takes up to an hour and
- the egg whites shouldn't be beaten so stiff they are hard
- to fold in and contain no air to expand and puff up the
- dish.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>To perk up the seasonings, mustard, Worcestershire sauce,
- lemon juice, nutmeg and even garlic are often used to taste,
- especially in England.</p>
-
- <p>While Cheddar is the preferred cheese, Parmesan runs it a
- close second. Then comes Swiss. You may use any two or all
- three of these together. Sometimes Roquefort is added, as in
- the Ramekin recipes below.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Parmesan
- Souffl&eacute;</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make the same as Basic Souffl&eacute;, with these small
- modifications in the ingredients:</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 101 --><a name="Page_101"
- id="Page_101"></a> 1 full cup of grated Parmesan<br />
- 1 extra egg in place of the &frac12; cup of Cheddar
- cheese<br />
- A little more butter<br />
- Black pepper, not cayenne</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Swiss Souffl&eacute;</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make the same as Basic Souffl&eacute;, with these slight
- changes:</p>
-
- <p>1&frac14; cups grated Swiss cheese instead of the
- Cheddar cheese<br />
- Nutmeg in place of the cayenne</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Parmesan-Swiss
- Souffl&eacute;</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make the same as Basic Souffl&eacute;, with these little
- differences:</p>
-
- <p>&frac12; cup grated Swiss cheese, and &frac12; cup
- grated Parmesan in place<br />
- of the Cheddar cheese<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon each of sugar and black pepper for
- seasoning.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Any of these makes a light, lovely luncheon or a proper
- climax to a grand dinner.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese-Corn
- Souffl&eacute;</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make as Basic Souffl&eacute;, substituting for the
- scalded milk 1 cup of sieved and strained juice from
- cream-style canned corn.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese-Spinach
- Souffl&eacute;</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Saut&eacute; 1&frac12; cups of finely chopped, drained
- spinach in butter with 1 teaspoon finely grated onion, and
- then whip it until light and fluffy. Mix well into the
- white sauce of the Basic Souffl&eacute; before adding the
- cheese and following the rest of the recipe.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese-Tomato
- Souffl&eacute;</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Substitute hot tomato juice for the scalded milk.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 102 --><a name="Page_102"
- id="Page_102"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese-Sea-food
- Souffl&eacute;</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Add 1&frac12; cups finely chopped or ground lobster,
- crab, shrimp, other sea food or mixture thereof, with any
- preferred seasoning added.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese-Mushroom
- Souffl&eacute;</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1&frac12; cups grated sharp Cheddar<br />
- 1 cup cream of mushroom soup<br />
- Paprika, to taste<br />
- Salt<br />
- 2 egg yolks, well beaten<br />
- 2 egg whites, beaten stiff<br />
- 2 tablespoons chopped, cooked bacon<br />
- 2 tablespoons sliced, blanched almonds</p>
-
- <p>Heat cheese with soup and paprika, adding the cheese
- gradually and stirring until smooth. Add salt and thicken
- the sauce with egg yolks, still stirring steadily, and
- finally fold in the whites. Sprinkle with bacon and almonds
- and bake until golden brown and puffed high (about 1
- hour).</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese-Potato
- Souffl&eacute;</b> (Potato Puff)</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>6 potatoes<br />
- 2 onions<br />
- 1 tablespoon butter or margarine<br />
- 1 cup hot milk<br />
- &frac34; cup grated Cheddar cheese<br />
- 1 teaspoon salt<br />
- A dash of pepper<br />
- 2 egg yolks, well beaten<br />
- 2 egg whites, beaten stiff<br />
- &frac14; cup grated Cheddar cheese</p>
-
- <p>Cook potatoes and onions together until tender and put
- through a ricer. Mix with all the other ingredients except
- the egg whites and the Cheddar. Fold in the egg whites, mix
- thoroughly and pour into a buttered baking dish. Sprinkle
- the &frac14; cup of Cheddar on
- <!-- Page 103 --><a name="Page_103"
- id="Page_103"></a> top and bake in moderate oven about
- &frac12; hour, until golden-brown and well puffed. Serve
- instantly.</p>
-
- <p>Variations of this popular Souffl&eacute; leave out the
- onion and simplify matters by using 2 cups of mashed
- potatoes. Sometimes 1 tablespoon of catsup and another of
- minced parsley is added to the mixture. Or onion juice
- alone, to take the place of the cooked onions&mdash;about a
- tablespoon, full or scant.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The English, in concocting such a Potato Puff or
- Souffl&eacute;, are inclined to make it extra peppery, as they
- do most of their Cheese Souffl&eacute;s, with not only "a dust
- of black pepper" but "as much cayenne as may be stood on the
- face of a sixpence."</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese Fritter
- Souffl&eacute;s</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>These combine ham with Parmesan cheese and are even more
- delicately handled in the making than cr&ecirc;pes
- suzette.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="cats">
- PUFFS
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Three-in-One Puffs</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup grated Swiss<br />
- 1 cup grated Parmesan<br />
- 1 cup cream cheese<br />
- 5 eggs, lightly beaten<br />
- salt and pepper</p>
-
- <p>Mix the cheeses into one mass moistened with the beaten
- eggs, splashed on at intervals. When thoroughly
- incorporated, put in ramekins, tiny tins, cups, or any sort
- of little mold of any shape. Bake in hot oven about 10
- minutes, until richly browned.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Such miniature Souffl&eacute;s serve as liaison officers for
- this entire section, since they are baked in ramekins, or
- ramequins, from the French word for the small baking dish that
- holds only one portion. These may be paper boxes, usually
- round, earthenware, <!-- Page 104 --><a name="Page_104"
- id="Page_104"></a>china, Pyrex, of any attractive shape in
- which to bake or serve the Puffs.</p>
-
- <p>More commonly, in America at least, Puffs are made without
- ramekin dishes, as follows:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Fried Puffs</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 egg whites, beaten stiff<br />
- &frac12; cup grated cheese<br />
- 1 tablespoon flour<br />
- Salt<br />
- Paprika</p>
-
- <p>Into the stiff egg whites fold the cheese, flour and
- seasonings. When thoroughly mixed pat into shape desired,
- roll in crumbs and fry.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Roquefort Puffs</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&#8539; pound genuine French Roquefort<br />
- 1 egg white, beaten stiff<br />
- 8 crackers or 2-inch bread rounds</p>
-
- <p>Cream the Roquefort, fold in the egg white, pile on
- crackers and bake 15 minutes in slow oven.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The constant repetition of "beaten stiff" in these recipes
- may give the impression that the whites are badly beaten up,
- but such is not the case. They are simply whipped to peaks and
- left moist and glistening as a teardrop, with a slight sad
- droop to them that shows there is still room for the air to
- expand and puff things up in cooking.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Parmesan Puffs</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make a spread of mayonnaise or other salad dressing with
- equal parts of imported Parmesan, grated fine. Spread on a
- score <!-- Page 105 --><a name="Page_105"
- id="Page_105"></a>or more of crackers in a roomy pan and
- broil a couple of minutes till they puff up
- golden-brown.</p>
-
- <p>Use only the best Parmesan, imported from Italy; or,
- second best, from Argentina where the rich pampas grass and
- Italian settlers get together on excellent Parmesan and
- Romano. Never buy Parmesan already grated; it quickly loses
- its flavor.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Breakfast Puffs</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup flour<br />
- 1 cup milk<br />
- &frac14; cup finely grated cheese<br />
- 1 egg, lightly beaten<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt</p>
-
- <p>Mix all together to a smooth, light batter and fill
- ramekins or cups half full; then bake in quick oven until
- they are puffing over the top and golden-brown.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Danish Fondue Puffs</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 stale roll<br />
- &frac12; cup boiling hot milk<br />
- Salt<br />
- Pepper<br />
- 2 cups freshly grated Cheddar cheese<br />
- 4 egg yolks, beaten lemon-yellow<br />
- 4 egg whites, beaten stiff</p>
-
- <p>Soak roll in boiling milk and beat to a paste. Mix with
- cheese and egg yolks. When smooth and thickened fold in the
- egg whites and fill ramekins, tins, cups or paper forms and
- slowly bake until puffed up and golden-brown.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>New England Cheese
- Puffs</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup sifted flour<br />
- 1 teaspoon baking powder<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon Hungarian paprika<br />
- &frac14; teaspoon dry mustard<br />
- 2 egg yolks, beaten lemon-yellow<br />
- &frac12; cup milk<br />
- 1 cup freshly grated Cheddar cheese<br />
- 2 egg whites, beaten stiff but not dry<br />
- <!-- Page 106 --><a name="Page_106"
- id="Page_106"></a></p>
-
- <p>Sift dry ingredients together, mix yolks with milk and
- stir in. Add cheese and when thoroughly incorporated fold
- in the egg whites to make a smooth batter. Drop from a big
- spoon into hot deep fat and cook until well browned.</p>
-
- <p>Caraway seeds are sometimes added. Poppy seeds are also
- used, and either of these makes a snappier puff, especially
- tasty when served with soup.</p>
-
- <p>A few drops of tabasco give this an extra tang.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cream Cheese Puffs</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac12; pound cream cheese<br />
- 1 cup milk<br />
- 4 eggs, lightly beaten<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon dry mustard</p>
-
- <p>Soften cheese by heating over hot water. Remove from
- heat and add milk, eggs and seasoning. Beat until well
- blended, then pour into custard cups, ramekins or any other
- individual baking dishes that are attractive enough to
- serve the puffs in.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="cats">
- RAMEKINS OR RAMEQUINS
- </div>
-
- <p>Some Ramekin dishes are made so exquisitely that they may be
- collected like snuff bottles.</p>
-
- <p>Ramekins are utterly French, both the cooked Puffs and the
- individual dishes in which they are baked. Essentially a Cheese
- Puff, this is also <i>au gratin</i> when topped with both
- cheese and browned bread crumbs. By a sort of poetic cook's
- license the name is also applied to any kind of cake containing
- cheese and cooked in the identifying one-portion ramekin. It is
- used chiefly in the plural, however, together with the name of
- the chief ingredient, such as "Chicken Ramekins" and:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese Ramekins I</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 eggs<br />
- 2 tablespoons flour<br />
- &#8539; pound butter, melted<br />
- &#8539; pound grated cheese<br />
- <!-- Page 107 --><a name="Page_107"
- id="Page_107"></a></p>
-
- <p>Mix well and bake in individual molds for 15
- minutes.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese Ramekins II</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>3 tablespoons melted butter<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon each, salt and pepper<br />
- &frac34; cup bread crumbs<br />
- &frac12; cup grated cheese<br />
- 2 eggs, lightly beaten<br />
- 1&frac12; cups milk</p>
-
- <p>Mix the first four dry ingredients together, stir eggs
- into the milk and add. Stir to a smooth batter and bake in
- buttered ramekins, standing in water, in moderate oven.
- Serve piping hot, for like Souffl&eacute;s and all
- associated Puffs, the hot air will puff out of them
- quickly; then they will sink and be inedible.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="cats">
- TWO ANCIENT ENGLISH RECIPES,<br />
- STILL GOING STRONG
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese Ramekins III</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Grate &frac12; pound of any dry, rich cheese. Butter a
- dozen small paper cases, or little boxes of stiff writing
- paper like Souffl&eacute; cases. Put a saucepan containing
- &frac12; pint of water over the fire, add 2 tablespoons of
- butter, and when the water boils, stir in 1 heaping
- tablespoonful of flour. Beat the mixture until it shrinks
- away from the sides of the saucepan; then stir in the
- grated cheese. Remove the paste thus made from the fire,
- and let it partly cool. In the meantime separate the yolks
- from the whites of three eggs, and beat them until the
- yolks foam and the whites make a stiff froth. Put the
- mixture at once into the buttered paper cases, only
- half-filling them (since they rise very high while being
- baked) with small slices of cheese, and bake in a moderate
- oven for about 15 minutes. As soon as the Puffs are done,
- put the cases on a hot dish covered with a folded napkin,
- and serve very hot.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The most popular cheese for Ramekins has always been, and
- still is, Gruy&egrave;re. But because the early English also
- adopted Italian Parmesan, <!-- Page 108 --><a name="Page_108"
- id="Page_108"></a> that followed as a close second, and
- remains there today.</p>
-
- <p>Sharp Cheddar makes tangy Ramekins, as will be seen in this
- second oldster; for though it prescribes Gloucester and
- Cheshire "'arf-and-'arf," both are essentially Cheddars.
- Gloucester has been called "a glorified Cheshire" and the
- latter has long been known as a peculiarly rich and colorful
- elder brother of Cheddar, described in Kenelme Digby's
- <i>Closet Open'd</i> as a "quick, fat, rich, well-tasted
- cheese."</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese Ramekins IV</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Scrape fine &frac14; pound of Gloucester cheese and
- &frac14; pound of Cheshire cheese. Beat this scraped cheese
- in a mortar with the yolks of 4 eggs, &frac14; pound of
- fresh butter, and the crumbs of a French roll boiled in
- cream until soft. When all this is well mixed and pounded
- to a paste, add the beaten whites of 4 eggs. Should the
- paste seem too stiff, 1 or 2 tablespoons of sherry may be
- added. Put the paste into paper cases, and bake in a Dutch
- oven till nicely browned. The Ramekins should be served
- very hot.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Since both Gloucester cheese and Cheshire cheese are not
- easily come by even in London today, it would be hard to
- reproduce this in the States. So the best we can suggest is to
- use half-and-half of two of our own great Cheddars, say
- half-Coon and half-Wisconsin Longhorn, or half-Tillamook and
- half-Herkimer County. For there's no doubt about it,
- contrasting cheeses tickle the taste buds, and as many as three
- different kinds put together make Puffs all the more
- perfect.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Ramequins &agrave; la
- Parisienne</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 cups milk<br />
- 1 cup cream<br />
- 1 ounce salt butter<br />
- 1 tablespoon flour<br />
- &frac12; cup grated Gruy&egrave;re<br />
- Coarsely ground pepper<br />
- An atom of nutmeg<br />
- A <i>soup&ccedil;on</i> of garlic<br />
- A light touch of powdered sugar<br />
- 8 eggs, separated<br />
- <!-- Page 109 --><a name="Page_109"
- id="Page_109"></a></p>
-
- <p>Boil milk and cream together. Melt butter, mix in the
- flour and stir over heat 5 minutes, adding the milk and
- cream mixture a little at a time. When thoroughly cooked,
- remove from heat and stir in cheese, seasonings and the
- yolks of all 8 eggs, well beaten, and the whites of 2 even
- better beaten. When well mixed, fold in the remaining egg
- whites, stiffly beaten, until you have a batter as smooth
- and thick as cream. Pour this into ramekins of paper,
- porcelain or earthenware, filling each about &#8532; full
- to allow for them to puff up as they bake in a very slow
- oven until golden-brown (or a little less than 20
- minutes).</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Le Ramequin
- Mor&eacute;zien</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This celebrated specialty of Franche-Comt&eacute; is
- described as "a porridge of water, butter, seasoning,
- chopped garlic and toast; thickened with minced
- Gruy&egrave;re and served very hot."</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Several French provinces are known for distinctive
- individual Puffs usually served in the dainty fluted forms they
- are cooked in. In Jeanne d'Arc's Lorraine, for instance, there
- are the simply named <i>Les Ramequins</i>, made of flour,
- Gruy&egrave;re and eggs.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Swiss-Roquefort
- Ramekins</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac14; pound Swiss cheese<br />
- &frac14; pound Roquefort cheese<br />
- &frac12; pound butter<br />
- 8 eggs, separated<br />
- 4 breakfast rolls, crusts removed<br />
- &frac12; cup cream</p>
-
- <p>The batter is made in the usual way, with the soft
- insides of the rolls simmered in the cream and stirred in.
- The egg whites are folded in last, as always, the batter
- poured into ramekins part full and baked to a golden-brown.
- Then they are served instantaneously, lest they fall.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 110 --><a name="Page_110"
- id="Page_110"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Puff Paste Ramekins</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Puff or other pastry is rolled out fiat and sprinkled
- with fine tasty cheese or any cheese mixture, such as
- Parmesan with Gruy&egrave;re and/or Swiss Sapsago for a
- piquant change, but in lesser quantity than the other
- cheeses used. Parmesan cheese has long been the favorite
- for these.</p>
-
- <p>Fold paste into 3 layers, roll out again and dust with
- more cheese. Fold once more and roll this out and cut in
- small fancy shapes to bake 10 to 15 minutes in a hot oven.
- Brushing with egg yolk before baking makes these Ramekins
- shine.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Frying Pan Ramekins</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Melt 2 ounces of butter, let it cool a little and then
- mix with &frac12; pound of cheese. Fold in the whites of 3
- eggs, beaten stiff but not dry. Cover frying pan with
- buttered papers, put slices of bread on this and cover with
- the cheese mixture. Cook about 5 minutes, take it off and
- brown it with a salamander.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>There are two schools of salamandering among turophiles. One
- holds that it toughens the cheese and makes it less digestible;
- the other that it's simply swell. Some of the latter addicts
- have special cheese-branding irons made with their monograms,
- to identify their creations, whether they be burned on the
- skins of Welsh Rabbits or Frying Pan Ramekins. Salamandering
- with an iron that has a gay, carnivalesque design can make a
- sort of harlequin Ramekin.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Casserole Ramekin</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Here is the Americanization of a French original: In a
- deep casserole lay alternate slices of white bread and
- Swiss cheese, with the cheese slices a bit bigger all
- around. Beat 2 eggs with 2 cups of milk, season with salt
- and&mdash;of all things&mdash;nutmeg! Proceed to bake like
- individual Ramekins.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 111 --><a name="Page_111"
- id="Page_111"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/111.gif"
- width="450"
- height="397"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Eight</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>Pizzas, Blintzes, Pastes, Cheese Cakes, etc.</h2>
-
- <p>No matter how big or hungry your family, you can always
- appease them with pizza.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Pizza&mdash;The Tomato Pie of
- Sicily</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>DOUGH</p>
-
- <p>1 package yeast, dissolved in warm water<br />
- 2 cups sifted flour<br />
- 1 teaspoon salt<br />
- 2 tablespoons olive oil</p>
-
- <p>Make dough of this. Knead 12 to 20 minutes. Pat into a
- ball, cover it tight and let stand 3 hours in warm place
- until twice the size.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 112 --><a name="Page_112"
- id="Page_112"></a>TOMATO PASTE</p>
-
- <p>3 tablespoons olive oil<br />
- 2 large onions, sliced thin<br />
- 1 can Italian tomato paste<br />
- 8 to 10 anchovy filets, cut small<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon oregano<br />
- Salt<br />
- Crushed chili pepper<br />
- 2&frac12; cups water</p>&gt;
-
- <p>In the oil fry onion tender but not too brown, stir in
- tomato paste and keep stirring 3 or 4 minutes. Season, pour
- water over and simmer slowly 25 to 30 minutes. Add
- anchovies when sauce is done.</p>
-
- <p>CHEESE</p>
-
- <p>&frac12; cup grated Italian, Parmesan, Romano or
- Pecorino, depending on your pocketbook</p>
-
- <p>Procure a low, wide and handsome tin pizza pan, or
- reasonable substitute, and grease well before spreading the
- well-raised dough &frac12; to &frac34; inch thick. Poke
- your finger tips haphazardly into the dough to make marks
- that will catch the sauce when you pour it on generously.
- Shake on Parmesan or Parmesan-type cheese and bake in hot
- oven &frac12; hour, then &frac14; hour more at lower heat
- until the pizza is golden-brown. Cut in wedges like any
- other pie and serve.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The proper pans come all tin and a yard wide, down to
- regular apple-pie size, but twelve-inch pans are the most
- popular.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /><b>Miniature Pizzas</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Miniature pizzas are split English muffins rubbed with
- garlic or onion and brushed with olive oil. Cover with
- tomato sauce and a slice of Mozzarella cheese, anchovy,
- oregano and grated Parmesan, and heat 8 minutes.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 113 --><a name="Page_113"
- id="Page_113"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Italian-Swiss
- Scallopini</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 pound paper-thin veal cutlets<br />
- &frac12; cup flour<br />
- &frac12; cup grated Swiss and Parmesan, mixed<br />
- 1 egg yolk, lightly beaten with water<br />
- Butter<br />
- Salt<br />
- Paprika</p>
-
- <p>Moisten veal with egg and roll in flour mixed with
- cheese, quickly brown, lower flame and cook 4 to 5 minutes
- till tender. Dust with paprika and salt.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Neapolitan Baked Lasagne, or
- Stuffed Noodles</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 pound lasagne, or other wide noodles<br />
- 1&frac12; cups cooked thick tomato sauce with meat<br />
- &frac12; pound Ricotta or cottage cheese<br />
- 1 pound Mozzarella or American Cheddar<br />
- &frac14; pound grated Parmesan, Romano or Pecorino<br />
- Salt<br />
- Pepper, preferably crushed red pods<br />
- A shaker filled with grated Parmesan, or reasonable
- substitute</p>
-
- <p>Cook wide or broad noodles 15 to 20 minutes in rapidly
- boiling salted water until tender, but not soft, and drain.
- Pour &frac12; cup of tomato sauce in baking dish or pan,
- cover with about &frac12; of the noodles, sprinkle with
- grated Parmesan, a layer of sauce, a layer of Mozzarella
- and dabs of Ricotta. Continue in this fashion, alternating
- layers and seasoning each, ending with a final spread of
- sauce, Parmesan and red pepper. Bake firm in moderate oven,
- about 15 minutes, and served in wedges like pizza, with
- canisters of grated Parmesan, crushed red pepper pods and
- more of the sauce to taste.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Little Hats,
- Cappelletti</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Freshly made and still moist Cappelletti, little hats,
- contrived out of tasty paste, may be had in any Little
- Italy macaroni shop. <!-- Page 114 --><a name="Page_114"
- id="Page_114"></a> These may be stuffed sensationally in
- four different flavors with only two cheeses.</p>
-
- <p>Brown slices of chicken and ham separately, in butter.
- Mince each very fine and divide in half, to make four
- mixtures in equal amounts. Season these with salt, pepper
- and nutmeg and a binding of 2 parts egg yolk to I part egg
- white.</p>
-
- <p>With these meat mixtures you can make four
- different-flavored fillings:</p>
-
- <p>Ham and Mozzarella Chicken and Mozzarella Ham and
- Ricotta Chicken and Ricotta</p>
-
- <p>Fill the little hats alternately, so you'll have the
- same number of each different kind. Pinch edges tight
- together to keep the stuffings in while boiling fast for 5
- minutes in chicken broth (or salted water, if you
- must).</p>
-
- <p>Since these Cappelletti are only a pleasing form and
- shape of ravioli, they are served in the same way on hot
- plates, with plain tomato sauce and Parmesan or reasonable
- substitute. If we count this final seasoning as an
- ingredient, this makes three cheeses, so that each of half
- a dozen taste buds can be getting individual sensations
- without letting the others know what it's doing.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Dauphiny Ravioli</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This French variant of the famous Italian pockets of
- pastry follows the Cappelletti pattern, with any fresh goat
- cheese and Gruy&egrave;re melted with butter and minced
- parsley and boiled in chicken broth.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Italian Fritters</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac14; cup flour<br />
- 2 tablespoons sugar<br />
- &frac14; pound fresh Ricotta<br />
- 2 eggs, beaten<br />
- &frac12; cup shredded Mozzarella<br />
- Rind of &frac12; lemon, grated<br />
- 3 tablespoons brandy<br />
- Salt<br />
- <!-- Page 115 --><a name="Page_115"
- id="Page_115"></a></p>
-
- <p>Stir and mix well together in the order given and let
- stand 1 hour or more to thicken the batter so it will hold
- its shape while cooking.</p>
-
- <p>Shape batter like walnuts and hold one at a time in the
- bowl of a long-handled spoon dipped for 10 seconds in
- boiling hot oil. Fritter the "walnuts" so, and serve at
- once with powdered sugar.</p>
-
- <p>To make fascinating cheese croquettes, mix several
- contrasting cheeses in this batter.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Italian Asparagus and
- Cheese</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This gives great scope for contrasting cheeses in one
- and the same dish. In a shallow baking pan put a foundation
- layer of grated Cheddar and a little butter. Cover with a
- layer of tender parts of asparagus, lightly salted; next a
- layer of grated Gruy&egrave;re with a bit of butter, and
- another of asparagus. From here you can go as far as you
- like with varied layers of melting cheeses alternating with
- asparagus, until you come to the top, where you add two
- more kinds of cheese, a mixture of powdered Parmesan with
- Sapsago to give the new-mown hay scent.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Garlic on Cheese</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>For one sandwich prepare 30 or 40 garlic cloves by
- removing skins and frying out the fierce pungence in
- smoking olive oil. They skip in the hot pan like Mexican
- jumping beans. Toast one side of a thickish slice of bread,
- put this side down on a grilling pan, cover it with a slice
- of imported Swiss Emmentaler or Gruy&egrave;re, of about
- the same size, shape and thickness. Stick the cooked garlic
- cloves, while still blistering hot, in a close pattern into
- the cheese and brown for a minute under the grill. Salt
- lightly and dash with paprika for the color. (Recipe by Bob
- Brown in Merle Armitage's collection <i>Fit for a
- King</i>.)</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Spaniards call garlic cloves teeth, Englishmen call them
- toes. It was cheese and garlic together that inspired
- Shakespeare to Hotspur's declaration in <i>King Henry
- IV</i>:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <!-- Page 116 -->
- <a name="Page_116"
- id="Page_116"></a> <span>I had rather
- live<br /></span> <span>With cheese and garlic in
- a windmill, far,<br /></span> <span>Than feed on
- cates and have him talk to me<br /></span>
- <span>In any summer-house in
- Christendom.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>Some people can take a mere <i>soup&ccedil;on</i> of the
- stuff, while others can down it by the soup spoon, so we feel
- it necessary in reprinting our recipe to point to the warning
- of another early English writer: "Garlic is very dangerous to
- young children, fine women and hot young men."</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Blintzes</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This snow white member of the cr&ecirc;pes suzette
- sorority is the most popular deb in New York's fancy cheese
- dishes set. Almost unknown here a decade or two ago, it has
- joined blinis, kreplach and cheeseburgers as a quick and
- sustaining lunch for office workers.</p>
-
- <p>2 eggs<br />
- 1 cup water<br />
- 1 cup sifted flour<br />
- Salt<br />
- Cooking oil<br />
- &frac12; pound cottage cheese<br />
- 2 tablespoons butter<br />
- 2 cups sour cream</p>
-
- <p>Beat 1 egg light and make a batter with the water, flour
- and salt to taste. Heat a well-greased small frying pan and
- make little pancakes with 2 tablespoons of batter each.
- Cook the cakes over low heat and on one side only. Slide
- each cake off on a white cloth, with the cooked side down.
- While these are cooling make the blintz-filling by beating
- together the second egg, cottage cheese and butter. Spread
- each pancake thickly with the mixture and roll or make into
- little pockets or envelopes with the end tucked in to hold
- the filling. Cook in foil till golden-brown and serve at
- once with sufficient sour cream to smother them.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Vatroushki</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Russia seems to have been the cradle of all sorts of
- blinis and blintzes, and perhaps the first, of them to be
- made was <!-- Page 117 --><a name="Page_117"
- id="Page_117"></a> vatroushki, a variant of the blintzes
- above. The chief difference is that rounds of puff paste
- dough are used instead of the hot cakes, 1 teaspoon of
- sugar is added to the cottage cheese filling, and the
- sour cream, &frac12; cup, is mixed into this instead of
- being served with it. Little cups filled with this mix
- are made by pinching the edges of the dough together.
- The tops are brushed with egg yolk and baked in a brisk
- oven.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cottage Cheese
- Pancakes</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 cup prepared pancake<br />
- 4 tablespoons top milk or light cream<br />
- 1 teaspoon salt<br />
- 4 eggs, well beaten<br />
- 1 tablespoon sugar<br />
- 2 cups cottage cheese, put through ricer</p>
-
- <p>Mix batter and stir in cheese last until smooth.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese Waffles</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 cups prepared waffle flour<br />
- 3 egg yolks, lightly beaten<br />
- &frac14; cup melted butter<br />
- &frac34; cup grated sharp Cheddar<br />
- 3 egg whites, beaten stiff</p>
-
- <p>Stir up a smooth waffle batter of the first 4
- ingredients and fold in egg whites last.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Today you can get imported canned Holland cheese waffles to
- heat quickly and serve.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Napkin Dumpling</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 pound cottage cheese<br />
- &#8539; pound butter, softened<br />
- 3 eggs, beaten<br />
- &frac34; cup Farina<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- Cinnamon and brown sugar</p>
-
- <p>Mix together all ingredients (except the cinnamon and
- sugar) to form a ball. Moisten a linen napkin with cold
- water and tie <!-- Page 118 --><a name="Page_118"
- id="Page_118"></a>the ball of dough in it. Simmer 40 to
- 50 minutes in salted boiling water, remove from napkin,
- sprinkle well with cinnamon and brown sugar, and serve.
- This is on the style of Hungarian potato and other
- succulent dumplings and may be served with goulash or as
- a meal in itself.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="cats">
- BUTTER AND CHEESE
- </div>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Where fish is scant<br /></span> <span>And fruit
- of trees,<br /></span> <span>Supply that
- want<br /></span> <span>With butter and
- cheese.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="auth">Thomas Tusser in<br /></span>
- <span class="auth"><i>The Last Remedy</i><br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>Butter and cheese are mixed together in equal parts for
- cheese butter. Serbia has a cheese called Butter that more or
- less matches Turkey's Durak, of which butter is an
- indispensable ingredient, and French Cancoillote is based on
- sour milk simmered with butter.</p>
-
- <p>The English have a cheese called Margarine, made with the
- butter substitute. In Westphalia there are no two schools of
- thought about whether 'tis better to eat butter with cheese or
- not, for in Westphalia sour-milk cheese, butter is mixed in as
- part of the process of making. The Arabs press curds and butter
- together to store in vats, and the Scots have Crowdie or Cruddy
- Butter.</p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- BUTTERMILK CHEESE
- </div>
-
- <p>The value of buttermilk is stressed in an extravagant old
- Hindu proverb: "A man may live without bread, but without
- buttermilk he dies."</p>
-
- <p>Cheese was made before butter, being the earliest form of
- <!-- Page 119 --><a name="Page_119"
- id="Page_119"></a>dairy manufacturing, so buttermilk cheese
- came well after plain milk cheese, even after whey cheese.
- It is very tasty, and a natural with potato salad. The curd
- is salted after draining and sold in small parchment
- packages.</p>
-
- <p>German "leather" cheese has buttermilk mixed with the plain.
- The Danes make their Appetitost with sour buttermilk. Ricotta
- Romano, for a novelty, is made of sheep buttermilk.</p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- COTTAGE CHEESE
- </div>
-
- <p>In America cottage cheese is also called pot, Dutch and
- smearcase. It is the easiest and quickest to make of all
- cheeses, by simply letting milk sour, or adding buttermilk to
- curdle it, then stand a while on the back of the kitchen stove,
- since it is homemade as a rule. It is drained in a bag of
- cheesecloth and may be eaten the same day, usually salted.</p>
-
- <p>The Pilgrims brought along the following two tried and true
- recipes from olde England, and both are still in use and good
- repute:</p>
-
- <p><i>Cottage Cheese No. 1</i></p>
-
- <p>Let milk sour until clotted. Pour boiling water over and it
- will immediately curd. Stir well and pour into a colander. Pour
- a little cold water on the curd, salt it and break it up
- attractively for serving.</p>
-
- <p><i>Cottage Cheese No. 2</i></p>
-
- <p>A very rich and tasty variety is made of equal parts whole
- milk and buttermilk heated together to just under the boiling
- point. Pour into a linen bag and let drain until next day. Then
- remove, salt to taste and add a bit of butter or cream to make
- a smooth, creamy consistency, and pat into balls the size of a
- Seville orange.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 120 --><a name="Page_120"
- id="Page_120"></a></p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- CREAM CHEESE
- </div>
-
- <p>In England there are three distinct manners of making cream
- cheese:</p>
-
- <ol>
- <li>Fresh milk strained and lightly drained.</li>
-
- <li>Scalded cream dried and drained dry, like
- Devonshire.</li>
-
- <li>Rennet curd ripened, with thin, edible rind, or none,
- packaged<br />
- in small blocks or miniature bricks by dairy companies,
- as<br />
- in the U.S. Philadelphia Cream cheese.</li>
- </ol>
-
- <p>American cream cheeses follow the English pattern, being
- named from then: region or established brands owned by
- Breakstone, Borden, Kraft, Shefford, etc.</p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese such as the first listed above is easier to
- make than cottage cheese or any other. Technically, in fact, it
- is not a cheese but the dried curd of milk and is often called
- virginal. Fresh milk is simply strained through muslin in a
- perforated box through which the whey and extra moisture drains
- away for three or four days, leaving a residue as firm as fresh
- butter.</p>
-
- <p>In America, where we mix cream cheese with everything, a
- popular assortment of twelve sold in New York bears these
- ingredients and names: Chives, Cherry, Garden, Caviar, Lachs,
- Pimiento, Olive and Pimiento, Pineapple, Relish, Scallion,
- Strawberry, and Triple Decker of Relish, Pimiento and Cream in
- layers.</p>
-
- <p>In Italy there is Stracchino Cream, in Sweden Chantilly.
- Finally, to come to France, la Fonc&eacute;e or Fromage de Pau,
- a cream also known around the world as Cr&ecirc;me d'Isigny,
- Double Cr&ecirc;me, Fromage &agrave; la Cr&ecirc;me de Gien,
- Pots de Cr&ecirc;me St. Gervais, etc. etc.</p>
-
- <p>The French go even farther by eating thick fresh cream with
- Chevretons du Beaujolais and Fromage Blanc in the style that
- adds <i>&agrave; la cr&ecirc;me</i> to their already glorified
- names.</p>
-
- <p>The English came along with Snow Cream Cheese that is more
- of a dessert, similar to Italian Cream Cheese.</p>
-
- <p>We'd like to have a cheese ice cream to contrast with too
- sweet ones. Attempts at this have been made, both here and in
- England; <!-- Page 121 --><a name="Page_121"
- id="Page_121"></a>Scottish Caledonian cream came closest. We
- have frozen cheese with fruit, to be sure, but no true
- cheese ice cream as yet, though some cream cheeses seem
- especially suitable.</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>The farmer's daughter hath soft brown
- hair<br /></span> <span>(Butter and eggs and a pound of
- cheese)<br /></span> <span>And I met with a ballad I
- can't say where,<br /></span> <span>That wholly
- consisted of lines like these,<br /></span>
- <span>(Butter and eggs and a pound of
- cheese.)<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>In this parody by Calverly, "The Farmer's Daughter," the
- ingredients suggest cheese cake, dating back to 1381 In
- England. From that year Kettner in his <i>Book of the Table</i>
- quotes this recipe:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Take cream of almonds or of cow milk and beat them well
- together; and make small coffins (that is, cases of
- pastry), and do it (put it) therein; and do (put) thereto
- sugar and good powders. Or take good fat cheese and eggs
- and make them of divers colours, green, red or yellow, and
- bake them or serve them forth.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This primitive "receipt" grew up into Richmond maids of
- honor that caused Kettner to wax poetic with:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>At Richmond we are permitted to touch with our lips a
- countless number of these maids&mdash;light and airy as the
- "airy, fairy Lilian." What more can the finest poetry
- achieve in quickening the things of earth into tokens and
- foretastes of heaven, with glimpses of higher life and
- ethereal worlds.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="cats">
- CHEESECAKES
- </div>
-
- <p><i>Coronation Cheese Cake</i></p>
-
- <p>The <i>Oxford Dictionary</i> defines cheese cake as a
- "tartlet filled with sweet curds, etc." This shows that the
- cheese is the main thing, and the and-so-forth just a matter of
- taste. We are delighted to record that the Lord Mayor of London
- picked traditional cheese tarts, the maids of honor mentioned
- earlier in this section, as the Coronation dessert with which
- to regale the second Queen Elizabeth at the city luncheon in
- Guildhall This is most <!-- Page 122 -->
- <a name="Page_122"
- id="Page_122"></a>fitting, since these tarts were named
- after the maids of honor at the court of the first Queen
- Elizabeth. The original recipe is said to have sold for a
- thousand pounds. These Richmond maids of honor had the usual
- cheese cake ingredients: butter and eggs and pounds of
- cheese, but what made the subtle flavor: nutmeg, brandy,
- lemon, orange-flower water, or all four?</p>
-
- <p>More than 2,000 years before this land of Coronation cheese
- cake, the Greeks had a word for it&mdash;several in fact:
- Apician Cheese Cake, Aristoxenean, and Philoxenean among them.
- Then the Romans took it over and we read from an epistle of the
- period:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Thirty times in this one year, Charinus, while you have
- been arranging to make your will, have I sent you cheese
- cakes dripping with Hyblaean Thyme. (Celestial honey, such
- as that of Mount Hymettus we still get from Greece.)</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Plato mentioned cheese cake, and a town near Thebes was
- named for it before Christ was born, at a time when cheese
- cakes were widely known as "dainty food for mortal man."</p>
-
- <p>Today cheese cakes come in a half dozen popular styles, of
- which the ones flavored with fresh pineapple are the most
- popular in New York. But buyers delight in every sort,
- including the one hundred percent American type called cheese
- pies.</p>
-
- <p>Indeed, there seems to be no dividing line between cheese
- cakes and cheese pies. While most of them are sweet, some are
- made piquant with pimientos and olives. We offer a favorite of
- ours made from popcorn-style pot cheese put through a
- sieve:</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Pineapple Cheese Cake</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2&frac12; pounds sieved pot cheese<br />
- 1-inch piece vanilla bean<br />
- &frac14; pound sweet butter, melted<br />
- &frac12; small box graham crackers, crushed fine<br />
- 4 eggs<br />
- 2 cups sugar<br />
- 1 small can crushed pineapple, drained<br />
- 2 cups milk<br />
- &#8531; cup flour<br />
- <!-- Page 123 --><a name="Page_123"
- id="Page_123"></a></p>
-
- <p>In a big bowl mix everything except the graham crackers
- and pineapple in the order given above. Butter a square
- Pyrex pan and put in the graham-cracker dust to make,a
- crust. Cover this evenly with the pineapple and pour in the
- cheese-custard mixture. Bake I hour in a "quiet" oven, as
- the English used to say for a moderate one, and when done
- set aside for 12 hours before eating.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Because of the time and labor involved maybe you had better
- buy your cheese cakes, even though some of the truly fine ones
- cost a dime a bite, especially the pedigreed Jewish-American
- ones in Manhattan. Reuben's and Lindy's are two leaders at
- about five dollars a cake. Some are fruited with cherries or
- strawberries.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese Custard</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>4 eggs, slightly beaten<br />
- &frac12; teaspoon salt<br />
- 1 cup milk<br />
- A dash of pepper or paprika<br />
- 3 tablespoons melted butter<br />
- A few drops of onion juice, if desired<br />
- 4 tablespoons grated Swiss (imported)</p>
-
- <p>Mix all together, set in molds in pan of hot water, and
- bake until brown.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Open-faced Cheese Pie</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>3 eggs<br />
- 1 cup sugar<br />
- 2 pounds soft smearcase</p>
-
- <p>Whip everything together and fill two pie crusts. Bake
- without any upper crust.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><b>The Apple-pie Affinity</b></p>
-
- <p>Hot apple pie was always accompanied with cheese in New
- England, even as every slice of apple pie in Wisconsin has
- cheese <!-- Page 124 --><a name="Page_124"
- id="Page_124"></a>for a sidekick, according to law. Pioneer
- hot pies were baked in brick ovens and flavored with nutmeg,
- cinnamon and rose geranium. The cheese was Cheddar, but
- today all sorts of pie and cheese combinations are common,
- such as banana pie and Gorgonzola, mince with Danish Blue,
- pumpkin with cream cheese, peach pie with Habl&eacute;, and
- even a green dusting of Sapsago over raisin pie.</p>
-
- <p>Apple pie <i>au gratin</i>, thickly grated over with
- Parmesan, Caciocavallo or Sapsago, is something special when
- served with black coffee. Cider, too, or applejack, is a
- natural accompaniment to any dessert of apple with its
- cheese.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Apple Pie Adorned</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Apple pie is adorned with cream and cheese by pressing
- cream cheese through a ricer and folding in plenty of
- double cream beaten thick and salted a little. Put the
- mixture in a pastry tube and decorate top of pie in
- fanciful fashion.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Apple Pie &aacute; la
- Cheese</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Lay a slice of melting cheese on top of apple (or any
- fruit or berry) pie, and melt under broiler 2 to 3
- minutes.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese-crusty Apple
- Pie</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>In making an apple pie, roll out the top crust and
- sprinkle with sharp Cheddar, grated, dot with butter and
- bake golden-brown.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Flan au Fromage</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>To make this Franche-Comt&eacute; tart of crisp paste,
- simply mix coarsely grated Gruy&egrave;re with beaten egg,
- fill the tart cases and bake.</p>
-
- <p>For any cheese pastry or fruit and custard pie crusts,
- work in tasty shredded sharp Cheddar in the ratio of 1 to 4
- parts of flour.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 125 --><a name="Page_125"
- id="Page_125"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Christmas Cake
- Sandwiches</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>A traditional Christmas carol begs for:</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>A little bit of spice cake<br /></span> <span>A
- little bit of cheese,<br /></span> <span>A glass of
- cold water,<br /></span> <span>A penny, if you
- please.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>For a festive handout cut the spice cake or fruit cake
- in slices and sandwich them with slices of tasty cheese
- between.</p>
-
- <p>To maintain traditional Christmas cheer for the elders,
- serve apple pie with cheese and applejack.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Angelic Camembert</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 ripe Camembert, imported<br />
- 1 cup Anjou dry white wine<br />
- &frac12; pound sweet butter, softened<br />
- 2 tablespoons finely grated toast crumbs</p>
-
- <p>Lightly scrape all crusty skin from the Camembert and
- when its creamy interior stands revealed put it in a small,
- round covered dish, pour in the wine, cover tightly so no
- bouquet or aroma can possibly escape, and let stand
- overnight.</p>
-
- <p>When ready to serve drain off and discard any wine left,
- dry the cheese and mash with the sweet butter into an
- angelic paste. Reshape in original Camembert form, dust
- thickly with the crumbs and there you are.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Such a delicate dessert is a favorite with the ladies, since
- some of them find a prime Camembert a bit too strong if taken
- straight.</p>
-
- <p>Although A. W. Fulton's observation in <i>For Men Only</i>
- is going out of date, it is none the less amusing:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>In the course of a somewhat varied career I have only
- met one woman who appreciated cheese. This quality in her
- seemed to me so deserving of reward that I did not hesitate
- to acquire her hand in marriage.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 126 --><a name="Page_126"
- id="Page_126"></a> Another writer has said that "only
- gourmets among women seem to like cheese, except farm women
- and foreigners." The association between gourmets and farm
- women is borne out by the following urgent plea from early
- Italian landowners:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span><i>Ai contadini non far sapere</i><br /></span>
- <span><i>Quanta &egrave; buono it cacio con le
- pere</i>.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Don't let the peasants know<br /></span>
- <span>How good are cheese and pears.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>Having found out for ourselves, we suggest a golden slice of
- Taleggio, Stracchino, or pale gold Bel Paese to polish off a
- good dinner, with a juicy Lombardy pear or its American
- equivalent, a Bartlett, let us say.</p>
-
- <p>This celestial association of cheese and pears is further
- accented by the French:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span><i>Entre la poire et le fromage</i><br /></span>
- <span>Between the pear and the cheese.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>This places the cheese after the fruit, as the last course,
- in accordance with early English usage set down by John Clarke
- in his <i>Paroemiologia</i>:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>After cheese comes nothing.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>But in his <i>Epigrams</i> Ben Jonson serves them
- together.</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Digestive cheese, and fruit there sure will
- be.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>That brings us back to cheese and pippins:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>I will make an end of my dinner;
- there's<br /></span> <span>pippins and cheese to
- come.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="auth">Shakespeare's <i>Merry Wives of
- Windsor</i><br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>When should the cheese be served? In England it is served
- before or after the fruit, with or without the port.</p>
-
- <p>Following <i>The Book of Keruynge</i> in modern spelling we
- note when it was published in 1431 the proper thing "after
- meat" was "pears, nuts, strawberries, whortleberries (American
- huckle<!-- Page 127 -->
- <a name="Page_127"
- id="Page_127"></a>berries) and hard cheese." In modern
- practice we serve some suitable cheese like Camembert
- directly on slices of apple and pears, Gorgonzola on sliced
- banana, Habl&eacute; spread on pineapple and a cheese
- dessert tray to match the Lazy Lou, with everything crunchy
- down to Crackerjacks. Good, too, are figs, both fresh and
- preserved, stuffed with cream cheese, kumquats, avocados,
- fruity dunking mixtures of Pineapple cheese, served in the
- scooped-out casque of the cheese itself, and apple or pear
- and Provolone creamed and put back in the rind it came in.
- Pots of liquored and wined cheeses, no end, those of your
- own making being the best.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Champagned Roquefort or
- Gorgonzola</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac12; pound mellow Roquefort<br />
- &frac14; pound sweet butter, softened<br />
- A dash cayenne<br />
- &frac34; cup champagne</p>
-
- <p>With a silver fork mix cheese and butter to a smooth
- paste, moistening with champagne as you go along, using a
- little more or less champagne according to consistency
- desired. Serve with the demitasse and cognac, offering,
- besides crackers, gilt gingerbread in the style of Holland
- Dutch cheese tasters, or just plain bread.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>After dinner cheeses suggested by Phil Alpert are:</p>
-
- <p>FROM FRANCE: Port-Salut, Roblochon, Coulommiers, Camembert,
- Brie, Roquefort, Calvados (try it with a spot of Calvados,
- apple brandy)</p>
-
- <p>FROM THE U.S.: Liederkranz, Blue, Cheddar</p>
-
- <p>FROM SWEDEN: Habl&eacute; Cr&ecirc;me Chantilly</p>
-
- <p>FROM ITALY: Taleggio, Gorgonzola, Provolone, Bel Paese</p>
-
- <p>FROM HUNGARY: Kascaval</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 128 --><a name="Page_128"
- id="Page_128"></a> FROM SWITZERLAND: Swiss
- Gruy&egrave;re</p>
-
- <p>FROM GERMANY: K&uuml;mmelk&auml;se</p>
-
- <p>FROM NORWAY: Gjetost, Bondost</p>
-
- <p>FROM HOLLAND: Edam, Gouda</p>
-
- <p>FROM ENGLAND: Stilton</p>
-
- <p>FROM POLAND: Warshawski Syr</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 129 --><a name="Page_129"
- id="Page_129"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/129.gif"
- width="450"
- height="308"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Nine</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>Au Gratin, Soups, Salads and Sauces</h2>
-
- <p>He who says <i>au gratin</i> says Parmesan. Thomas Gray, the
- English poet, saluted it two centuries ago with:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Parma, the happy country where huge cheeses
- grow.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>On September 4, 1666, Pepys recorded the burying of his pet
- Parmesan, "as well as my wine and some other things," in a pit
- in Sir W. Batten's garden. And on the selfsame fourth of
- September, more than a century later, in 1784, Woodforde in his
- <i>Diary of a Country Parson</i> wrote:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>I sent Mr. Custance about 3 doz. more of apricots, and
- he sent me back another large piece of fine Parmesan
- cheese. It was very kind of him.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The second most popular cheese for <i>au gratin</i> is
- Italian Romano, and, for an entirely different flavor, Swiss
- Sapsago. The <!-- Page 130 --><a name="Page_130"
- id="Page_130"></a>French, who gave us this cookery term, use
- it in its original meaning for any dish with a browned
- topping, usually of bread crumbs, or crumbs and cheese. In
- America we think of <i>au gratin</i> as grated cheese only,
- although Webster says, "with a browned covering, often mixed
- with butter or cheese; as, potatoes <i>au gratin</i>." So
- let us begin with that.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Potatoes au Gratin</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>2 cups diced cooked potatoes<br />
- 2 tablespoons grated onion<br />
- &frac12; cup grated American Cheddar cheese<br />
- 2 tablespoons butter<br />
- &frac12; cup milk<br />
- 1 egg<br />
- Salt<br />
- Pepper<br />
- More grated cheese for covering</p>
-
- <p>In a buttered baking dish put a layer of diced potatoes,
- sprinkle with onion and bits of butter. Next, scatter on a
- thin layer of cheese and alternate with potatoes, onions
- and butter. Stir milk, egg, salt and pepper together and
- pour it on the mixture. Top everything with plenty of
- grated cheese to make it authentically American <i>au
- gratin</i>. Bake until firm in moderate oven, about
- &frac12; hour.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Eggs au Gratin</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make a white sauce flavored with minced onion to pour
- over any desired number of eggs broken into a buttered
- baking dish. Begin by using half of the sauce and
- sprinkling on a lot of grated cheese. After the eggs are
- in, pour on the rest of the sauce, cover it with grated
- cheese and bread crumbs, drop in bits of butter, and cook
- until brown in oven (or about 12 minutes).</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Tomatoes au Gratin</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Cover bottom of shallow baking pan with slices of tomato
- and sprinkle liberally with bread crumbs and grated cheese,
- season <!-- Page 131 --><a name="Page_131"
- id="Page_131"></a> with salt, pepper and dots of butter,
- add another layer of tomato slices, season as before and
- continue this, alternating with cheese, until pan is
- full. Add a generous topping of crumbs, cheese and
- butter. Bake 50 minutes in moderate oven.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Onion Soup au Gratin</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>4 or 5 onions, sliced<br />
- 4 or 5 tablespoons butter<br />
- 1 quart stock or canned consomm&eacute;<br />
- 1 quart bouillon made from dissolving 4 or 5 cubes<br />
- Rounds of toasted French bread<br />
- 1&frac12; cups grated Parmesan cheese</p>
-
- <p>Saut&eacute; onions in butter in a roomy saucepan until
- light golden, and pour the stock over. When heated put in a
- larger casserole, add the bouillon, season to taste and
- heat to boiling point. Let simmer 15 minutes and serve in
- deep well-heated soup plates, the bottoms covered with
- rounds of toasted French bread which have been heaped with
- freshly grated Parmesan and browned under the broiler. More
- cheese is served for guests to sprinkle on as desired.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>At gala parties, where wine flows, a couple of glasses of
- champagne are often added to the bouillon.</p>
-
- <p>In the famed onion soup <i>au gratin</i> at Les Halles in
- Paris, grated Gruy&egrave;re is used in place of Parmesan. They
- are interchangeable in this recipe.</p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- AMERICAN CHEESE SOUPS
- </div>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>In this era of fine canned soups a quick cheese soup is
- made by heating cream of tomato soup, ready made, and
- adding finely grated Swiss or Parmesan to taste. French
- bread toasted and topped with more cheese and broiled
- golden makes the best base to pour this over, as is done
- with the French onion soup above.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 132 --><a name="Page_132"
- id="Page_132"></a> The same cheese toasts are the basis
- of a simple milk-cheese soup, with heated milk poured
- over and a seasoning of salt, pepper, chopped chives, or
- a dash of nutmeg.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Chicken Cheese Soup</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Heat together 1 cup milk, 1 cup water in which 2 chicken
- bouillon cubes have been dissolved, and 1 can of condensed
- cream of chicken soup. Stir in &frac14; cup grated American
- Cheddar cheese and season with salt, pepper, and plenty of
- paprika until cheese melts.</p>
-
- <p>Other popular American recipes simply add grated cheese
- to lima bean or split bean soup, peanut butter soup, or
- plain cheese soup with rice.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Imported French <i>marmites</i> are <i>de rigueur</i> for a
- real onion soup <i>au gratin</i>, and an imported Parmesan
- grinder might be used for freshly ground cheese. In preparing,
- it is well to remember that they are basically only melted
- cheese, melted from the top down.</p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- CHEESE SALADS
- </div>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>When a Frenchman reaches the salad he is</span>
- <span>resting and in no hurry. He eats the</span>
- <span>salad to prepare himself for the cheese.</span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span class="auth">Henri Charpentier,</span>
- <span class="auth"><i>Life &amp; la Henri</i>.</span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Green Cheese Salad
- Julienne</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Take endive, water cress and as many different kinds of
- crisp lettuce as you can find and mix well with Provolone
- cheese cut in thin julienne strips and marinated 3 to 4
- hours in French dressing. Crumble over the salad some Blue
- cheese and toss everything thoroughly, with plenty of
- French dressing.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 133 --><a name="Page_133"
- id="Page_133"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>American Cheese Salad</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Slice a sweet ripe pineapple thin and sprinkle with
- shredded American Cheddar. Serve on lettuce dipped in
- French dressing.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese and Nut Salad</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Mix American Cheddar with an equal amount of nut meats
- and enough mayonnaise to make a paste. Roll these in little
- balls and serve with fruit salads, dusting lightly with
- finely grated Sapsago.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Brie or Camembert
- Salad</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Fill ripe pear-or peach-halves with creamy imported Brie
- or Camembert, sprinkle with honey, serve on lettuce
- drenched with French dressing and scatter shredded almonds
- over. (Cream cheese will do in a pinch. If the Camembert
- isn't creamy enough, mash it with some sweet cream.)</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Three-in-One Mold</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac34; cup cream cheese<br />
- &frac12; cup grated American Cheddar cheese<br />
- &frac12; cup Roquefort cheese, crumbled<br />
- 2 tablespoons gelatin, dissolved and stirred into<br />
- &frac12; cup boiling water<br />
- Juice of 1 lemon<br />
- Salt<br />
- Pepper<br />
- 2 cups cream, beaten stiff<br />
- &frac12; cup minced chives</p>
-
- <p>Mash the cheeses together, season gelatin liquid with
- lemon, salt and pepper and stir into cheese with the
- whipped cream. Add chives last Put in ring mold or any mold
- you fancy, chill well and slice at table to serve on
- lettuce with a little mayonnaise, or plain.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 134 --><a name="Page_134"
- id="Page_134"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Swiss Cheese Salad</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Dice &frac12; pound of cheese into &frac12;-inch cubes.
- Slice one onion very thin. Mix well in a soup plate. Dash
- with German mustard, olive oil, wine vinegar,
- Worcestershire sauce. Salt lightly and grind in plenty of
- black pepper. Then stir, preferably with a wooden spoon so
- you won't mash the cheese, until every hole is drenched
- with the dressing.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Rosie's Swiss Breakfast
- Cheese Salad</b></p>
-
- <p>Often Emmentaler is cubed in a salad for breakfast, relished
- specially by males on the morning after. We quote the original
- recipe brought over by Rosie from the Swiss Tyrol to thrill the
- writers' and artists' colony of Ridgefield, New Jersey, in her
- brother Emil's White House Inn:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>First Rosie cut a thick slice of prime imported
- Emmentaler into half-inch cubes. Then she mixed imported
- French olive oil, German mustard and Swiss white wine
- vinegar with salt and freshly ground pepper in a deep soup
- plate, sprinkled on a few drops of pepper sauce scattered
- in the chunks of Schweizer and stirred the cubes with a
- light hand, using a wooden fork and spoon to prevent
- bruising.</p>
-
- <p>The salad was ready to eat only when each and every
- tiny, shiny cell of the Swiss from the homeland had been
- washed, oiled and polished with the soothing mixture.</p>
-
- <p>"Drink down the juice, too, when you have finished mine
- Breakfast Cheese Salad," Rosie advised the customers. "It
- is the best cure in the world for the worst hangover."</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Gorgonzola and Banana
- Salad</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Slice bananas lengthwise, as for a banana split.
- Sprinkle with lemon juice and spread with creamy
- Gorgonzola. Sluice with French dressing made with lemon
- juice in place of vinegar, to help bring out the natural
- banana flavor of ripe Gorgonzola.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 135 --><a name="Page_135"
- id="Page_135"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese and Pea Salad</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Cube &frac12; pound of American Cheddar and mix with a
- can of peas, 1 cup of diced celery, 1 cup of mayonnaise,
- &frac12; cup of sour cream, and 2 tablespoons each of
- minced pimientos and sweet pickles. Serve in lettuce cups
- with a sprinkling of parsley and chopped radishes.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Apple and Cheese
- Salad</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>&frac12; cup cream cheese<br />
- 1 cup chopped pecans<br />
- Salt and pepper<br />
- Apples, sliced &frac12;-inch thick<br />
- Lettuce leaves<br />
- Creamy salad dressing</p>
-
- <p>Make tiny seasoned cheese balls, center on the apple
- slices standing on lettuce leaves, and sluice with creamy
- salad dressing.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Roquefort Cheese Salad
- Dressing</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>No cheese sauce is easier to make than the American
- favorite of Roquefort cheese mashed with a fork and mixed
- with French dressing. It is often made in a pint Mason jar
- and kept in the refrigerator to shake up on occasion and
- toss over lettuce or other salads.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Unfortunately, even when the Roquefort is the French import,
- complete with the picture of the sheep in red, and <i>garanti
- v&eacute;ritable</i>, the dressing is often ruined by bad
- vinegar and cottonseed oil (of all things). When bottled to
- sell in stores, all sorts of extraneous spice, oils and mustard
- flour are used where nothing more is necessary than the
- manipulation of a fork, fine olive oil and good
- vinegar&mdash;white wine, tarragon or malt. Some ardent
- amateurs must have their splash of Worcestershire sauce or
- lemon juice with salt and pepper. This Roquefort dressing is
- good on all green salads, but on endive it's something
- special.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 136 --><a name="Page_136"
- id="Page_136"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Sauce Mornay</b></p>
-
- <p>Sauce Mornay has been hailed internationally as "the
- greatest culinary achievement in cheese."</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Nothing is simpler to make. All you do is prepare a
- white sauce (the French Sauce B&eacute;chamel) and add
- grated Parmesan to your liking, stirring it in until melted
- and the sauce is creamy. This can be snapped up with
- cayenne or minced parsley, and when used with fish a little
- of the cooking broth is added.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Plain Cheese Sauce</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 part of any grated cheese to 4 parts of white
- sauce</p>
-
- <p>This is a mild sauce that is nice with creamed or
- hard-cooked eggs. When the cheese content is doubled, 2
- parts of cheese to 4 of white sauce, it is delicious on
- boiled cauliflower, baked potatoes, macaroni and crackers
- soaked in milk.</p>
-
- <p>The sauce may be made richer by mixing melted butter
- with the flour in making the white sauce, or by beating egg
- yolk in with the cheese.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>From thin to medium to thick it serves divers purposes:</p>
-
- <p><i>Thin</i>: it may be used instead of milk to make a tasty
- milk toast, sometimes spiced with curry.</p>
-
- <p><i>Medium</i>: for baking by pouring over crackers soaked in
- milk.</p>
-
- <p><i>Thick</i>: serves as a sort of Welsh Rabbit when poured
- generously over bread toasted on one side only, with the
- untoasted side up, to let the sauce sink in.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Parsleyed Cheese
- Sauce</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>This makes a mild, pleasantly pungent sauce, to enliven
- the cabbage family&mdash;hot cauliflower, broccoli, cabbage
- and Brussels sprouts. Croutons help when sprinkled
- over.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 137 --><a name="Page_137"
- id="Page_137"></a></p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- CORNUCOPIA OF CHEESE RECIPES
- </div>
-
- <p>Since this is the Complete Book of Cheese we will fill a
- bounteous cornucopia here with more or less essential, if not
- indispensable, recipes and dishes not so easy to classify, or
- overlooked or crowded out of the main sections devoted to the
- classic Fondues, Rabbits, Souffl&eacute;s, etc.</p>
-
- <p><br />
- <i>Stuffed Celery, Endive, Anise and Other Suitable
- Stalks</i></p>
-
- <p>Use any soft cheese you like, or firm cheese softened by
- pressing through a sieve; at room temperature, of course, with
- any seasoning or relish.</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>SUGGESTIONS:</p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese and chopped chives, pimientos, olives, or
- all three, with or without a touch of Worcestershire.</p>
-
- <p>Cottage cheese and piccalilli or chili sauce.</p>
-
- <p>Sharp Cheddar mixed with mayonnaise, mustard, cream,
- minced capers, pickles, or minced ham.</p>
-
- <p>Roquefort and other Blues are excellent fillings for
- your favorite vegetable stalk, or scooped-out dill pickle.
- This last is specially nice when filled with snappy cheese
- creamed with sweet butter.</p>
-
- <p>All canap&eacute; butters are ideally suited to stuffing
- stalks. Pineapple cheese, especially that part close to the
- pineapple-flavored rind, is perfect when creamed.</p>
-
- <p>A masterpiece in the line of filled stalks: Cut the
- leafy tops off an entire head of celery, endive, anise or
- anything similarly suitable. Wash and separate stalks, but
- keep them in order, to reassemble in the head after each is
- stuffed with a different mixture, using any of the above,
- or a tangy mix of your own concoction.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <!-- Page 138 --><a name="Page_138"
- id="Page_138"></a>
-
- <p>After all stalks are filled, beginning with the baby
- center ones, press them together in the form of the
- original head, tie tight, and chill. When ready, slice in
- rolls about 8-inch thick and arrange as a salad on a bed of
- water cress or lettuce, moistened with French dressing.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cold Dunking</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Besides hot dunking in Swiss Fondue, cold dunking may be
- had by moistening plenty of cream cheese with cream or
- lemon in a dunking bowl. When the cheese is sufficiently
- liquefied, it is liberally seasoned with chopped parsley,
- chives, onions, pimiento and/or other relish. Then a couple
- of tins of anchovies are macerated and stirred in, oil and
- all.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheese Charlotte</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Line a baking dish from bottom to top with decrusted
- slices of bread dipped in milk. Cream 1 tablespoon of sweet
- butter with 2 eggs and season before stirring in 2 cups of
- grated cheese. Bake until golden brown in slow oven.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Straws</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Roll pastry dough thin and cover with grated Cheddar,
- fold and roll at least twice more, sprinkling with cheese
- each time. Chill dough in refrigerator and cut in
- straw-size strips. Stiffly salt a beaten egg yolk and glaze
- with that to give a salty taste. Bake for several minutes
- until crisp.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Supa Shetgia</b>
- <a name="FNanchor_B_2"
- id="FNanchor_B_2"></a> <a href="#Footnote_B_2"
- class="fnanchor">[B]</a></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><i>This is the famous cheese soup of the Engadine and
- little known in this country. One of its seasonings is
- nutmeg and until one has used it in cheese dishes, it is
- hard to describe how perfectly
- <!-- Page 139 --><a name="Page_139"
- id="Page_139"></a> it gives that extra something. The
- recipe, as given, is for each plate, but there is no
- reason why the old-fashioned tureen could not be used
- and the quantities simply increased</i>.</p>
-
- <p>Put a slice of stale French bread, toasted or not, into
- a soup plate and cover it with 4 tablespoons of grated or
- shredded Swiss cheese. Place another slice of bread on top
- of this and pour over it some boiling milk. Cover the plate
- and let it stand for several minutes. Season with salt,
- pepper and nutmeg. Serve topped with browned, hot butter.
- Use whole nutmeg and grate it freshly.</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="footnote">
- <p><a name="Footnote_B_2"
- id="Footnote_B_2"></a>
- <a href="#FNanchor_B_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a>
- (from <i>Cheese Cookery</i>, by Helmut Ripperger)</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="cats">
- WITH A CHEESE SHAKER ON THE TABLE
- </div>
-
- <p>Italians are so dependent on cheese to enrich all their
- dishes, from soups to spaghetti&mdash;and indeed any
- vegetable&mdash;that a shaker of grated Parmesan, Romano or
- reasonable substitute stands ready at every table, or is served
- freshly grated on a side dish. Thus any Italian soup might be
- called a cheese soup, but we know of only one, the great
- minestrone, in which cheese is listed as an indispensable
- ingredient along with the pasta, peas, onion, tomatoes, kidney
- beans, celery, olive oil, garlic, oregano, potatoes, carrots,
- and so forth.</p>
-
- <p>Likewise, a chunk of melting or toasting cheese is essential
- in the Fritto Misto, the finest mixed grill we know, and it's
- served up as a separate tidbit with the meats.</p>
-
- <p>Italians grate on more cheese for seasoning than any other
- people, as the French are wont to use more wine in cooking.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Pfeffern&uuml;sse and
- Caraway</b></p>
-
- <p>The gingery little "pepper nuts," <i>pfeffern&uuml;sse</i>,
- imported from Germany in barrels at Christmastime, make one of
- the best accompaniments to almost any kind of cheese. For
- contrast try a dish of caraway.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 140 --><a name="Page_140"
- id="Page_140"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Diablotins</b></p>
-
- <p>Small rounds of buttered bread or toast heaped with a mound
- of grated cheese and browned in the oven is a French
- contribution.</p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- CHEESE OMELETS
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheddar Omelet</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make a plain omelet your own way. When the mixture has
- just begun to cook, dust over it evenly &frac12; cup grated
- Cheddar.<br />
- (a) Use young Cheddar if you want a mild, bland
- omelet.<br />
- (b) Use sharp, aged Cheddar for a full-flavored one.<br />
- (c) Sprinkle (b) with Worcestershire sauce to make what
- might be called a Wild Omelet.<br />
- Cook as usual. Fold and serve.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Parmesan Omelet</b>
- (mild)</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Cook as above, but use &frac14; cup only of Parmesan,
- grated fine, in place of the &frac12; cup Cheddar.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Parmesan Omelet</b> (full
- flavored)</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>As above, but use &frac12; cup Parmesan, finely grated,
- as follows: Sift &frac14; cup of the Parmesan into your egg
- mixture at the beginning and dust on the second &frac14;
- cup evenly, just as the omelet begins to set.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>A Meal-in-One Omelet</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Fry &frac12; dozen bacon slices crisp and keep hot while
- frying a cup of diced, boiled potatoes in the bacon fat, to
- equal crispness. <!-- Page 141 --><a name="Page_141"
- id="Page_141"></a>Meanwhile make your omelet mixture of
- 3 eggs, beaten, and 1&frac12; tablespoons of shredded
- Emmentaler (or domestic Swiss) with 1 tablespoon of
- chopped chives and salt and pepper to taste.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Tomato and</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make plain omelet, cover with thin rounds of fresh
- tomato and dust well with any grated cheese you like. Put
- under broiler until cheese melts to a golden brown.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Omelet with Cheese
- Sauce</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make a plain French, fluffy or puffy omelet and when
- finished, cover with a hot, seasoned, reinforced white
- sauce in which &frac14; pound of shredded cheese has been
- melted, and mixed well with &frac12; cup cooked, diced
- celery and 1 tablespoon of pimiento, minced.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>The French use grated Gruy&egrave;re for this with all sorts
- of sauces, such as the <i>Savoyar de Savoie</i>, with potatoes,
- chervil, tarragon and cream. A delicious appearance and added
- flavor can be had by browning with a salamander.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Spanish
- Flan&mdash;Quesillo</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>FOR THE CARAMEL:<br />
- &frac12; cup sugar<br />
- 4 tablespoons water<br />
- <br />
- FOR THE FLAN:<br />
- 4 eggs, beaten separately<br />
- 2 cups hot milk<br />
- &frac12; cup sugar<br />
- Salt</p>
-
- <p>Brown sugar and mix with water to make the caramel. Pour
- it into a baking mold.</p>
-
- <p>Make Flan by mixing together all the ingredients. Add to
- carameled mold and bake in pan of water in moderate oven
- about &frac34; hour.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 142 --><a name="Page_142"
- id="Page_142"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Italian Fritto Misto</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>The distinctive Italian Mixed Fry, Fritto Misto, is made
- with whatever fish, sweetbreads, brains, kidneys, or
- tidbits of meat are at hand, say a half dozen different
- cubes of meat and giblets, with as many hearts of
- artichokes, <i>finocchi</i>, tomato, and different
- vegetables as you can find, but always with a hunk of
- melting cheese, to fork out in golden threads with each
- mouthful of the mixture.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Polish Piroghs</b> (a
- pocketful of cheese)</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Make noodle dough with 2 eggs and 2 cups of flour, roll
- out very thin and cut in 2-inch squares.</p>
-
- <p>Cream a cupful of cottage cheese with a tablespoon of
- melted butter, flavor with cinnamon and toss in a handful
- of seedless currents.</p>
-
- <p>Fill pastry squares with this and pinch edges tight
- together to make little pockets.</p>
-
- <p>Drop into a lot of fast-boiling water, lightly salted,
- and boil steadily 30 minutes, lowering the heat so the
- pockets won't burst open.</p>
-
- <p>Drain and serve on a piping hot platter with melted
- butter and a sprinkling of bread crumbs.</p>
-
- <p>This is a cross between ravioli and blintzes.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Cheesed Mashed
- Potatoes</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Whip into a steaming hot dish of creamily mashed
- potatoes some old Cheddar with melted butter and a
- crumbling of crisp, cooked bacon.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>If there's a chafing dish handy, a first-rate nightcap can
- be made via a</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 143 --><a name="Page_143"
- id="Page_143"></a> <img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Saut&eacute;ed Swiss
- Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Tuck a slice of Swiss cheese between two pieces of
- thickly buttered bread, trim crusts, cut sandwich in two,
- surround it with one well-beaten egg, slide it into
- sizzling butter and fry on both sides. A chef at the New
- York Athletic Club once improved on this by first
- sandwiching the Swiss between a slice of ham and a slice of
- chicken breast, then beating up a brace of eggs with a
- jigger of heavy sweet cream and soaking his sandwich in
- this until it sopped up every drop. A final frying in sweet
- butter made strong men cry for it.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 144 --><a name="Page_144"
- id="Page_144"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/144.gif"
- width="450"
- height="338"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Ten</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>Appetizers, Crackers, Sandwiches, Savories,<br />
- Snacks, Spreads and Toasts</h2>
-
- <p>In America cheese got its start in country stores in our
- cracker-barrel days when every man felt free to saunter in,
- pick up the cheese knife and cut himself a wedge from the
- big-bellied rattrap cheese standing under its glass bell or
- wire mesh hood that kept the flies off but not the
- free-lunchers. Cheese by itself being none too palatable, the
- taster would saunter over to the cracker barrel, shoo the cat
- off and help himself to the old-time crackers that can't be
- beat today.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 145 --><a name="Page_145"
- id="Page_145"></a> At that time Wisconsin still belonged to
- the Indians and Vermont was our leading cheese state, with
- its Sage and Cheddar and Vermont Country Store Crackers, as
- Vrest Orton of Weston Vermont, calls them. When Orton heard
- we were writing this book, he sent samples from the store
- his father started in 1897 which is still going strong.
- Together with the Vermont Good Old-fashioned Natural Cheese
- and the Sage came a handy handmade Cracker Basket, all
- wicker, ten crackers long and just one double cracker wide.
- A snug little casket for those puffy, old-time, two-in-one
- soda biscuits that have no salt to spoil the taste of the
- accompanying cheese. Each does double duty because it's made
- to split in the middle, so you can try one kind of cheese on
- one half and another on t'other, or sandwich them
- between.</p>
-
- <p>Some Pied Piper took the country cheese and crackers to the
- corner saloon and led a free-lunch procession that never
- faltered till Prohibition came. The same old store cheese was
- soon pepped up as saloon cheese with a saucer of caraway seeds,
- bowls of pickles, peppers, pickled peppers and rye bread with
- plenty of mustard, pretzels or cheese straws, smearcase and
- schwarzbrot. Beer and cheese forever together, as in the
- free-lunch ditty of that great day:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>I am an Irish hunter;<br /></span> <span>I am, I
- ain't.<br /></span> <span>I do not hunt for
- deer<br /></span> <span>But beer.<br /></span>
- <span>Oh, Otto, wring the bar rag.<br /></span>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>I do not hunt for fleas<br /></span> <span>But
- cheese.<br /></span> <span>Oh, Adolph, bring the free
- lunch.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p>It was there and then that cheese came of age from coast to
- coast. In every bar there was a choice of Swiss, Cottage,
- Limburger&mdash;manly cheeses, walkie-talkie oldsters that
- could sit up and beg, golden yellow, tangy mellow, always cut
- in cubes. <!-- Page 146 --><a name="Page_146"
- id="Page_146"></a>Cheese takes the cube form as naturally as
- eggs take the oval and honeycombs the hexagon.</p>
-
- <p>On the more elegant handout buffets, besides the shapely
- cubes, free Welsh Rabbit started at four every afternoon, to
- lead the tired businessman in by the nose; or a smear of
- Canadian Snappy out of a pure white porcelain pot in the classy
- places, on a Bent's water biscuit.</p>
-
- <div class="cats">
- SANDWICHES AND SAVORY SNACKS
- </div>
-
- <p>Next to nibbling cheese with crackers and appetizers, of
- which there is no end in sight, cheese sandwiches help us
- consume most of our country's enormous output of Brick, Cheddar
- and Swiss. To attempt to classify and describe all of these
- would be impossible, so we will content ourselves by picking a
- few of the cold and hot, the plain and the fancy, the familiar
- and the exotic. Let's use the alphabet to sum up the
- situation.</p>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>A &nbsp; &nbsp; Alpine Club Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Spread toasts with mayonnaise and fill with a thick
- slice of imported Emmentaler, well-mustarded and seasoned,
- and the usual club-sandwich toppings of thin slices of
- chicken or turkey, tomato, bacon and a lettuce leaf.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>B &nbsp; &nbsp; Boston Beany, Open-face</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Lightly butter a slice of Boston brown bread, cover it
- generously with hot baked beans and a thick layer of
- shredded Cheddar. Top with bacon and put under a slow
- broiler until cheese melts and the bacon crisps.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>C &nbsp; &nbsp; Cheeseburgers</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Pat out some small seasoned hamburgers exceedingly thin
- and, using them instead of slices of bread, sandwich in a
- nice <!-- Page 147 --><a name="Page_147"
- id="Page_147"></a>slice of American Cheddar well covered
- with mustard. Crimp edges of the hamburgers all around
- to hold in the cheese when it melts and begins to run.
- Toast under a brisk boiler and serve on soft, toasted
- sandwich buns.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>D &nbsp; &nbsp; Deviled Rye</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Butter flat Swedish rye bread and heat quickly in hot
- oven. Cool until crisp again. Then spread thickly with
- cream cheese, bedeviled with catsup, paprika or
- pimiento.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>E &nbsp; &nbsp; Egg, Open-faced</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Saut&eacute; minced small onion and small green pepper
- in 2 tablespoons of butter and make a sauce by cooking with
- a cup of canned tomatoes. Season and reduce to about half.
- Fry 4 eggs and put one in the center of each of 4 pieces of
- hot toast spread with the red sauce. Sprinkle each
- generously with grated Cheddar, broil until melted and
- serve with crisp bacon.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>F &nbsp; &nbsp; French-fried Swiss</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Simply make a sandwich with a noble slice of imported
- Gruy&egrave;re, soak it in beaten egg and milk and fry
- slowly till cheese melts and the sandwich is nicely
- browned. This is a specialty of Franche-Comt&eacute;.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>G &nbsp; &nbsp; Grilled Chicken-Ham-Cheddar</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Cut crusts from 2 slices of white bread and butter them
- on both sides. Make a sandwich of these with 1 slice cooked
- chicken, &frac12; slice sharp Cheddar cheese, and a
- sprinkling of minced ham. Fasten tight with toothpicks, cut
- in half and dip thoroughly in a mixture of egg and milk.
- Grill golden on both sides and serve with lengthwise slices
- of dill pickle.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <!-- Page 148 --><a name="Page_148"
- id="Page_148"></a> <b>H &nbsp; &nbsp; He-man Sandwich,
- Open-faced</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Butter a thick slice of dark rye bread, cover with a
- layer of mashed cold baked beans and a slice of ham, then
- one of Swiss cheese and a wheel of Bermuda onion topped
- with mustard and a sowing of capers.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>I &nbsp; &nbsp; International Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Split English muffins and toast on the hard outsides,
- cover soft, untoasted insides with Swiss cheese, spread
- lightly with mustard, top that with a wheel of Bermuda
- onion and 1 or 2 slices of Italian-type tomato. Season with
- cayenne and salt, dot with butter, cover with Brazil nuts
- and brown under the broiler.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>J &nbsp; &nbsp; Jurassiennes, or Cro&ucirc;tes
- Comtoises</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Soak slices of stale buns in milk, cover with a mixture
- of onion browned in chopped lean bacon and mixed with
- grated Gruy&egrave;re. Simmer until cheese melts, and
- serve.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>K &nbsp; &nbsp; K&uuml;mmelk&auml;se</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>If you like caraway flavor this is your sandwich: On
- well-buttered but lightly mustarded rye, lay a thickish
- slab of Milwaukee K&uuml;mmelk&auml;se, which translates
- caraway cheese. For good measure sprinkle caraway seeds on
- top, or serve them in a saucer on the side. Then dash on a
- splash of k&uuml;mmel, the caraway liqueur that's best when
- imported.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>L &nbsp; &nbsp; Limburger Onion or Limburger Catsup</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Marinate slices of Bermuda onion in a peppery French
- dressing for &frac12; hour. Then butter slices of rye,
- spread well with soft Limburger, top with onion and you
- will have something super-duper&mdash;if you like
- Limburger. <!-- Page 149 --><a name="Page_149"
- id="Page_149"></a></p>
-
- <p>When catsup is substituted for marinated onion the
- sandwich has quite another character and flavor, so true
- Limburger addicts make one of each and take alternate bites
- for the thrill of contrast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>M &nbsp; &nbsp; Meringue, Open-faced</b> (from the Browns'
- <i>10,000 Snacks</i>)</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Allow 1 egg and 4 tablespoons of grated cheese to 1
- slice of bread. Toast bread on one side only, spread butter
- on untoasted side, put 2 tablespoons grated cheese over
- butter, and the yolk of an egg in the center. Beat egg
- white stiff with a few grains of salt and pile lightly on
- top. Sprinkle the other 2 tablespoons of grated cheese over
- that and bake in moderate oven until the egg white is firm
- and the cheese has melted to a golden-brown.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>N &nbsp; &nbsp; Neufch&acirc;tel and Honey</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>We know no sandwich more ethereal than one made with
- thin, decrusted, white bread, spread with sweet butter,
- then with Neufch&acirc;tel topped with some fine
- honey&mdash;Mount Hymettus, if possible.</p>
-
- <p>Any creamy Petit Suisse will do as well as the
- Neufch&acirc;tel, but nothing will take the place of the
- honey to make this heavenly sandwich that must have been
- the original ambrosia.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>O &nbsp; &nbsp; Oskar's Ham-Cam</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Oskar Davidsen of Copenhagen, whose five-foot menu lists
- 186 superb sandwiches and snacks, each with a character all
- its own, perfected the Ham-Cam base for a flock of fancy
- ham sandwiches, open-faced on rye or white, soft or crisp,
- sweet or sour, almost any one-way slice you desire. He uses
- as many contrasting kinds of bread as possible, and his
- butter varies from salt to fresh and whipped. The Ham-Cam
- base involves "a juicy, tender slice of freshly boiled,
- mild-cured ham" with imported Camembert spread on the ham
- as thick as velvet.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 150 --><a name="Page_150"
- id="Page_150"></a> The Ham-Cam is built up with such
- splendors as "goose liver paste and Madeira wine jelly,"
- "fried calves' kidney and <i>r&eacute;moulade</i>,"
- "Bombay curry salad," "bird's liver and fried egg," "a
- slice of red roast beef" and more of that red Madeira
- jelly, with anything else you say, just so long as it
- does credit to Camembert on ham.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>P &nbsp; &nbsp; Pickled Camembert</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Butter a thin slice of rye or pumpernickel and spread
- with ripe imported Camembert, when in season (which isn't
- summer). Make a mixture of sweet, sour and dill pickles,
- finely chopped, and spread it on. Top this with a thin
- slice of white bread for pleasing contrast with the
- black.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>Q &nbsp; &nbsp; Queijo da Serra Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>On generous rounds of French "flute" or other crunchy,
- crusty white bread place thick portions of any good
- Portuguese cheese made of sheep's milk "in the mountains."
- This last translates back into Queijo da Serra, the
- fattest, finest cheese in the world&mdash;on a par with
- fine Greek Feta. Bead the open-faced creamy cheese lightly
- with imported capers, and you'll say it's scrumptious.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>R &nbsp; &nbsp; Roquefort Nut</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Butter hot toast and cover with a thickish slice of
- genuine Roquefort cheese. Sprinkle thickly with genuine
- Hungarian paprika. Put in moderate oven for about 6
- minutes. Finish it off with chopped pine nuts, almonds, or
- a mixture thereof.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>S &nbsp; &nbsp; Smoky Sandwich and Sturgeon-smoked
- Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Skin some juicy little, jolly little sprats, lay on thin
- rye, or a slice of miniature-loaf rye studded with caraway,
- spread with sweet butter and cover with a slice of smoked
- cheese.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 151 --><a name="Page_151"
- id="Page_151"></a> Hickory is preferred for most of the
- smoking in America. In New York the best smoked cheese,
- whether from Canada or nearer home, is usually cured in
- the same room with sturgeon. Since this king of smoked
- fish imparts some of its regal savor to the Cheddar,
- there is a natural affinity peculiarly suited to
- sandwiching as above.</p>
-
- <p>Smoked salmon, eel, whitefish or any other, is also good
- with cheese smoked with hickory or anything with a
- salubrious savor, while a sandwich of smoked turkey with
- smoked cheese is out of this world. We accompany it with a
- cup of smoky Lapsang Soochong China tea.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>T &nbsp; &nbsp; Tangy Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>On buttered rye spread cream cheese, and on this bed lay
- thinly sliced dried beef. In place of mustard dot the beef
- with horseradish and pearl onions or those reliable old
- chopped chives. And by the way, if you must use mustard on
- every cheese sandwich, try different kinds for a change:
- sharp English freshly mixed by your own hand out of the tin
- of powder, or Dijon for a French touch.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>U &nbsp; &nbsp; Unusual Sandwich&mdash;of Flowers, Hay and
- Clover</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>On a sweet-buttered slice of French white bread lay a
- layer of equally sweet English Flower cheese (made with
- petals of rose, marigold, violet, etc.) and top that with
- French Fromage de foin. This French hay cheese gets its
- name from being ripened on hay and holds its new-mown
- scent. Sprinkle on a few imported capers (the smaller they
- are, the better), with a little of the luscious juice, and
- dust lightly with Sapsago.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>V &nbsp; &nbsp; Vegetarian Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Roll your own of alternate leaves of lettuce, slices of
- store cheese, avocados, cream cheese sprinkled heavily with
- chopped <!-- Page 152 --><a name="Page_152"
- id="Page_152"></a>chives, and anything else in the
- Vegetable or Caseous Kingdoms that suits your fancy.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>W &nbsp; &nbsp; Witch's Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Butter 2 slices of sandwich bread, cover one with a thin
- slice of imported Emmentaler, dash with cayenne and a drop
- or two of tabasco. Slap on a sizzling hot slice of grilled
- ham and press it together with the cheese between the two
- bread slices, put in a hot oven and serve piping hot with a
- handful of "moonstones"&mdash;those outsize pearl
- onions.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>X &nbsp; &nbsp; Xochomilco Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>In spite of the "milco" in Xochomilco, there isn't a
- drop to be had that's native to the festive, floating
- gardens near Mexico City. For there, instead of the cow, a
- sort of century plant gives milky white <i>pulque</i>, the
- fermented juice of this cactuslike desert plant. With this
- goes a vegetable cheese curded by its own vegetable rennet.
- It's called tuna cheese, made from the milky juice of the
- prickly pear that grows on yet another cactuslike plant of
- the dry lands. This tuna cheese sometimes teams up in arid
- lands with the juicy thick cactus leaf sliced into a
- tortilla sandwich. The milky <i>pulque</i> of Xochomilco
- goes as well with it as beer with a Swiss cheese
- sandwich.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>Y &nbsp; &nbsp; Yolk Picnic Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Hard-cooked egg yolk worked into a yellow paste with
- cream cheese, mustard, olive oil, lemon juice, celery salt
- and a touch of tabasco, spread on thick slices of whole
- wheat bread.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><br />
- <b>Z &nbsp; &nbsp; Zebra</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Take a tip from Oskar over in Copenhagen and design your
- own Zebra sandwich as decoratively as one of those
- oft-photoed <!-- Page 153 --><a name="Page_153"
- id="Page_153"></a>skins in El Morocco. Just alternate
- stripes of black bread with various white cheeses in
- between, to follow, the black and white zebra
- pattern.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>For good measure we will toss in a couple of toasted cheese
- sandwiches.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Toasted Cheese
- Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Butter both sides of 2 thick slices of white bread and
- sandwich between them a seasoned mixture of shredded sharp
- cheese, egg yolk, mustard and chopped chives, together with
- stiffly beaten egg white folded in last to make a light
- filling. Fry the buttered sandwich in more butter until
- well melted and nicely gilded.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>This toasted cheeser is so good it's positively sinful. The
- French, who outdo us in both cooking and sin, make one of their
- own in the form of fried fingers of stale bread doused in an
- 'arf and 'arf Welsh Rabbit and Fondue melting of
- Gruy&egrave;re, that serves as a liaison to further sandwich
- the two.</p>
-
- <p>Garlic is often used in place of chopped chives, and in
- contrast to this wild one there's a mild one made of Dutch
- cream cheese by the equally Dutch Pennsylvanians.</p>
-
- <p>England, of course, together with Wales, holds all-time
- honors with such celebrated regional "toasting cheeses" as
- Devonshire and Dunlop. Even British Newfoundland is known for
- its simple version, that's quite as pleasing as its rich Prince
- Edward Island Oyster Stew.</p>
-
- <p><img src="images/pointer.gif"
- width="58"
- height="41"
- alt="picture: pointer" /> <b>Newfoundland Toasted Cheese
- Sandwich</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>1 pound grated Cheddar<br />
- 1 egg, well beaten<br />
- &frac12; cup milk<br />
- 1 tablespoon butter</p>
-
- <p>Heat together and pour over well-buttered toast.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 154 --><a name="Page_154"
- id="Page_154"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/154.gif"
- width="391"
- height="390"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Eleven</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>"Fit for Drink"</h2>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>A country without a fit drink for cheese has no cheese
- fit for drink.</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>Greece was the first country to prove its epicurean fitness,
- according to the old saying above, for it had wine to tipple
- and sheep's milk cheese to nibble. The classical Greek cheese
- has always been Feta, and no doubt this was the kind that Circe
- combined most suitably with wine to make a farewell drink for
- her lovers. She put further sweetness and body into the stirrup
- cup by stirring honey and barley meal into it. Today we might
- whip this up in an electric mixer to toast her memory.</p>
-
- <p>While a land flowing with milk and honey is the ideal of
- many, France, Italy, Spain or Portugal, flowing with wine and
- honey, suit a lot of gourmets better. Indeed, in such
- vinous-caseous places cheese is on the house at all wine sales
- for prospective customers to snack upon and thus bring out the
- full flavor of the <!-- Page 155 --><a name="Page_155"
- id="Page_155"></a>cellared vintages. But professional wine
- tasters are forbidden any cheese between sips. They may
- clear their palates with plain bread, but nary a crumb of
- Roquefort or cube of Gruy&egrave;re in working hours, lest
- it give the wine a spurious nobility.</p>
-
- <p>And, speaking of Roquefort, Roman&eacute;e has the closest
- affinity for it. Such affinities are also found in Pont
- l'Ev&ecirc;que and Beaujolais, Brie and red champagne,
- Coulommiers and any good <i>vin ros&eacute;</i>. Heavenly
- marriages are made in Burgundy between red and white wines of
- both C&ocirc;tes, de Nuits and de Baune, and Burgundian cheeses
- such as Epoisses, Soumaintarin and Saint-Florentin. Pommard and
- Port-Salut seem to be made for each other, as do Ch&acirc;teau
- Margaux and Camembert.</p>
-
- <p>A great cheese for a great wine is the rule that brings
- together in the neighboring provinces such notables as Sainte
- Maure, Valen&ccedil;ay, Vend&ocirc;me and the Loire
- wines&mdash;Vouvray, Saumur and Anjou. Gruy&egrave;re mates
- with Chablis, Camembert with St. Emilion; and any dry red wine,
- most commonly claret, is a fit drink for the hundreds of other
- fine French cheeses.</p>
-
- <p>Every country has such happy marriages, an Italian standard
- being Provolone and Chianti. Then there is a most unusual pair,
- French Neufch&acirc;tel cheese and Swiss Neuch&acirc;tel wine
- from just across the border. Switzerland also has another
- cheese favorite at home&mdash;Trauben (grape cheese), named
- from the Neuch&acirc;tel wine in which it is aged.</p>
-
- <p>One kind of French Neufch&acirc;tel cheese, Bondon, is also
- uniquely suited to the company of any good wine because it is
- made in the exact shape and size of a wine barrel bung. A
- similar relation is found in Brinzas (or Brindzas) that are
- packed in miniature wine barrels, strongly suggesting what
- should be drunk with such excellent cheeses: Hungarian Tokay.
- Other foreign cheeses go to market wrapped in vine leaves. The
- affinity has clearly been laid down in heaven.</p>
-
- <p>Only the English seem to have a <i>fortissimo</i> taste in
- the go-with wines, according to these matches registered by
- Andr&eacute; Simon in <i>The Art of Good Living:</i></p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 156 --><a name="Page_156"
- id="Page_156"></a></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- Red Cheshire with Light Tawny Port<br />
- White Cheshire with Oloroso Sherry<br />
- Blue Leicester with Old Vintage Port<br />
- Green Roquefort with New Vintage Port
- </div>
-
- <p>To these we might add brittle chips of Greek Casere with
- nips of Amontillado, for an eloquent appetizer.</p>
-
- <p>The English also pour port into Stilton, and sundry other
- wines and liquors into Cheddars and such. This doctoring leads
- to fraudulent imitation, however, for either port or stout is
- put into counterfeit Cheshire cheese to make up for the
- richness it lacks.</p>
-
- <p>While some combinations of cheeses and wines may turn out
- palatable, we prefer taking ours straight. When something more
- fiery is needed we can twirl the flecks of pure gold in a
- chalice of Eau de Vie de Danzig and nibble on legitimate Danzig
- cheese unadulterated. <i>Goldwasser</i>, or Eau de Vie, was a
- favorite liqueur of cheese-loving Franklin Roosevelt, and we
- can be sure he took the two separately.</p>
-
- <p>Another perfect combination, if you can take it, is imported
- k&uuml;mmel with any caraway-seeded cheese, or cream cheese
- with a handy saucer of caraway seeds. In the section of France
- devoted to gin, the juniper berries that flavor the drink also
- go into a local cheese, Fromage Fort. This is further fortified
- with brandy, white wine and pepper. One regional tipple with
- such brutally strong cheese is black coffee laced with gin.</p>
-
- <p>French la Jonch&eacute;e is another potted thriller with not
- only coffee and rum mixed in during the making, but orange
- flower water, too. Then there is la Petafina, made with brandy
- and absinthe; Hazebrook with brandy alone; and la Cachat with
- white wine and brandy.</p>
-
- <p>In Italy white Gorgonzola is also put up in crocks with
- brandy. In Oporto the sharp cheese of that name is enlivened by
- port, Cider and the greatest of applejacks, Calvados, seem made
- to go the regional Calvados cheese. This is also true of our
- native Jersey Lightning and hard cider with their accompanying
- New <!-- Page 157 --><a name="Page_157"
- id="Page_157"></a>York State cheese. In the Auge Valley of
- France, farmers also drink homemade cider with their own
- Augelot, a piquant kind of Pont l'Ev&ecirc;que.</p>
-
- <p>The English sip pear cider (perry) with almost any British
- cheese. Milk would seem to be redundant, but Sage cheese and
- buttermilk do go well together.</p>
-
- <p>Wine and cheese have other things in common. Some wines and
- some cheeses are aged in caves, and there are vintage cheeses
- no less than vintage wines, as is the case with Stilton.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 158 --><a name="Page_158"
- id="Page_158"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/158.gif"
- width="450"
- height="390"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Chapter<br />
- Twelve</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>Lazy Lou</h2>
-
- <p>Once, so goes the sad story, there was a cheesemonger
- unworthy of his heritage. He exported a shipload of inferior
- "Swiss" made somewhere in the U.S.A. Bad to begin with, it had
- worsened on the voyage. Rejected by the health authorities on
- the other side, it was shipped back, reaching home in the
- unhappy condition known as "cracked." To cut his losses the
- rascally cheesemonger had his cargo ground up and its flavor
- disguised with hot peppers and chili sauce. Thus there came
- into being the abortion known as the "cheese spread."</p>
-
- <p>The cheese spread or "food" and its cousin, the processed
- cheese, are handy, cheap and nasty. They are available every
- <!-- Page 159 -->
- <a name="Page_159"
- id="Page_159"></a>where and some people even like them. So
- any cheese book is bound to take formal notice of their
- existence. I have done so&mdash;and now, an unfond farewell
- to them.</p>
-
- <p>My academic cheese education began at the University of
- Wisconsin in 1904. I grew up with our great Midwest industry; I
- have read with profit hundreds of pamphlets put out by the
- learned Aggies of my Alma Mater. Mostly they treat of honest,
- natural cheeses: the making, keeping and enjoying of authentic
- Longhorn Cheddars, short Bricks and naturalized Limburgers.</p>
-
- <p>At the School of Agriculture the students still, I am told,
- keep their hand in by studying the classical layout on a cheese
- board. One booklet recommends the following for freshman
- contemplation:</p>
-
- <div class="center">
- <table summary="cheese board layout"
- cellpadding="4">
- <tr>
- <td align="left">CARAWAY BRICK</td>
-
- <td align="left">SELECT BRICK</td>
-
- <td align="left">EDAM</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">WISCONSIN SWISS</td>
-
- <td align="left">LONGHORN AMERICAN</td>
-
- <td align="left">SHEFFORD</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </div>
-
- <p>These six sturdy samples of Wisconsin's best will stimulate
- any amount of classroom discussion. Does the Edam go better
- with German-American black bread or with Swedish Ry-Krisp? To
- butter or not to butter? And if to butter, with which cheese?
- Salt or sweet? How close do we come to the excellence of the
- genuine Alpine Swiss? Primary school stuff, but not unworthy of
- thought.</p>
-
- <p>Pass on down the years. You are now ready to graduate. Your
- cheese board can stand a more sophisticated setup. Try two
- boards; play the teams against each other.</p>
-
- <div class="center">
- <table summary="The All-American Champs"
- cellpadding="2">
- <tr>
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>The All-American Champs</b></td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">NEW YORK COON</td>
-
- <td align="left">PHILADELPHIA CREAM</td>
-
- <td align="left">OHIO LIEDERKRANZ</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">VERMONT SAGE</td>
-
- <td align="left">KENTUCKY TRAPPIST</td>
-
- <td align="left">WISCONSIN LIMBURGER</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="right">CALIFORNIA JACK</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left">PINEAPPLE</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="right">MINNESOTA BLUE</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left">BRICK</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="center">TILLAMOOK</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
- <p><!-- Page 160 --><a name="Page_160"
- id="Page_160"></a></p>
-
- <p class="center"><b>VS.</b></p>
-
- <table summary="The European Giants"
- cellpadding="4">
- <tr>
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left"><b>The European Giants</b></td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">PORTUGUESE TRAZ-</td>
-
- <td align="left">DUTCH GOUDA</td>
-
- <td align="left">ITALIAN PARMESAN</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;OS-MONTES</td>
-
- <td align="left">FRENCH ROQUEFORT</td>
-
- <td align="left">SWISS EMMENTALER</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" align="left">YUGOSLAVIAN KACKAVALJ</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">
- <table summary="more cheese"
- width="80%"
- cellpadding="2">
- <tr>
- <td align="left">ENGLISH STILTON</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left">DANISH BLUE</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">GERMAN M&Uuml;NSTER</td>
-
- <td align="left"></td>
-
- <td align="left">GREEK FETA</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3"
- align="center">HABL&Eacute;</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </div>
-
- <p>The postgraduate may play the game using as counters the
- great and distinctive cheeses of more than fifty countries.
- Your Scandinavian board alone, just to give an idea of the
- riches available, will shine with blues, yellows, whites, smoky
- browns, and chocolates representing Sweden, Norway, Denmark,
- Finland, Iceland and Lapland.</p>
-
- <p>For the Britisher only blue-veined Stilton is worthy to
- crown the banquet. The Frenchman defends Roquefort, the Dane
- his own regal Blue; the Swiss sticks to Emmentaler before,
- during and after all three meals. You may prefer to finish with
- a delicate Brie, a smoky slice of Provolone, a bit of Baby
- Gouda, or some Liptauer Garniert, about which more later.</p>
-
- <p>We load them all on Lazy Lou, Lazy Susan's big twin brother,
- a giant roulette wheel of cheese, every number a winner. A
- second Lazy Lou will bear the savories and go-withs. For these
- tidbits the English have a divine genius; think of the deviled
- shrimps, smoked oysters, herring roe on toast, snips of broiled
- sausage ... But we will make do with some olives and radishes,
- a few pickles, nuts, capers. With our two trusty Lazy Lous on
- hand plus wine or beer, we can easily dispense with the mere
- dinner itself.</p>
-
- <p>Perhaps it is an Italian night. Then Lazy Lou is happily
- burdened with imported Latticini; Incanestrato, still bearing
- the imprint of its wicker basket; Pepato, which is but
- Incanestrato peppered; Mel Fina; deep-yellow, buttery Scanno
- with its slightly burned flavor; tangy Asiago; Caciocavallo, so
- called because the the cheeses, tied in pairs and hung over a
- pole, look as though they <!-- Page 161 --><a name="Page_161"
- id="Page_161"></a> were sitting in a saddle&mdash;cheese on
- horseback, or "<i>cacio a cavallo</i>." Then we ring in Lazy
- Lou's first assistant, an old, silver-plated, revolving
- Florentine magnum-holder. It's designed to spin a gigantic
- flask of Chianti. The flick of a finger and the bottle is
- before you. Gently pull it down and hold your glass to the
- spout.</p>
-
- <p>True, imported wines and cheeses are expensive. But native
- American products and reasonably edible imitations of the real
- thing are available as substitutes. Anyway, protein for
- protein, a cheese party will cost less than a steak barbecue.
- And it can be more fun.</p>
-
- <p>Encourage your guests to contribute their own latest
- discoveries. One may bring along as his ticket of admission a
- Primavera from Brazil; another some cubes of an Andean
- specialty just flown in from Colombia's mountain city,
- M&eacute;rida, and still wrapped in its aromatic leaves of
- <i>Frailej&oacute;n Lanudo</i>; another a few wedges of savory
- sweet English Flower cheese, some flavored with rose petals,
- others with marigolds; another a tube of South American
- Kr&auml;uterk&auml;se.</p>
-
- <p>Provide your own assortment of breads and try to include
- some of those fat, flaky old-fashioned crackers that country
- stores in New England can still supply. Mustard? Sure, if
- <i>.you</i> like it. If you want to be fancy, use a tricky
- little gadget put out by the Maille condiment-makers in France
- and available here in the food specialty shops. It's a
- miniature painter's palate holding five mustards of different
- shades and flavors and two mustard paddles. The mustards, in
- proper chromatic order, are: jonquil yellow "Strong Dijon";
- "Green Herbs"; brownish "Tarragon"; golden "Ora"; crimson
- "Tomato-flavored."</p>
-
- <p>And, just to keep things moving, we have restored an antique
- whirling cruet-holder to deliver Worcestershire sauce, soy
- sauce, A-1, Tap Sauce and Major Grey's Chutney. Salt shakers
- and pepper mills are handy, with a big-holed tin canister
- filled with crushed red-pepper pods, chili powder,
- Hungarian-paprika and such small matters. Butter, both sweet
- and salt, is on hand, together with, saucers or bowls of curry,
- capers, chives (sliced, not <!-- Page 162 --><a name="Page_162"
- id="Page_162"></a>chopped), minced onion, fresh mint leaves,
- chopped pimientos, caraway, quartered lemons, parsley, fresh
- tarragon, tomato slices, red and white radishes, green and
- black olives, pearl onions and assorted nutmeats.</p>
-
- <p>Some years ago, when I was collaborating with my mother,
- Cora, and my wife, Rose, in writing <i>10,000 Snacks</i>
- (which, by the way, devotes nearly forty pages to cheeses), we
- staged a rather elaborate tasting party just for the three of
- us. It took a two-tiered Lazy Lou to twirl the load.</p>
-
- <p>The eight wedges on the top round were English and French
- samples and the lower one carried the rest, as follows:</p>
-
- <div class="center">
- <table summary="cheese tasting Lazy Lou"
- cellpadding="8">
- <tr>
- <td align="left">ENGLISH CHEDDAR</td>
-
- <td align="left">CHESHIRE</td>
-
- <td align="left">ENGLISH STILTON</td>
-
- <td align="left">CANADIAN CHEDDAR (rum flavored)</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">FRENCH M&Uuml;NSTER</td>
-
- <td align="left">FRENCH BRIE</td>
-
- <td align="left">FRENCH CAMEMBERT</td>
-
- <td align="left">FRENCH ROQUEFORT</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">SWISS SAPSAGO</td>
-
- <td align="left">SWISS GRUYERE</td>
-
- <td align="left">SWISS EDAM</td>
-
- <td align="left">DUTCH GOUDA</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td align="left">ITALIAN PROVOLONE</td>
-
- <td align="left">CZECH OSTIEPKI</td>
-
- <td align="left">ITALIAN GORGONZOLA</td>
-
- <td align="left">NORWEGIAN GJETOST</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4"
- align="center">HUNGARIAN LIPTAUER</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </div>
-
- <p>The tasting began with familiar English Cheddars, Cheshires
- and Stiltons from the top row. We had cheese knives, scoops,
- graters, scrapers and a regulation wire saw, but for this line
- of crumbly Britishers fingers were best.</p>
-
- <p>The Cheddar was a light, lemony-yellow, almost white, like
- our best domestic "bar cheese" of old.</p>
-
- <p>The Cheshire was moldy and milky, with a slightly fermented
- flavor that brought up the musty dining room of Fleet Street's
- Cheshire cheese and called for draughts of beer. The Stilton
- was strong but mellow, as high in flavor as in price.</p>
-
- <p>Only the rum-flavored Canadian Cheddar from Montreal (by
- courtesy English) let us down. It was done up as fancy as a
- bridegroom <!-- Page 163 --><a name="Page_163"
- id="Page_163"></a> in waxed white paper and looked as smooth
- and glossy as a gardenia. But there its beauty ended. Either
- the rum that flavored it wasn't up to much or the mixture
- hadn't been allowed to ripen naturally.</p>
-
- <p>The French M&uuml;nster, however, was hearty, cheery, and
- better made than most German M&uuml;nster, which at that time
- wasn't being exported much by the Nazis. The Brie was melting
- prime, the Camembert was so perfectly matured we ate every
- scrap of the crust, which can't be done with many American
- "Camemberts" or, indeed, with the dead, dry French ones sold
- out of season. Then came the Roquefort, a regal cheese we voted
- the best buy of the lot, even though it was the most expensive.
- A plump piece, pleasantly unctuous but not greasy, sharp in
- scent, stimulatingly bittersweet in taste&mdash;unbeatable.
- There is no American pretender to the Roquefort throne. Ours is
- invariably chalky and tasteless. That doesn't mean we have no
- good Blues. We have. But they are not Roquefort.</p>
-
- <p>The Sapsago or Kr&auml;uterk&auml;se from Switzerland (it
- has been made in the Canton of Glarus for over five hundred
- years) was the least expensive of the lot. Well-cured and dry,
- it lent itself to grating and tasted fine on an old-fashioned
- buttered soda cracker. Sapsago has its own seduction, derived
- from the clover-leaf powder with which the curd is mixed and
- which gives it its haunting flavor and spring-like sage-green
- color.</p>
-
- <p>Next came some truly great Swiss Gruy&egrave;re, delicately
- rich, and nutty enough to make us think of the sharp white
- wines to be drunk with it at the source.</p>
-
- <p>As for the Provolone, notable for the water-buffalo milk
- that makes it, there's an example of really grown-up milk.
- Perfumed as spring flowers drenched with a shower of Anjou,
- having a bouquet all its own and a trace of a winelike kick, it
- made us vow never to taste another American imitation. Only a
- smooth-cheeked, thick slab cut from a pedigreed Italian
- Provolone of medium girth, all in one piece and with no sign of
- a crack, satisfy the gourmet.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 164 --><a name="Page_164"
- id="Page_164"></a> The second Italian classic was
- Gorgonzola, gorgeous Gorgonzola, as fruity as apples,
- peaches and pears sliced together. It smells so much like a
- ripe banana we often eat them together, plain or with the
- crumbly <i>formaggio</i> lightly forked into the fruit,
- split lengthwise.</p>
-
- <p>After that the Edam tasted too lipsticky, like the red-paint
- job on its rind, and the Gouda seemed only half-hearted. Both
- too obviously ready-made for commerce with nothing individual
- or custom-made about them, rolled or bounced over from Holland
- by the boat load.</p>
-
- <p>The Ostiepki from Czechoslovakia might have been a link of
- smoked ostrich sausage put up in the skin of its own red neck.
- In spite of its pleasing lemon-yellow interior, we couldn't
- think of any use for it except maybe crumbling thirty or forty
- cents' worth into a ten-cent bowl of bean soup. But that seemed
- like a waste of money, so we set it aside to try in tiny chunks
- on crackers as an appetizer some other day, when it might be
- more appetizing.</p>
-
- <p>We felt much the same about the chocolate-brown Norwegian
- Gjetost that looked like a slab of boarding-school fudge and
- which had the same cloying cling to the tongue. We were told by
- a native that our piece was entirely too young. That's what
- made it so insipid, undeveloped in texture and flavor. But the
- next piece we got turned out to be too old and decrepit, and so
- strong it would have taken a Paul Bunyan to stand up under it.
- When we complained to our expert about the shock to our
- palates, he only laughed, pointing to the nail on his little
- finger.</p>
-
- <p>"You should take just a little bit, like that. A pill no
- bigger than a couple of aspirins or an Alka-Seltzer. It's only
- in the morning you take it when it's old and strong like this,
- for a pick-me-up, a cure for a hangover, you know, like a
- prairie oyster well soused in Worcestershire."</p>
-
- <p>That made us think we might use it up to flavor a Welsh
- Rabbit, <i>instead</i> of the Worcestershire sauce, but we
- couldn't melt it with anything less than a blowtorch.</p>
-
- <p>To bring the party to a happy end, we went to town on the
- <!-- Page 165 --><a name="Page_165"
- id="Page_165"></a> Hungarian Liptauer, garnishing that fine,
- granulating buttery base after mixing it well with some
- cream cheese. We mixed the mixed cheese with sardine and
- tuna mashed together in a little of the oil from the can. We
- juiced it with lemon, sluiced it with bottled sauces, worked
- in the leftovers, some tarragon, mint, spicy seeds, parsley,
- capers and chives. We peppered and paprikaed it, salted and
- spiced it, then spread it thicker than butter on
- pumpernickel and went to it. <i>That's</i> Liptauer
- Garniert.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 166 --><a name="Page_166"
- id="Page_166"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/166.gif"
- width="450"
- height="290"
- alt="No. 4 Cheese Inc." />
- </div>
-
- <div class="rightalign">
- <i>Appendix</i>
- </div>
-
- <h2>The A-B-Z of Cheese</h2>
-
- <p><i>Each cheese is listed by its name and country of origin,
- with any further information available. Unless otherwise
- indicated, the cheese is made of cow's milk.</i></p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_A"
- id="AtoZ_A"></a><br />
- A</h3>
-
- <p><b>Aberdeen</b><br />
- <i>Scotland</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; creamy mellow.</p>
-
- <p><b>Abertam</b><br />
- <i>Bohemia</i> <i>(Made near Carlsbad</i>)</p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep; distinctive, with a savory smack all its
- own.</p>
-
- <p><b>Absinthe</b> <i>see</i> Petafina.</p>
-
- <p><b>Acidophilus</b> <i>see</i> Saint-Ivel.</p>
-
- <p><b>Aettekees</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>November to May&mdash;winter-made and eaten.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 167 --><a name="Page_167"
- id="Page_167"></a> <b>Affin&eacute;, Carr&eacute;</b>
- <i>see</i> Ancien Imp&eacute;rial.</p>
-
- <p><b>Affumicata, Mozzarella</b> <i>see</i> Mozzarella.</p>
-
- <p><b>After-dinner cheeses</b> <i>see</i>
- <a href="#Page_111">Chapter 8</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Agricultural school cheeses</b> <i>see</i>
- College-educated.</p>
-
- <p><b>Aiguilles, Fromage d'</b><br />
- <i>Alpine France</i></p>
-
- <p>Named "Cheese of the Needles" from the sharp Alpine peaks of
- the district where it is made.</p>
-
- <p><b>Aizy, Cendr&eacute;e d'</b> <i>see</i>
- Cendr&eacute;e.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ajacilo, Ajaccio</b><br />
- <i>Corsica</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; piquant; nut-flavor. Named after the chief city of
- French Corsica where a cheese-lover, Napoleon, was born.</p>
-
- <p><b>&agrave; la Cr&egrave;me</b> <i>see</i> Fromage, Fromage
- Blanc, Chevretons.</p>
-
- <p><b>&agrave; la Main</b> <i>see</i> Vacherin.</p>
-
- <p><b>&agrave; la Pie</b> <i>see</i> Fromage.</p>
-
- <p><b>&agrave; la Rachette</b> <i>see</i> Bagnes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Albini</b><br />
- <i>Northern Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; made of both goat and cow milk; white, mellow,
- pleasant-tasting table cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Albula</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Rich with the flavor of cuds of green herbs chewed into
- creamy milk that makes tasty curds. Made in the fertile Swiss
- Valley of Albula whose proud name it bears.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alderney</b><br />
- <i>Channel Islands</i></p>
-
- <p>The French, who are fond of this special product of the very
- special breed of cattle <!-- Page 168 --><a name="Page_168"
- id="Page_168"></a> named after the Channel Island of
- Alderney, translate it phonetically&mdash;Fromage
- d'Aurigny.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alemtejo</b><br />
- <i>Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>Called in full Queijo de Alemtejo, cheese of Alemtejo, in
- the same way that so many French cheeses carry along the
- <i>fromage</i> title. Soft; sheep and sometimes goat or cow; in
- cylinders of three sizes, weighing respectively about two
- ounces, one pound, and four pounds. The smaller sizes are the
- ones most often made with mixed goat and sheep milk. The method
- of curdling without the usual animal rennet is interesting and
- unusual. The milk is warmed and curdled with vegetable rennet
- made from the flowers of a local thistle, or cardoon, which is
- used in two other Portuguese cheeses&mdash;Queijo da Cardiga
- and Queijo da Serra da Estrella&mdash;and probably in many
- others not known beyond their locale. In France la Caillebotte
- is distinguished for being clabbered with <i>chardonnette</i>,
- wild artichoke seed. In Portugal, where there isn't so much
- separating of the sheep from the goats, it takes several weeks
- for Alemtejos to ripen, depending on the lactic content and
- difference in sizes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alfalfa</b> <i>see</i> Sage.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alise Saint-Reine</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; summer-made.</p>
-
- <p><b>Allg&auml;uer Bergk&auml;se, Allg&auml;uer Rundk&auml;se,
- or Allg&auml;uer Emmentaler</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; Emmentaler type. The small district of Allg&auml;u
- names a mountain of cheeses almost as fabulous as our
- "Rock-candy Mountain." There are two principal kinds, vintage
- Allg&auml;uer Bergk&auml;se <!-- Page 169 -->
- <a name="Page_169"
- id="Page_169"></a>and soft Allg&auml;uer Rahmk&auml;se,
- described below. This celebrated cheese section runs through
- rich pasture lands right down and into the Swiss Valley of
- the Emme that gives the name Emmentaler to one of the
- world's greatest. So it is no wonder that Allg&auml;uer
- Bergk&auml;se can compete with the best Swiss. Before the
- Russian revolution, in fact, all vintage cheeses of
- Allg&auml;u were bought up by wealthy Russian noblemen and
- kept in their home caves in separate compartments for each
- year, as far back as the early 1900's. As with fine vintage
- wines, the price of the great years went up steadily. Such
- cheeses were shipped to their Russian owners only when the
- chief cheese-pluggers of Allg&auml;u found they had reached
- their prime.</p>
-
- <p><b>Allg&auml;uer Rahmk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria</i></p>
-
- <p>Full cream, similar to Romadur and Limburger, but milder
- than both. This sets a high grade for similar cheeses made in
- the Bavarian mountains, in monasteries such as Andechs. It goes
- exquisitely with the rich dark Bavarian beer. Some of it is as
- slippery as the stronger, smellier Bierk&auml;se, or the
- old-time Slipcote of England. Like so many North Europeans, it
- is often flavored with caraway. Although entirely different
- from its big brother, vintage Bergk&auml;se, Rahmk&auml;se can
- stand proudly at its side as one of the finest cheeses in
- Germany.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alpe</b> <i>see</i> Fiore di Alpe.</p>
-
- <p><b>Al Pepe</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard and peppery, like its name. Similar to Pepato
- (<i>see</i>).</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 170 --><a name="Page_170"
- id="Page_170"></a> <b>Alpes</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Bel Paese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alpestra</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>A smoked cheese that tastes, smells and inhales like
- whatever fish it was smoked with. The French Alps has a
- different Alpestre; Italy spells hers Alpestro.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alpestre, Alpin, or Fromage de Brian&ccedil;on</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; goat; dry; small; lightly salted. Made at
- Brian&ccedil;on and Gap.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alpestro</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; goat; dry; lightly salted.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alpin or Cl&eacute;rimbert</b><br />
- <i>Alpine France</i></p>
-
- <p>The milk is coagulated with rennet at 80&deg; F. in two
- hours. The curd is dipped into molds three to four inches in
- diameter and two and a half inches in height, allowed to drain,
- turned several times for one day only, then salted and ripened
- one to two weeks.</p>
-
- <p><b>Altenburg, or Altenburger Ziegenk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; goat; small and flat&mdash;one to two inches thick,
- eight inches in diameter, weight two pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Alt Kuhk&auml;se Old Cow Cheese</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; well-aged, as its simple name suggests.</p>
-
- <p><b>Altsohl</b> <i>see</i> Brinza.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ambert, or Fourme d'Ambert</b><br />
- <i>Limagne, Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A kind of Cheddar made from November to May and belonging to
- the Cantal&mdash;Fourme-La Tome tribe.</p>
-
- <p><b>American, American Cheddar</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Described under their home states and distinctive names are
- a dozen fine American Cheddars, such as Coon, Wiscon
- <!-- Page 171 -->
- <a name="Page_171"
- id="Page_171"></a>sin, Herkimer County and Tillamook, to
- name only a few. They come in as many different shapes, with
- traditional names such as Daisies, Flats, Longhorns,
- Midgets, Picnics, Prints and Twins. The ones simply called
- Cheddars weigh about sixty pounds. All are made and pressed
- and ripened in about the same way, although they differ
- greatly in flavor and quality. They are ripened anywhere
- from two months to two years and become sharper, richer and
- more flavorsome, as well as more expensive, with the passing
- of time. <i>See</i> Cheddar states and Cheddar types in
- <a href="#Page_37">Chapter 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Americano Romano</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; brittle; sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Amou</b><br />
- <i>B&eacute;arn, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Winter cheese, October to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Anatolian</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Anchovy Links</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>American processed cheese that can be mixed up with
- anchovies or any fish from whitebait to whale, made like a
- sausage and sold in handy links.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ancien Imp&eacute;rial</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; fresh cream; white, mellow and creamy like
- Neufch&acirc;tel and made in the same way. Tiny bricks packaged
- in tin foil, two inches square, one-half inch thick, weighing
- three ounces. Eaten both fresh and when ripe. It is also called
- Carr&eacute; and has separate names for the new and the old:
- (a) Petit Carr&eacute; when newly made; (b) Carr&eacute;
- Affin&eacute;, when it has reached a ripe old age, which
- doesn't take long&mdash;about the same time as
- Neufch&acirc;tel.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 172 --><a name="Page_172"
- id="Page_172"></a><b>Ancona</b> <i>see</i> Pecorino.</p>
-
- <p><b>Andean</b><br />
- <i>Venezuela</i></p>
-
- <p>A cow's-milker made in the Andes near M&eacute;rida. It is
- formed into rough cubes and wrapped in the pungent, aromatic
- leaves of <i>Frailej&oacute;n Lanudo</i> (<i>Espeletia
- Schultzii</i>) which imparts to it a characteristic flavor.
- (Description given in <i>Buen Provecho!</i> by Dorothy
- Kamen-Kaye.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Andechs</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria</i></p>
-
- <p>A lusty Allg&auml;uer type. Monk-made on the monastery hill
- at Andechs on Ammersee. A superb snack with equally monkish
- dark beer, black bread and blacker radishes, served by the
- brothers in dark brown robes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Antwerp</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; nut-flavored; named after its place of origin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Appenzeller</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland, Bavaria and Baden</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft Emmentaler type made in a small twenty-pound
- wheel&mdash;a pony-cart wheel in comparison to the big Swiss.
- There are two qualities: (a) Common, made of skim milk and
- cured in brine for a year; (b) Festive, full milk, steeped in
- brine with wine, plus white wine lees and pepper. The only
- cheese we know of that is ripened with lees of wine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Appetitost</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; sour milk; nutlike flavor. It's an appetizer that
- lives up to its name, eaten fresh on the spot, from the loose
- bottom pans in which it is made.</p>
-
- <p><b>Appetost</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Sour buttermilk, similar to Primula, with caraway seeds
- added for snap. Imitated in U.S.A.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 173 --><a name="Page_173"
- id="Page_173"></a><b>Apple</b> <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A small New York State Cheddar put up in the form of a
- red-cheeked apple for New York City trade. Inspired by the
- pear-shaped Provolone and Baby Gouda, no doubt.</p>
-
- <p><b>Arber</b><br />
- <i>Bohemia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; sour milk; yellow; mellow and creamy. Made in
- mountains between Bohemia and Silesia.</p>
-
- <p><b>Argentine</b><br />
- <i>Argentina</i></p>
-
- <p>Argentina is specially noted for fine reproductions of
- classical Italian hard-grating cheeses such as Parmesan and
- Romano, rich and fruity because of the lush pampas-grass
- feeding.</p>
-
- <p><b>Armavir</b><br />
- <i>Western Caucasus</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; whole sour sheep milk; a hand cheese made by stirring
- cold, sour buttermilk or whey into heated milk, pressing in
- forms and ripening in a warm place. Similar to Hand cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Arnauten</b> <i>see</i> Travnik.</p>
-
- <p><b>Arovature</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Water-buffalo milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Arras, Coeurs d'</b> <i>see</i> Coeurs.</p>
-
- <p><b>Arrigny</b><br />
- <i>Champagne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made only in winter, November to May. Since gourmet products
- of the same province often have a special affinity, Arrigny and
- champagne are specially well suited to one another.</p>
-
- <p><b>Artichoke, Cardoon or Thistle for Rennet</b> <i>see</i>
- Caillebotte.</p>
-
- <p><b>Artificial Dessert Cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>In the lavish days of olde England Artificial Dessert Cheese
- was made by mixing <!-- Page 174 --><a name="Page_174"
- id="Page_174"></a> one quart of cream with two of milk and
- spiking it with powdered cinnamon, nutmeg and mace. Four
- beaten eggs were then stirred in with one-half cup of white
- vinegar and the mixture boiled to a curd. It was then poured
- into a cheesecloth and hung up to drain six to eight hours.
- When taken out of the cloth it was further flavored with
- rose water, sweetened with castor sugar, left to ripen for
- an hour or two and finally served up with more cream.</p>
-
- <p><b>Asadero, or Oaxaca</b><br />
- <i>Jalisco and Oaxaca, Mexico</i></p>
-
- <p>White; whole-milk. Curd is heated, and hot curd is cut and
- braided or kneaded into loaves from eight ounces to eleven
- pounds in weight Asadero means "suitable for roasting."</p>
-
- <p><b>Asco</b><br />
- <i>Corsica, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made only in the winter season, October to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Asiago I, II and III</b><br />
- <i>Vicenza, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Sometimes classed as medium and mild, depending mostly on
- age. Loaves weigh about eighteen pounds each and look like
- American Cheddar but have a taste all their own.</p>
-
- <p>I. Mild, nutty and sharp, used for table slicing and
- eating.</p>
-
- <p>II. Medium, semihard and tangy, also used for slicing until
- nine months old.</p>
-
- <p>III. Hard, old, dry, sharp, brittle. When over nine months
- old, it's fine for grating.</p>
-
- <p><b>Asin, or Water cheese</b><br />
- <i>Northern Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Sour-milk; washed-curd; whitish; soft; buttery. Made mostly
- in spring and eaten in summer and autumn. Dessert
- <!-- Page 175 --><a name="Page_175"
- id="Page_175"></a> cheese, frequently eaten with honey and
- fruit.</p>
-
- <p><b>Au Cumin</b><br />
- <i>see</i> M&uuml;nster.</p>
-
- <p><b>Au Fenouil</b><br />
- <i>see</i> Tome de Savoie.</p>
-
- <p><b>Au Foin and de Foin</b></p>
-
- <p>A style of ripening "on the hay." <i>See</i> Pithiviers au
- Foin and Fromage de Foin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Augelot</b><br />
- <i>Val&eacute;e d'Auge, Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; tangy; piquant Pont l'Ev&ecirc;que type.</p>
-
- <p><b>d'Auray</b> <i>see</i> Sainte-Anne.</p>
-
- <p><b>Aurigny, Fromage d'</b> <i>see</i> Alderney.</p>
-
- <p><b>Aurillac</b> <i>see</i> Bleu d'Auvergne.</p>
-
- <p><b>Aurore and Triple Aurore</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made and eaten all year.</p>
-
- <p><b>Australian and New Zealand</b><br />
- <i>Australia and New Zealand</i></p>
-
- <p>Enough cheese is produced for local consumption, chiefly
- Cheddar; some Gruy&egrave;re, but unfortunately mostly
- processed.</p>
-
- <p><b>Autun</b><br />
- <i>Nivernais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Produced and eaten all year. Fromage de Vache is another
- name for it and this is of special interest in a province where
- the chief competitors are made of goat's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Auvergne, Bleu d'</b> <i>see</i> Bleu.</p>
-
- <p><b>Au Vin Blanc, Confits</b> <i>see</i> Epoisses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Avesnes, Boulette d'</b> <i>see</i> Boulette.</p>
-
- <p><b>Aydes, les</b><br />
- <i>Orl&eacute;anais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Not eaten during July, August or September. Season, October
- to June.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 176 --><a name="Page_176"
- id="Page_176"></a> <b>Azeit&atilde;o, Queijo do</b><br />
- <i>Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, sheep, sapid and extremely oily as the superlative
- <i>&atilde;o</i> implies. There are no finer, fatter cheeses in
- the world than those made of rich sheep milk in the mountains
- of Portugal and named for them.</p>
-
- <p><b>Azeitoso</b><br />
- <i>Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; mellow, zestful and as oily as it is named.</p>
-
- <p><b>Azuldoch Mountain</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Mild and mellow mountain product.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_B"
- id="AtoZ_B"></a><br />
- B</h3>
-
- <p><b>Backsteiner</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria</i></p>
-
- <p>Resembles Limburger, but smaller, and translates Brick, from
- the shape. It is aromatic and piquant and not very much like
- the U.S. Brick.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bagnes, or Fromage &agrave; la Raclette</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Not only hard but very hard, named from <i>racler</i>,
- French for "scrape." A thick, one-half-inch slice is cut across
- the whole cheese and toasted until runny. It is then scraped
- off the pan it's toasted in with a flexible knife, spread on
- bread and eaten like an open-faced Welsh Rabbit sandwich.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bagozzo, Grana Bagozzo, Bresciano</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; yellow; sharp. Surface often colored red. Parmesan
- type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bakers' cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>Skim milk, similar to cottage cheese, but softer and finer
- grained. Used in making bakery products such as cheese cake,
- pie, and pastries, but may also be eaten like creamed cottage
- cheese.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 177 --><a name="Page_177"
- id="Page_177"></a> <b>Ball</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Made from thick sour milk in Pennsylvania in the style of
- the original Pennsylvania Dutch settlers.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ballak&auml;se or Womelsdorf</b></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Ball.</p>
-
- <p><b>Balls, Dutch Red</b></p>
-
- <p>English name for Edam.</p>
-
- <p><b>Banbury</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, rich cylinder about one inch thick made in the town of
- Banbury, famous for its spicy, citrus-peel buns and its
- equestrienne. Banbury cheese with Banbury buns made a
- sensational snack in the early nineteenth century, but both are
- getting scarce today.</p>
-
- <p><b>Banick</b><br />
- <i>Armenia</i></p>
-
- <p>White and sweet.</p>
-
- <p><b>Banjaluka</b><br />
- <i>Bosnia</i></p>
-
- <p>Port-Salut type from its Trappist monastery.</p>
-
- <p><b>Banon, or les Petits Banons</b><br />
- <i>Provence, France,</i></p>
-
- <p>Small, dried, sheep-milker, made in the foothills of the
- Alps and exported through Marseilles in season, May to
- November. This sprightly summer cheese is generously sprinkled
- with the local brandy and festively wrapped in fresh green
- leaves.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bar cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Any saloon Cheddar, formerly served on every free-lunch
- counter in the U.S. Before Prohibition, free-lunch cheese was
- the backbone of America's cheese industry.</p>
-
- <p><b>Barbacena</b><br />
- <i>Minas Geraes, Brazil</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, white, sometimes chalky. Named from its home city in
- the leading cheese state of Brazil.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 178 --><a name="Page_178"
- id="Page_178"></a> <b>Barberey, or Fromage de
- Troyes</b><br />
- <i>Champagne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, creamy and smooth, resembling Camembert, five to six
- inches in diameter and 1&frac14; inches thick. Named from its
- home town, Barberey, near Troyes, whose name it also bears.
- Fresh, warm milk is coagulated by rennet in four hours. Uncut
- curd then goes into a wooden mold with a perforated bottom, to
- drain three hours, before being finished off in an earthenware
- mold. The cheeses are salted, dried and ripened three weeks in
- a cave. The season is from November to May and when made in
- summer they are often sold fresh.</p>
-
- <p><b>Barboux</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft.</p>
-
- <p><b>Baronet</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A natural product, mild and mellow.</p>
-
- <p><b>Barron</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bassillac</b> <i>see</i> Bleu.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bath</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Gently made, lightly salted, drained on a straw mat in the
- historic resort town of Bath. Ripened in two weeks and eaten
- only when covered with a refined fuzzy mold that's also
- eminently edible. It is the most delicate of English-speaking
- cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Battelmatt</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland, St. Gothard Alps, northern Italy, and western
- Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>An Emmentaler made small where milk is not plentiful. The
- "wheel" is only sixteen inches in diameter and four inches
- high, weighing forty to eighty pounds. The cooking of the curd
- is done at a little lower temperature than Emmentaler, it
- ripens more rapidly&mdash;in four months &mdash;
- <!-- Page 179 --><a name="Page_179"
- id="Page_179"></a> and is somewhat softer, but has the same
- holes and creamy though sharp, full nutty flavor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bauden</b> (<i>see also</i> Koppen)<br />
- <i>Germany, Austria, Bohemia and Silesia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft, sour milk, hand type, made in herders' mountain
- huts in about the same way as Harzk&auml;se, though it is
- bigger. In two forms, one cup shape (called Koppen), the other
- a cylinder. Strong and aromatic, whether made with or without
- caraway.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bavarian Beer cheese</b> <i>see</i> Bayrischer
- Bierk&auml;se.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bavarian Cream</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>Very soft; smooth and creamy. Made in the Bavarian
- mountains. Especially good with sweet wines and sweet
- sauces.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bavarois &agrave; la Vanille</b> <i>see</i> Fromage
- Bavarois.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bayonne</b> <i>see</i> Fromage de Bayonne.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bayrischer Bierk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria</i></p>
-
- <p>Bavarian beer cheese from the Tyrol is made not only to eat
- with beer, but to dunk in it.</p>
-
- <p><b>Beads of cheese</b><br />
- <i>Tibet</i></p>
-
- <p>Beads of hard cheese, two inches in diameter, are strung
- like a necklace of cowrie shells or a rosary, fifty to a
- hundred on a string. <i>Also see</i> Money Made of Cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Beagues</b> <i>see</i> Tome de Savoie.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bean Cake, Tao-foo, or Tofu</b><br />
- <i>China, Japan, the Orient</i></p>
-
- <p>Soy bean cheese imported from Shanghai and other oriental
- ports, and also imitated in every Chinatown around the world.
- Made from the milk of beans and curdled with its own vegetable
- rennet.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 180 --><a name="Page_180"
- id="Page_180"></a> <b>Beaujolais</b> <i>see</i>
- Chevretons.</p>
-
- <p><b>Beaumont, or Tome de Beaumont</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A more or less successful imitation of Trappist Tamie, a
- trade-secret triumph of Savoy. At its best from October to
- June.</p>
-
- <p><b>Beaupr&eacute; de Roybon</b><br />
- <i>Dauphin&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A winter specialty made from November to April.</p>
-
- <p><b>Beckenried</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>A good mountain cheese from goat milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Beer cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>While our beer cheese came from Germany and the word is
- merely a translation of Bierk&auml;se, we use it chiefly for a
- type of strong Limburger made mostly in Milwaukee. This fine,
- aromatic cheese is considered by many as the very best to eat
- while drinking beer. But in Germany Bierk&auml;se is more apt
- to be dissolved in a glass or stein of beer, much as we mix
- malted powder in milk, and drunk with it, rather than
- eaten.</p>
-
- <p><b>Beer-Regis</b><br />
- <i>Dorsetshire, England</i></p>
-
- <p>This sounds like another beer cheese, but it's only a mild
- Cheddar named after its hometown in Dorsetshire.</p>
-
- <p><b>Beist-Cheese</b><br />
- <i>Scotland</i></p>
-
- <p>A curiosity of the old days. "The first milk after a
- calving, boiled or baked to a thick consistency, the result
- somewhat resembling new-made cheese, though this is clearly not
- a true cheese." (MacNeill)</p>
-
- <p><b>Belarno</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; goat; creamy dessert cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Belgian Cooked</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>The milk, which has been allowed to curdle spontaneously, is
- skimmed and allowed to drain. When dry it is thoroughly kneaded
- by hand and is allowed <!-- Page 181 --><a name="Page_181"
- id="Page_181"></a> to undergo fermentation, which takes
- ordinarily from ten to fourteen days in winter and six to
- eight days in summer. When the fermentation is complete,
- cream and salt are added and the mixture is heated slowly
- and stirred until homogeneous, when it is put into molds and
- allowed to ripen for eight days longer. A cheese ordinarily
- weighs about three-and-a-half pounds. It is not essentially
- different from other forms of cooked cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Beli Sir</b> <i>see</i> Domaci.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bellelay, T&ecirc;te de Moine, or Monk's Head</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, buttery, semisharp spread. Sweet milk is coagulated
- with rennet in twenty to thirty minutes, the curd cut fairly
- fine and cooked not so firm as Emmentaler, but firmer than
- Limburger. After being pressed, the cheeses are wrapped in bark
- for a couple of weeks until they can stand alone. Since no eyes
- are desired in the cheeses, they are ripened in a moist cellar
- at a lowish temperature. They take a year to ripen and will
- keep three or four years. The diameter is seven inches, the
- weight nine to fifteen pounds. The monk's head after cutting is
- kept wrapped in a napkin soaked in white wine and the soft,
- creamy spread is scraped out to "butter" bread and snacks that
- go with more white wine. Such combinations of old wine and old
- cheese suggest monkish influence, which began here in the
- fifteenth century with the jolly friars of the Canton of Bern.
- There it is still made exclusively and not exported, for
- there's never quite enough to go around.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 182 --><a name="Page_182"
- id="Page_182"></a> <b>Bel Paese</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p><i>See under</i> <a href="#Page_17">Foreign Greats, Chapter
- 3</a>. <i>Also see</i> Mel Fino, a blend, and Bel Paese
- types&mdash;French Boudanne and German Saint Stefano. The
- American imitation is not nearly so good as the Italian
- original.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bel Paesino</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A play on the Bel Paese name and fame. Weight one pound and
- diminutive in every other way.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bergk&auml;se</b> <i>see</i> Allg&auml;uer.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bergquara</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard, fat, resembles Dutch Gouda. Tangy, pleasant taste.
- Gets sharper with age, as they all do. Molded in cylinders of
- fifteen to forty pounds. Popular in Sweden since the eighteenth
- century.</p>
-
- <p><b>Berkeley</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Named after its home town in Gloucester, England.</p>
-
- <p><b>Berliner Kuhk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Berlin, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Cow cheese, pet-named turkey cock cheese by Berlin students.
- Typical German hand cheese, soft; aromatic with caraway seeds,
- and that's about the only difference between it and Alt
- Kuhk&auml;se, without caraway.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bernarde, Formagelle Bernarde</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Cow's whole milk, to which about 10% of goat's milk is added
- for flavor. Cured for two months.</p>
-
- <p><b>Berques</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made of skim milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Berry Rennet</b> <i>see</i> Withania.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bessay, le</b><br />
- <i>Bourbonnais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, mild, and creamy.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 183 --><a name="Page_183"
- id="Page_183"></a> <b>Bexhill</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream cheeses, small, flat, round. Excellent munching.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bierk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>There are several of these unique beer cheeses that are
- actually dissolved in a stein of beer and drunk down with it in
- the Bierstubes, notably Bayrischer, Dresdener, and
- Olm&uuml;tzer. Semisoft; aromatic; sharp. Well imitated in
- <i>echt Deutsche</i> American spots such as Milwaukee and
- Hoboken.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bifrost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat; white; mildly salt. Imitated in a process spread in
- 4&frac14;-ounce package.</p>
-
- <p><b>Binn</b><br />
- <i>Wallis, Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Exceptionally fine Swiss from the great cheese canton of
- Wallis.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bitto</b><br />
- <i>Northern Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard Emmentaler type made in the Valtellina. It is really
- two cheeses in one. When eaten fresh, it is smooth, sapid,
- big-eyed Swiss. When eaten after two years of ripening, it is
- very hard and sharp and has small eyes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blanc &agrave; la cr&egrave;me</b> <i>see</i> Fromage
- Blanc.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blanc</b> <i>see</i> Fromage Blanc I and II.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bleu</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Brittle; blue-veined; smooth; biting.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bleu d'Auvergne or Fromage Bleu</b><br />
- <i>Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep or mixed sheep, goat or cow; from Pontgibaud and
- Laqueuille ripening caves. Similar to better-known Cantal of
- the same province. Akin to Roquefort and Stilton, and to Bleu
- de Laqueuille.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bleu de Bassillac</b><br />
- <i>Limousin, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Blue mold of Roquefort type that's prime from November to
- May.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 184 --><a name="Page_184"
- id="Page_184"></a> <b>Bleu de Laqueuille</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Bleu d'Auvergne, but with a different savor.
- Named for its originator, Antoine Roussel-Laqueuille, who first
- made it a century ago, in 1854.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bleu de Limousin, Fromage</b><br />
- <i>Lower Limousin</i></p>
-
- <p>Practically the same as Bleu de Bassillac, from Lower
- Limousin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bleu de Salers</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A variety of Bleu d'Auvergne from the same province
- distinguished for its blues that are green. With the majority,
- this is at its best only in the winter months, from November to
- May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bleu, Fromage</b> <i>see</i> Bleu d'Auvergne.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bleu-Olivet</b> <i>see</i> Olivet.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blind</b></p>
-
- <p>The name for cheeses lacking the usual holes of the type
- they belong to, such as blind Swiss.</p>
-
- <p><b>Block Edam</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>U.S. imitation of the classical Dutch cheese named after the
- town of Edam.</p>
-
- <p><b>Block, Smoked</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>The name is self-explanatory and suggests a well-colored
- meerschaum.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bloder, or Schlicker Milch</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Sour-milker.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blue Cheddar</b> <i>see</i> Cheshire-Stilton.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blue, Danish</b> <i>see</i> Danish Blue.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blue Dorset</b> <i>see</i> Dorset.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blue, Jura</b> <i>see</i> Jura Bleu and Septmoncel.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blue, and Blue with Port Links</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>One of the modern American process sausages.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 185 --><a name="Page_185"
- id="Page_185"></a> <b>Blue, Minnesota</b> <i>see</i>
- Minnesota.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blue Moon</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A process product.</p>
-
- <p><b>Blue Vinny, Blue Vinid, Blue-veined Dorset, or Double
- Dorset</b><br />
- <i>Dorsetshire, England</i></p>
-
- <p>A unique Blue that actually isn't green-veined. Farmers make
- it for private consumption, because it dries up too easily to
- market. An epicurean esoteric match for Truckles No. 1 of
- Wiltshire. It comes in a flat form, chalk-white, crumbly and
- sharply flavored, with a "royal Blue" vein running right
- through horizontally. The Vinny mold, from which it was named,
- is different from all other cheese molds and has a different
- action.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bocconi Geganti</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Sharp and smoky specialty.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bocconi Provoloni</b> <i>see</i> Provolone.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bo&icirc;te</b> <i>see</i> Fromage de Bo&icirc;te.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bombay</b><br />
- <i>India</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; goat; dry; sharp. Good to crunch with a Bombay Duck in
- place of a cracker.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bondes</b> <i>see</i> Bondon de Neufch&acirc;tel.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bondon de Neufch&acirc;tel, or Bondes</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Nicknamed <i>Bonde &agrave; tout bien</i>, from resemblance
- to the bung in a barrel of Neuch&acirc;tel wine. Soft, small
- loaf rolls, fresh and mild. Similar to Gournay, but sweeter
- because of 2% added sugar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bondon de Rouen</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A fresh Neufch&acirc;tel, similar to Petit Suisse, but
- slightly salted, to last up to ten days.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 186 --><a name="Page_186"
- id="Page_186"></a> <b>Bondost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>When caraway seed is added this is called Kommenost, spelled
- Kuminost in Norway.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bond Ost</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation of Scandinavian cheese, with small production in
- Wisconsin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bon Larron</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Romantically named "the penitent thief."</p>
-
- <p><b>Borden's</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A full line of processed and naturals, of which Liederkranz
- is the leader.</p>
-
- <p><b>Borelli</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A small water-buffalo cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bossons Maceres</b><br />
- <i>Provence, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A winter product, December, January, February and March
- only.</p>
-
- <p><b>Boudanne</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Whole or skimmed cow's milk, ripens in two to three
- months.</p>
-
- <p><b>Boudes, Boudon</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, fresh, smooth, creamy, mild child of the
- Neufch&acirc;tel family.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bougon Lamothe</b> <i>see</i> Lamothe.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bouill&eacute;, la</b><br />
- <i>Normandy France</i></p>
-
- <p>One of this most prolific province's thirty different
- notables. In season October to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Boule de Lille</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Name given to Belgian Oude Kaas by the French who enjoy
- it.</p>
-
- <p><b>Boulette d'Avesnes</b>, or <b>Boulette de
- Cambrai</b><br />
- <i>Flanders, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made from November to May, eaten all year.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bourgain</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Type of fresh Neufch&acirc;tel made in France. Perishable
- and consumed locally.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 187 --><a name="Page_187"
- id="Page_187"></a> <b>Bourgognes</b> <i>see</i> Petits
- Bourgognes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Box</b><br />
- <i>W&uuml;rttemberg, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to U.S. Brick. It comes in two styles; firm, and
- soft:</p>
-
- <p>I. Also known as Schachtelk&auml;se, Boxed Cheese; and
- Hohenheim, where it is made. A rather unimportant variety. Made
- in a copper kettle, with partially skim milk, colored with
- saffron and spiked with caraway, a handful to every two hundred
- pounds. Salted and ripened for three months and shipped in
- wooden boxes.</p>
-
- <p>II. Also known by names of localities where made: Hohenburg,
- Mondess and Weihenstephan. Made of whole milk. Mild but
- piquant.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bra No. I</b><br />
- <i>Piedmont, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, round form, twelve inches in diameter, three inches
- high, weight twelve pounds. A somewhat romantic cheese, made by
- nomads who wander with their herds from pasture to pasture in
- the region of Bra.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bra No. II</b><br />
- <i>Turin and Cuneo, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, creamy, small, round and mild although cured in
- brine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brand or Brandk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, sour-milk hand cheese, weighing one-third of a pound.
- The curd is cooked at a high temperature, then salted and set
- to ferment for a day. Butter is then mixed into it before
- pressing into small bricks. After drying it is put in used beer
- kegs to ripen and is frequently moistened with beer while
- curing.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brandy</b> <i>see</i> Caledonian, Cream.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 188 --><a name="Page_188"
- id="Page_188"></a> <b>Branja de Brailia</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep; extra salty because always kept in brine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Branja de Cosulet</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>Described by Richard Wyndham in <i>Wine and Food</i>
- (Winter, 1937): A creamy sheep's cheese which is encased in
- pine bark. My only criticism of this most excellent cheese is
- that the center must always remain a gastronomical second best.
- It is no more interesting than a good English Cheddar, while
- the outer crust has a scented, resinous flavor which must be
- unique among cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bratk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Strong; specially made to roast in slices over coal. Fine,
- grilled on toast.</p>
-
- <p><b>Breakfast, Fr&uuml;hst&uuml;ck, Lunch, Delikat, and other
- names</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft and delicate, but with a strong tang. Small round, for
- spreading. Lauterbach is a well-known breakfast cheese in
- Germany, while in Switzerland Emmentaler is eaten at all three
- meals.</p>
-
- <p><b>Breakstone</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Like Borden and other leading American cheesemongers and
- manufacturers, Breakstone offer a full line, of which their
- cream cheese is an American product to be proud of.</p>
-
- <p><b>Br&eacute;segaut</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, white.</p>
-
- <p><b>Breslau</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A proud Prussian dessert cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bressans</b> <i>see</i> les Petits.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bresse</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Lightly cooked.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bretagne</b> <i>see</i> Montauban.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 189 --><a name="Page_189"
- id="Page_189"></a> <b>Brevine</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Emmentaler type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brian&ccedil;on</b> <i>see</i> Alpin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brick</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_37">Chapter
- 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brickbat</b><br />
- <i>Wiltshire, England</i></p>
-
- <p>A traditional Wiltshire product since early in the
- eighteenth century. Made with fresh milk and some cream, to
- ripen for one year before "it's fit to eat." The French call it
- Briqueton.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bricotta</b><br />
- <i>Corsica</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft, sour sheep, sometimes mixed with sugar and rum and
- made into small luscious cakes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brie</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>;
- <i>also see</i> Cendr&eacute; and Coulommiers.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brie Fa&ccedil;on</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>The name of imitation Brie or Brie type made in all parts of
- France. Often it is dry, chalky, and far inferior to the finest
- Brie <i>v&eacute;ritable</i> that is still made best in its
- original home, formerly called La Brie, now Seine et Marne, or
- Ile-de-France.</p>
-
- <p><i>see</i> Nivernais Decize, Le Mont d'Or, and
- Ile-de-France.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brie de Meaux</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>This genuine Brie from the Meaux region has an excellent
- reputation for high quality. It is made only from November to
- May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brie de Melun</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>This Brie <i>v&eacute;ritable</i> is made not only in the
- seasonal months, from November to May, but practically all the
- year around. It is not always prime. Summer Brie, called
- Maigre, is notably poor and thin.
- <!-- Page 190 --><a name="Page_190"
- id="Page_190"></a>Spring Brie is merely Migras, half-fat, as
- against the fat autumn Gras that ripens until May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brillat-Savarin</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, and available all year. Although the author of
- <i>Physiologie du Go&ucirc;t</i> was not noted as a caseophile
- and wrote little on the subject beyond <i>Le Fondue</i>
- (<i>see</i> <a href="#Page_84">Chapter 6</a>), this savory
- Normandy produce is named in his everlasting praise.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brina Dubreala</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft, sheep, done in brine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brindza</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Our imitation of this creamy sort of fresh, white Roquefort
- is as popular in foreign colonies in America as back in its
- Hungarian and Greek homelands. On New York's East Side several
- stores advertise "Brindza fresh daily," with an extra "d"
- crowded into the original Brinza.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brine</b> <i>see</i> Italian Bra, Caucasian Ekiwani,
- Brina Dubreala, Briney.</p>
-
- <p><b>Briney, or Brined</b><br />
- <i>Syria</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft, salty, sharp. So-called from being processed in
- brine. Turkish Tullum Penney is of the same salt-soaked
- type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brinza, or Brinsen</b><br />
- <i>Hungary, Rumania, Carpathian Mountains</i></p>
-
- <p>Goes by many local names: Altsohl, Klencz, Landoch,
- Liptauer, Neusohl, Siebenburgen and Zips. Soft, sheep milk or
- sheep and goat; crumbly, sharp and biting, but creamy. Made in
- small lots and cured in a tub with beech shavings. Ftinoporino
- is its opposite number in Macedonia.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brioler</b> <i>see</i> Westphalia.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 191 --><a name="Page_191"
- id="Page_191"></a> <b>Briquebec</b> <i>see</i>
- Providence</p>
-
- <p><b>Briqueton</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>The French name for English Wiltshire Brickbat, one of the
- very few cheeses imported into France. Known in France in the
- eighteenth century, it may have influenced the making of
- Trappist Port-Salut at the Bricquebec Monastery in Manche.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brittle</b> <i>see</i> Greek Cashera, Italian Ricotta,
- Turkish Rarush Durmar, and U.S. Hopi.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brizecon</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation Reblochon made in the same Savoy province.</p>
-
- <p><b>Broccio, or le Brocconis</b><br />
- <i>Corsica, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, sour sheep milk or goat, like Bricotta and a first
- cousin to Italian Chiavari. Cream white, slightly salty; eaten
- fresh in Paris, where it is as popular as on its home island.
- Sometimes salted and half-dried, or made into little cakes with
- rum and sugar. Made and eaten all year.</p>
-
- <p><b>Broodkaas</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, flat, nutty.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brousses de la V&eacute;zubie, les</b><br />
- <i>Nice, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Small; sheep; long narrow bar shape, served either with
- powdered sugar or salt, pepper and chopped chives. Made in
- V&eacute;zubie.</p>
-
- <p><b>Brussels or Bruxelles</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, washed skim milk, fermented, semisharp, from Louvain
- and Hal districts.</p>
-
- <p><b>Budapest</b><br />
- <i>Hungary</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, fresh, creamy and mellow, a favorite at home in
- Budapest and abroad in Vienna.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 192 --><a name="Page_192"
- id="Page_192"></a> <b>Buderich</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A specialty in Dusseldorf.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bulle</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>A Swiss-Gruy&egrave;re.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bundost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; mellow; tangy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Burgundy</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Named after the province, not the wine, but they go
- wonderfully together.</p>
-
- <p><b>Bushman</b><br />
- <i>Australia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; yellow; tangy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Butter and Cheese</b> <i>see</i>
- <a href="#Page_111">Chapter 8</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>"Butter," Serbian</b> <i>see</i> Kajmar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Buttermilk</b><br />
- <i>U.S. &amp; Europe</i></p>
-
- <p>Resembles cottage cheese, but of finer grain.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_C"
- id="AtoZ_C"></a><br />
- C</h3>
-
- <p><b>Cabe&ccedil;ou, le</b><br />
- <i>Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Small; goat; from Maurs.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cabrillon</b><br />
- <i>Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>So much like the Cabre&ccedil;on they might be called sister
- nannies under the rind.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cachet d'Entrechaux, le, or Fromage Fort du
- Ventoux</b></p>
-
- <p><i>Provence Mountains, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; sheep; mixed with brandy, dry white wine and
- sundry seasonings. Well marinated and extremely strong. Season
- May to November.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caciocavallo</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>"Horse Cheese." The ubiquitous cheese of classical greats,
- imitated all around the world and back to Italy again.
- <i>See</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 193 --><a name="Page_193"
- id="Page_193"></a> <b>Caciocavallo Siciliano</b><br />
- <i>Sicily, also in U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Essentially a pressed Provolone. Usually from cow's whole
- milk, but sometimes from goat's milk or a mixture of the two.
- Weight between 17&frac12; and 26 pounds. Used for both table
- cheese and grating.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cacio Fiore, or Caciotta</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft as butter; sheep; in four-pound square frames;
- sweetish; eaten fresh.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cacio Pecorino Romano</b> <i>see</i> Pecorino.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cacio Romano</b> <i>see</i> Chiavari.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caerphilly</b><br />
- <i>Wales and England&mdash;Devon, Dorset, Somerset &amp;
- Wilshire</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; whole fresh milk; takes three weeks to ripen. Also
- sold "green," young and innocent, at the age of ten to eleven
- days when weighing about that many pounds. Since it has little
- keeping qualities it should be eaten quickly. Welsh miners eat
- a lot of it, think it specially suited to their needs, because
- it is easily digested and does not produce so much heat in the
- body as long-keeping cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caillebottes (Curds)</b><br />
- <i>France&mdash;Anjou, Poitou, Saintonge &amp;
- Vend&eacute;e</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, creamy, sweetened fresh or sour milk clabbered with
- chardonnette, wild artichoke seed, over slow fire. Cut in
- lozenges and served cold not two hours after cooking. Smooth,
- mellow and aromatic. A high type of this unusual cheese is
- Jonch&eacute;e (<i>see</i>). Other cheeses are made with
- vegetable rennet, some from similar thistle or cardoon juice,
- especially in Portugal.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caille de Poitiers</b> <i>see</i> Petits pots.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caille de Habas</b><br />
- <i>Gascony, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Clabbered or clotted sheep milk.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 194 --><a name="Page_194"
- id="Page_194"></a> <b>Cajassou</b><br />
- <i>P&eacute;rigord, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A notable goat cheese made in Cubjac.</p>
-
- <p><b>Calabrian</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>The Calabrians make good sheep cheese, such as this and
- Caciocavallo.</p>
-
- <p><b>Calcagno</b><br />
- <i>Sicily</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; ewe's milk. Suitable for grating.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caledonian Cream</b><br />
- <i>Scotland</i></p>
-
- <p>More of a dessert than a true cheese. We read in
- <i>Scotland's Inner Man</i>: "A sort of fresh cream cheese,
- flavored with chopped orange marmalade, sugar brandy and lemon
- juice. It is whisked for about half an hour. Otherwise, if put
- into a freezer, it would be good ice-pudding."</p>
-
- <p><b>Calvados</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Medium-hard; tangy. Perfect with Calvados applejack from the
- same province.</p>
-
- <p><b>Calvenzano</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Gorgonzola, made in Bergamo.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cambrai</b> <i>see</i> Boulette.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cambridge, or York</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; fresh; creamy; tangy. The curd is quickly made in one
- hour and dipped into molds without cutting to ripen for eating
- in thirty hours.</p>
-
- <p><b>Camembert</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>"Camembert"</b><br />
- <i>Germany, U.S. &amp; elsewhere</i></p>
-
- <p>A West German imitation that comes in a cute little
- heart-shaped box which nevertheless doesn't make it any more
- like the Camembert <i>v&eacute;ritable</i> of Normandy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Camosun</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; open-textured, resembling Monterey. Drained curd
- is pressed in <!-- Page 195 --><a name="Page_195"
- id="Page_195"></a>hoops, cheese is salted in brine for
- thirty hours, then coated with paraffin and cured for one to
- three months in humid room at 50&deg; to 60&deg; F.</p>
-
- <p><b>Canadian Club</b><br />
- <i>see</i> Cheddar Club.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cancoillotte, Cancaillotte, Canquoillotte, Quincoillotte,
- Cancoiade, Fromag&egrave;re, Temp&ecirc;te and "Pur&eacute;e"
- de fromage tres fort</b><br />
- <i>Franche-Comt&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; sour milk; sharp and aromatic; with added eggs and
- butter and sometimes brandy or dry white wine. Sold in
- attractive small molds and pots. Other sharp seasonings besides
- the brandy or wine make this one of the strongest of French
- strong cheeses, similar to Fromage Fort.</p>
-
- <p><b>Canestrato</b><br />
- <i>Sicily, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; mixed goat and sheep; yellow and strong. Takes one
- year to mature and is very popular both in Sicily where it is
- made to perfection and in Southern Colorado where it is
- imitated by and for Italian settlers.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cantal, Fromage de Cantal, Auvergne or Auvergne Bleu;
- also Fourme and La Tome.</b><br />
- <i>Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; smooth; mellow; a kind of Cheddar, lightly colored
- lemon; yellow; strong, sharp taste but hardly any smell. Forty
- to a hundred-twenty pound cylinders. The rich milk from
- highland pastures is more or less skimmed and, being a very old
- variety, it is still made most primitively. Cured six weeks or
- six months, and when very old it's very hard and very sharp. A
- Cantal type is Laguiole or Guiole.</p>
-
- <p><b>Capitanata</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caprian</b><br />
- <i>Capri, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Made from milk of goats that still overrun the original Goat
- Island, and tangy as a buck.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 196 --><a name="Page_196"
- id="Page_196"></a> <b>Caprino (Little Goat)</b><br />
- <i>Argentina</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; goat; sharp; table cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caraway Loaf</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>This is just one imitation of dozens of German
- caraway-seeded cheeses that roam the world. In Germany there is
- not only K&uuml;mmel loaf cheese but a loaf of caraway-seeded
- bread to go with it. Milwaukee has long made a good
- K&uuml;mmelk&auml;se or hand cheese and it would take more than
- the fingers on both hands to enumerate all of the European
- originals, from Dutch Komynkaas through Danish King Christian
- IX and Norwegian Kuminost, Italian Freisa, Pomeranian Rinnen
- and Belgian Leyden, to Pennsylvania Pot.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cardiga, Queijo da</b><br />
- <i>Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep; oily; mild flavor. Named from cardo, cardoon in
- English, a kind of thistle used as a vegetable rennet in making
- several other cheeses, such as French Caillebottes curdled with
- chardonnette, wild artichoke seed. Only classical Greek sheep
- cheeses like Casera can compare with the superb ones from the
- Portuguese mountain districts. They are lusciously oily, but
- never rancidly so.</p>
-
- <p><b>Carlsbad</b><br />
- <i>Bohemia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; sheep; white; slightly salted; expensive.</p>
-
- <p><b>Carr&eacute; Affin&eacute;</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, delicate, in small square forms; similar to Petit
- Carr&eacute; and Ancien Imp&eacute;rial (<i>see</i>).</p>
-
- <p><b>Carr&eacute; de l'Est</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Camembert, and imitated in the U.S.A.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cascaval Penir</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Cacciocavallo imitation consumed at home.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 197 --><a name="Page_197"
- id="Page_197"></a> <b>Caseralla</b><br />
- <i>Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; sheep; mellow; creamy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Casere</b><br />
- <i>Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep; brittle; gray and greasy. But wonderful!
- Sour-sweet tongue tickle. This classical though greasy Grecian
- is imitated with goat milk instead of sheep in Southern
- California.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cashera</b><br />
- <i>Armenia and Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; goat or cow's milk; brittle; sharp; nutty. Similar to
- Casere and high in quality.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cashera</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; sheep.</p>
-
- <p><b>Casher Penner</b> <i>see</i> Kasher.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cashkavallo</b><br />
- <i>Syria</i></p>
-
- <p>Mellow but sharp imitation of the ubiquitous Italian
- Cacciocavallo.</p>
-
- <p><b>Casigiolu, Panedda, Pera di vacca</b><br />
- <i>Sardinia</i></p>
-
- <p>Plastic-curd cheese, made by the Caciocavallo method.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caskcaval or Kaschcavallo</b> <i>see</i> Feta.</p>
-
- <p><b>Caspian</b><br />
- <i>Caucasus</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard. Sheep or cow, milked directly into cone-shaped
- cloth bag to speed the making. Tastes tangy, sharp and
- biting.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cassaro</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Locally consumed, seldom exported.</p>
-
- <p><b>Castelmagno</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Blue-mold, Gorgonzola type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Castelo Branco, White Castle</b><br />
- <i>Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; goat or goat and sheep; fermented. Similar to
- Serra da Estrella (<i>see</i>).</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 198 --><a name="Page_198"
- id="Page_198"></a> <b>Castillon, or Fromage de
- Gascony</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh cream cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Castle, Schlossk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>North Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Limburger type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Catanzaro</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Consumed locally, seldom exported.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cat's Head</b> <i>see</i> Katzenkopf.</p>
-
- <p><b>Celery</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Flavored mildly with celery seeds, instead of the usual
- caraway.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cendr&eacute;e, la</b><br />
- <i>France&mdash;Orl&eacute;anais, Blois &amp; Aube</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep; round and flat. Other Cendr&eacute;es are
- Champenois or Ricey, Brie, d'Aizy and Olivet</p>
-
- <p><b>Cendr&eacute; d'Aizy</b><br />
- <i>Burgundy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Available all year. <i>See</i> la Cendr&eacute;e.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cendr&eacute; de la Brie</b><br />
- <i>Ile-de-France, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Fall and winter Brie cured under the ashes, season September
- to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cendr&eacute; Champenois or Cendr&eacute; des
- Riceys</b><br />
- <i>Aube &amp; Marne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made and eaten from September to June, and ripened under the
- ashes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cendr&eacute; Olivet</b> <i>see</i> Olivet.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cenis</b> <i>see</i> Mont Cenis.</p>
-
- <p><b>Certoso Stracchino</b><br />
- <i>Italy, near Milan</i></p>
-
- <p>A variety of Stracchino named after the Carthusian friars
- who have made it for donkey's years. It is milder and softer
- and creamier than the Taleggio because it's made of cow instead
- of goat milk, but it has less distinction for the same
- reason.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 199 --><a name="Page_199"
- id="Page_199"></a> <b>Ceva</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft veteran of Roman times named from its town near
- Turin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chabichou</b><br />
- <i>Poitou, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; goat; fresh; sweet and tasty. A vintage cheese of the
- months from April to December, since such cheeses don't last
- long enough to be vintaged like wine by the year.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chaingy</b><br />
- <i>Orl&eacute;ans, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Season September to June.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cham</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>One of those eminent Emmentalers from Cham, the home town of
- Mister Pfister (<i>see</i> Pfister).</p>
-
- <p><b>Chamois milk</b></p>
-
- <p>Aristotle said that the most savorous cheese came from the
- chamois. This small goatlike antelope feeds on wild mountain
- herbs not available to lumbering cows, less agile sheep or
- domesticated mountain goats, so it gives, in small quantity but
- high quality, the richest, most flavorsome of milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Champenois or Fromage des Riceys</b><br />
- <i>Aube &amp; Marne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Season from September to June. The same as Cendr&eacute;
- Champenois and des Riceys.</p>
-
- <p><b>Champol&eacute;on de Queyras</b><br />
- <i>Hautes-Alpes, France</i>.</p>
-
- <p>Hard; skim-milker.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chantelle</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Natural Port du Salut type described as "zesty" by some of
- the best purveyors of domestic cheeses. It has a sharp taste
- and little odor, perhaps to fill the demand for a "married
- man's Limburger."</p>
-
- <p><b>Chantilly</b> <i>see</i> Habl&eacute;.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 200 --><a name="Page_200"
- id="Page_200"></a> <b>Chaource</b><br />
- <i>Champagne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, nice to nibble with the bottled product of this same
- high-living Champagne Province. A kind of Camembert.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chapelle</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft.</p>
-
- <p><b>Charmey Fine</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Gruy&egrave;re type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chaschol, or Chaschosis</b><br />
- <i>Canton of Grisons, Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; skim; small wheels, eighteen to twenty-two inches in
- diameter by three to four inches high, weight twenty-two to
- forty pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chasteaux</b> <i>see</i> Petits Fromages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chateauroux</b> <i>see</i> Fromage de Ch&egrave;vre.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chaumont</b><br />
- <i>Champagne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Season November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chavignol</b> <i>see</i> Crottin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chechaluk</b><br />
- <i>Armenia</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; pot; flaky; creamy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cheddar</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cheese bread</b><br />
- <i>Russia and U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>For centuries Russia has excelled in making a salubrious
- cheese bread called Notruschki and the cheese that flavors it
- is Tworog. (<i>See both</i>.) Only recently Schrafft's in New
- York put out a yellow, soft and toothsome cheese bread that has
- become very popular for toasting. It takes heat to bring out
- its full cheesy savor. Good when overlaid with cheese butter of
- contrasting piquance, say one mixed with Sapsago.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 201 --><a name="Page_201"
- id="Page_201"></a> <b>Cheese butter</b></p>
-
- <p>Equal parts of creamed butter and finely grated or soft
- cheese and mixtures thereof. The imported but still cheap green
- Sapsago is not to be forgotten when mixing your own cheese
- butter.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cheese food</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>"Any mixtures of various lots of cheese and other solids
- derived from milk with emulsifying agents, coloring matter,
- seasonings, condiments, relishes and water, heated or not, into
- a homogeneous mass." (A long and kind word for a homely,
- tasteless, heterogeneous mess.) From an advertisement</p>
-
- <p><b>Cheese hoppers</b> <i>see</i> Hoppers.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cheese mites</b> <i>see</i> Mites.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cheshire and Cheshire imitations</b> <i>see</i> with
- Cheddar in <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cheshire-Stilton</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>In making this combination of Cheshire and Stilton, the blue
- mold peculiar to Stilton is introduced in the usual Cheshire
- process by keeping out each day a little of the curd and mixing
- it with that in which the mold is growing well. The result is
- the Cheshire in size and shape and general characteristics but
- with the blue veins of Stilton, making it really a Blue
- Cheddar. Another combination is Yorkshire-Stilton, and quite as
- distinguished.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chester</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Another name for Cheshire, used in France where formerly
- some was imported to make the visiting Britishers feel at
- home.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 202 --><a name="Page_202"
- id="Page_202"></a> <b>Chevalier</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Curds sweetened with sugar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chev&egrave;lle</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A processed Wisconsin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ch&egrave;vre</b> <i>see</i> Fromages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ch&egrave;vre de Chateauroux</b> <i>see</i> Fromages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ch&egrave;vre petit</b> <i>see</i> Pet&igrave;ts
- Fromages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ch&egrave;vre, Tome de</b> <i>see</i> Tome.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chevretin</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat; small and square. Named after the mammy nanny, as so
- many are.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chevrets, Ponta &amp; St. R&eacute;my</b><br />
- <i>Bresse &amp; Franche-Comt&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Dry and semi-dry; crumbly; goat; small squares; lightly
- salted. Season December to April. Such small goat cheeses are
- named in the plural in France.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chevretons du Beaujolais &agrave; la cr&egrave;me,
- les</b><br />
- <i>Lyonnais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Small goat-milkers served with cream. This is a fair sample
- of the railroad names some French cheeses stagger under.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chevrotins</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, dried goat milk; white; small; tangy and semi-tangy.
- Made and eaten from March to December.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chhana</b><br />
- <i>Asia</i></p>
-
- <p>All we know is that this is made of the whole milk of cows,
- soured, and it is not as unusual as the double "h" in its
- name.</p>
-
- <p><b>Chiavari</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>There are two different kinds named for the Chiavari region,
- and both are hard:<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I. Sour cow's milk, also
- known as Cacio Romano.</span><br />
- II. Sweet whole milker, similar to Corsican Broccio. Chiavari,
- the<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">historic little port between
- Genoa and Pisa, is more noted as the</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">birthplace of the barbaric
- "chivaree" razzing of newlyweds with</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">its raucous serenade of
- dishpans, sour-note bugling and such.</span><br />
- <!-- Page 203 --><a name="Page_203"
- id="Page_203"></a></p>
-
- <p><b>Chives cream cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>Of the world's many fine fresh cheeses further freshened
- with chives, there's Belgian Herv&eacute; and French Claqueret
- (with onion added). (<i>See both</i>.) For our taste it's best
- when the chives are added at home, as it's done in Germany, in
- person at the table or just before.</p>
-
- <p><b>Christalinna</b><br />
- <i>Canton Graub&uuml;nden, Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; smooth; sharp; tangy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Christian IX</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>A distinguished spiced cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ciclo</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, small cream cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cierp de Luchon</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made from November to May in the Comt&eacute; de Foix, where
- it has the distinction of being the only local product worth
- listing with France's three hundred notables.</p>
-
- <p><b>Citeaux</b><br />
- <i>Burgundy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Trappist Port-Salut.</p>
-
- <p><b>Clabber cheese</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Simply cottage cheese left in a cool place until it grows
- soft and automatically changes its name from cottage to
- clabber.</p>
-
- <p><b>Clairvaux</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Formerly made in a Benedictine monastery of that name.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 204 --><a name="Page_204"
- id="Page_204"></a> <b>Claqueret, le</b><br />
- <i>Lyonnais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh cream whipped with chives, chopped fine with onions.
- <i>See</i> Chives.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cl&eacute;rimbert</b> <i>see</i> Alpin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cleves</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>French imitation of the German imitation of a Holland-Dutch
- original.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cloves</b> <i>see</i> Nagelk&auml;se.</p>
-
- <p><b>Club, Potted Club, Snappy, Cold-pack and Comminuted
- cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A. and Canada</i></p>
-
- <p>Probably McLaren's Imperial Club in pots was first to be
- called club, but others credit club to the U.S. In any case
- McLaren's was bought by an American company and is now
- all-American.</p>
-
- <p>Today there are many clubs that may sound swanky but taste
- very ordinary, if at all. They are made of finely ground aged,
- sharp Cheddar mixed with condiments, liquors, olives,
- pimientos, etc., and mostly carry come-on names to make the
- customers think they are getting something from Olde England or
- some aristocratic private club. All are described as
- "tangy."</p>
-
- <p>Originally butter went into the better clubs which were sold
- in small porcelain jars, but in these process days they are
- wrapped in smaller tin foil and wax-paper packets and called
- "snappy."</p>
-
- <p><b>Cocktail Cheeses</b></p>
-
- <p>Recommended from stock by Phil Alpert's "Cheeses of all
- Nations" stores:</p>
-
- <p>Argentine aged Gruy&egrave;re<br />
- Canadian d'Oka<br />
- French Bleu<br />
- <!-- Page 205 --><a name="Page_205"
- id="Page_205"></a> Brie<br />
- Camembert<br />
- Fontainebleu<br />
- Pont l'Ev&ecirc;que<br />
- Port du Salut<br />
- Roblochon<br />
- Roquefort<br />
- Grecian Feta<br />
- Hungarian Brinza<br />
- Polish Warshawski Syr<br />
- Rumanian Kaskaval<br />
- Swiss Schweizerk&auml;se<br />
- American Cheddar in brandy<br />
- Hopi Indian</p>
-
- <p><b>Coeur &agrave; la Cr&egrave;me</b><br />
- <i>Burgundy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>This becomes Fromage &agrave; la Cr&egrave;me II
- (<i>see</i>) when served with sugar, and it is also called a
- heart of cream after being molded into that romantic shape in a
- wicker or willow-twig basket.</p>
-
- <p><b>Coeurs d'Arras</b><br />
- <i>Artois, France</i></p>
-
- <p>These hearts of Arras are soft, smooth, mellow, caressingly
- rich with the cream of Arras.</p>
-
- <p><b>Coffee-flavored cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>Just as the Dutch captivated coffee lovers all over the
- world with their coffee-flavored candies, Haagische Hopjes, so
- the French with Jonch&eacute;e cheese and Italians with Ricotta
- satisfy the universal craving by putting coffee in for
- flavor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Coimbra</b><br />
- <i>Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat or cow; semihard; firm; round; salty; sharp. Not only
- one of those college-educated cheeses but a postgraduate one,
- bearing the honored name of Portugal's ancient academic
- center.</p>
-
- <p><b>Colby</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Cheddar, but of softer body and more open
- texture. Contains more <!-- Page 206 --><a name="Page_206"
- id="Page_206"></a> moisture, and doesn't keep as well as
- Cheddar.</p>
-
- <p><b>College-educated</b></p>
-
- <p>Besides Coimbra several countries have cheeses brought out
- by their colleges. Even Brazil has one in Minas Geraes and
- Transylvania another called Kolos-Monostor, while our
- agricultural colleges in every big cheese state from California
- through Ames in Iowa, Madison in Wisconsin, all across the
- continent to Cornell in New York, vie with one another in
- turning out diploma-ed American Cheddars and such of high
- degree. It is largely to the agricultural colleges that we owe
- the steady improvement in both quality and number of foreign
- imitations since the University of Wisconsin broke the curds
- early in this century by importing Swiss professors to teach
- the high art of Emmentaler.</p>
-
- <p><b>Colwick</b> <i>see</i> Slipcote.</p>
-
- <p><b>Combe-air</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Small; similar to Italian Stracchino in everything but
- size.</p>
-
- <p><b>Commission</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; ball-shaped like Edam and resembling it except being
- darker in color and packed in a ball weighing about twice as
- much, around eight pounds. It is made in the province of North
- Holland and in Friesland. It is often preferred to Edam for
- size and nutty flavor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Compi&egrave;gne</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft</p>
-
- <p><b>Comt&eacute;</b> <i>see</i> Gruy&egrave;re.</p>
-
- <p><b>Conches</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Emmentaler type.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 207 --><a name="Page_207"
- id="Page_207"></a> <b>Condrieu, Rigotte de la</b><br />
- <i>Rhone Valley below Lyons, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; goat; small; smooth; creamy; mellow; tasty. A
- cheese of cheeses for epicures, only made from May to November
- when pasturage is rich.</p>
-
- <p><b>Confits au Marc de Bourgogne</b> <i>see</i> Epoisses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Confits au Vin Blanc</b> <i>see</i> Epoisses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cooked, or Pennsylvania pot</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Named from cooking sour clabbered curd to the melting point.
- When cool it is allowed to stand three or four days until it is
- colored through. Then it is cooked again with salt, milk, and
- usually caraway. It is stirred until it's as thick as molasses
- and strings from a spoon. It is then put into pots or molds,
- whose shape it retains when turned out.</p>
-
- <p>All cooked cheese is apt to be tasteless unless some of the
- milk flavor cooked out is put back in, as wheat germ is now
- returned to white bread. Almost every country has a cooked
- cheese all its own, with or without caraway, such as the
- following:</p>
-
- <p>Belgium&mdash;Kochtounk&auml;se<br />
- Germany&mdash;Kochk&auml;se, Topfen<br />
- Luxembourg&mdash;Kochenk&auml;se<br />
- France&mdash;Fromage Ouit &amp; Le P'Teux<br />
- Sardinia&mdash;Pannedas, Freisa</p>
-
- <p><b>Coon</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_37">Chapter 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cornhusker</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A Nebraska product similar to Cheddar and Colby, but with
- softer body and more moisture.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 208 --><a name="Page_208"
- id="Page_208"></a> <b>Cornimont</b><br />
- <i>Vosges, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A splendid French version of Alsatian M&uuml;nster spiked
- with caraway, in flattish cylinders with mahogany-red coating.
- It is similar to G&eacute;rom&eacute; and the harvest cheese of
- G&eacute;rardmer in the same lush Vosges Valley.</p>
-
- <p><b>Corse, Roquefort de</b><br />
- <i>Corsica, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Corsican imitation of the real Roquefort, and not nearly so
- good, of course.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cossack</b><br />
- <i>Caucasus</i></p>
-
- <p>Cow or sheep. There are two varieties: I. Soft, cured in
- brine and still soft and mild after two months in<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">the salt bath.</span><br />
- II. Semihard and very sharp after aging in brine for a year or
- more.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cotherstone</b><br />
- <i>Yorkshire, England</i></p>
-
- <p>Also known as Yorkshire-Stilton, and Wensleydale No. I.
- (<i>See both</i>.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Cotrone, Cotronese</b> <i>see</i> Pecorino.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cotta</b> <i>see</i> Pasta.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cottage cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>Made in all countries where any sort of milk is obtainable.
- In America it's also called pot, Dutch, and smearcase. The
- English, who like playful names for homely dishes, call cottage
- cheese smearcase from the German Schmierk&auml;se. It is also
- called Glumse in Deutschland, and, together with cream, formed
- the basis of all of our fine Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cottenham or Double Cottenham</b><br />
- <i>English Midlands</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; double cream; blue mold. Similar to Stilton but
- creamier and richer, and made in flatter and broader forms.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 209 --><a name="Page_209"
- id="Page_209"></a> <b>Cottslowe</b><br />
- <i>Cotswold, England</i></p>
-
- <p>A brand of cream cheese named for its home in Cotswold,
- Gloucester. Although soft, it tastes like hard Cheddar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Coulommiers Frais, or Petit-Moule</b><br />
- <i>Ile-de-France, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh cream similar to Petit Suisse. (<i>See</i>.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Coulommiers, le, or Brie de Coulommiers</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Also called Petit-moule, from its small form. This genuine
- Brie is a pocket edition, no larger than a Camembert, standing
- only one inch high and measuring five or six inches across. It
- is made near Paris and is a great favorite from the autumn and
- winter months, when it is made, on until May. The making starts
- in October, a month earlier than most Brie, and it is off the
- market by July, so it's seldom tasted by the avalanche of
- American summer tourists.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cow cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>Sounds redundant, and is used mostly in Germany, where an
- identifying word is added, such as Berliner Kuhk&auml;se and
- Alt Kuhk&auml;se: old cow cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cream cheese</b><br />
- <i>International</i></p>
-
- <p>England, France and America go for it heavily. English cream
- begins with Devonshire, the world-famous, thick fresh cream
- that is sold cool in earthenware pots and makes fresh
- berries&mdash;especially the small wild strawberries of rural
- England&mdash;taste out of this world. It is also drained on
- straw mats and formed into fresh hardened cheeses in small
- molds. (<i>See</i> Devonshire cream.) Among regional
- specialties are the following, named from their place of origin
- or commercial brands:</p>
-
- <p>Cambridge<br />
- Cottslowe<br />
- Cornwall<br />
- <!-- Page 210 --><a name="Page_210"
- id="Page_210"></a> Farm Vale<br />
- Guilford<br />
- Homer's<br />
- "Italian"<br />
- Lincoln<br />
- New Forest<br />
- Rush (from being made on rush or straw mats&mdash;<i>see</i>
- Rush)<br />
- St. Ivel (distinguished for being made with acidophilus
- bacteria)<br />
- Scotch Caledonian<br />
- Slipcote (famous in the eighteenth century)<br />
- Victoria<br />
- York</p>
-
- <p><b>Cr&egrave;me Chantilly</b> <i>see</i> Habl&eacute;.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cr&egrave;me de Gien</b> <i>see</i> Fromage.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cr&egrave;me de Gruy&egrave;re</b><br />
- <i>Franche-Comt&eacute; France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft Gruy&egrave;re cream cheese, arrives in America in
- perfect condition in tin foil packets. Expensive but worth
- it.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cr&egrave;me des Vosges</b><br />
- <i>Alsace, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft cream. Season October to April.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cr&egrave;me Double</b> <i>see</i>
- Double-Cr&egrave;me.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cr&egrave;me, Fromage &agrave; la</b> <i>see</i>
- Fromage.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cr&egrave;me, Fromage Blanc &agrave; la</b> <i>see</i>
- Fromage Blanc.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cr&egrave;me St Gervais</b> <i>see</i> Pots de
- Cr&egrave;me St Gervais.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cr&egrave;met Nantais</b><br />
- <i>Lower Loire, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft fresh cream of Nantes.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 211 --><a name="Page_211"
- id="Page_211"></a> <b>Cr&egrave;mets, les</b><br />
- <i>Anjou, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A fresh cream equal to English Devonshire, served more as a
- dessert than a dessert cheese. The cream is whipped stiff with
- egg whites, drained and eaten with more fresh cream, sprinkled
- with vanilla and sugar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cremini</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, small cream cheese from Cremona, the violin town. And
- by the way, art-loving Italians make ornamental cheeses in the
- form of musical instruments, statues, still life groups and
- everything.</p>
-
- <p><b>Creole</b><br />
- <i>Louisiana, U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, rich, unripened cottage cheese type, made by mixing
- cottage-type curd and rich cream.</p>
-
- <p><b>Crescenza, Carsenza, Stracchino Crescenza, Crescenza
- Lombardi</b><br />
- <i>Lombardy, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Uncooked; soft; creamy; mildly sweet; fast-ripening;
- yellowish; whole milk. Made from September to April.</p>
-
- <p><b>Creuse</b><br />
- <i>Creuse, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A two-in-one farm cheese of skimmed milk, resulting from two
- different ways of ripening, after the cheese has been removed
- from perforated earthen molds seven inches in diameter and five
- or six inches high, where it has drained for several
- days:<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I. It is salted and turned
- frequently until very dry and hard.</span><br />
- II. It is ripened by placing in tightly closed mold, lined
- with straw.<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">This softens, flavors, and
- turns it golden-yellow. (<i>See</i> Hay</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">or Fromage de
- Foin.)</span></p>
-
- <p><b>Creusois, or Gu&eacute;ret</b><br />
- <i>Limousin, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Season, October to June.</p>
-
- <p><b>Croissant Demi-sel</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, double cream, semisalty. All year.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 212 --><a name="Page_212"
- id="Page_212"></a> <b>Crottin de Chavignol</b><br />
- <i>Berry, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; goat's milk; small; lightly salted; mellow. In
- season April to December. The name is not exactly
- complimentary.</p>
-
- <p><b>Crowdie, or Cruddy butter</b><br />
- <i>Scotland</i></p>
-
- <p>Named from the combination of fresh sweet milk curds pressed
- together with fresh butter. A popular breakfast food in
- Inverness and the Ross Shires. When kept for months it develops
- a high flavor. A similar curd and butter is made by Arabs and
- stored in vats, the same as in India, the land of ghee, where
- there's no refrigeration.</p>
-
- <p><b>Crying Kebbuck</b></p>
-
- <p>F. Marion MacNeill, in <i>The Scots Kitchen</i> says that
- this was the name of a cheese that used to be part of the
- Kimmers feast at a lying-in.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cuajada</b> <i>see</i> Venezuela.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cubjac</b> <i>see</i> Cajassou.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cuit</b> <i>see</i> Fromage Cuit.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cumin, M&uuml;nster au</b> <i>see</i> M&uuml;nster.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cup</b> <i>see</i> Koppen.</p>
-
- <p><b>Curd</b> <i>see</i> Granular curd, Sweet curd and York
- curd.</p>
-
- <p><b>Curds and butter</b><br />
- <i>Arabia</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh sweet milk curd and fresh butter are pressed together
- as in making Crowdie or Cruddy butter in Scotland. The Arabs
- put this strong mixture away in vats to get it even stronger
- than East Indian ghee.</p>
-
- <p><b>Cur&eacute;, Fromage de</b> <i>see</i> Nantais.</p>
-
- <h3><!-- Page 213 --><a name="Page_213"
- id="Page_213"></a> <a name="AtoZ_D"
- id="AtoZ_D"></a><br />
- D</h3>
-
- <p><b>Daisies, fresh</b></p>
-
- <p>A popular type and packaging of mild Cheddar, originally
- English. Known as an "all-around cheese," to eat raw, cook, let
- ripen, and use for seasoning.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dalmatian</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard ewe's-milker.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dambo</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard and nutty.</p>
-
- <p><b>Damen, or Glory of the Mountains (Gloires des
- Montagnes)</b><br />
- <i>Hungary</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, uncured, mild ladies' cheese, as its name asserts.
- Popular Alpine snack in Viennese caf&eacute;s with coffee
- gossip in the afternoon.</p>
-
- <p><b>Danish Blue</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard, rich, blue-veined, piquant, delicate, excellent
- imitation of Roquefort. Sometimes called "Danish Roquefort,"
- and because it is exported around the world it is Denmark's
- best-known cheese. Although it sells for 20% to 30% less than
- the international triumvirate of Blues, Roquefort, Stilton and
- Gorgonzola, it rivals them and definitely leads lesser
- Blues.</p>
-
- <p><b>Danish Export</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Skim milk and buttermilk. Round and flat, mild and mellow. A
- fine cheese, as many Danish exports are.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dansk Schweizerost</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Danish Swiss cheese, imitation Emmentaler, but with small
- holes. Nutty, sweet dessert or "picnic cheese," as Swiss is
- often called.</p>
-
- <p><b>Danzig</b><br />
- <i>Poland</i></p>
-
- <p>A pleasant cheese to accompany a glass of the great liqueur,
- Goldwasser, Eau de Vie de Danzig, from the same celebrated
- city.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 214 --><a name="Page_214"
- id="Page_214"></a> <b>Darling</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>One of the finest Vermont Cheddars, handled for years by one
- of America's finest fancy food suppliers, S.S. Pierce of
- Boston.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dauphin</b><br />
- <i>Flanders, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Season, November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>d'Aurigny, Fromage</b> <i>see</i> Alderney.</p>
-
- <p><b>Daventry</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>A Stilton type, white, small, round, flat and very rich,
- with "blue" veins of a darker green.</p>
-
- <p><b>Decize</b><br />
- <i>Nivernaise, France</i></p>
-
- <p>In season all year. Soft, creamy, mellow, resembles
- Brie.</p>
-
- <p><b>de Foin, Fromage</b> <i>see</i> Hay.</p>
-
- <p><b>de Fontine</b><br />
- <i>Spain</i></p>
-
- <p>Crumbly, sharp, nutty.</p>
-
- <p><b>de Gascony, Fromage</b> <i>see</i> Castillon.</p>
-
- <p><b>de G&eacute;rardmer</b> <i>see</i> R&eacute;collet.</p>
-
- <p><b>Delft</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>About the same as Leyden. (<i>See</i>.)</p>
-
- <p><b>D&eacute;licieux</b></p>
-
- <p>The brand name of a truly delicious Brie.</p>
-
- <p><b>Delikat</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A mellow breakfast spread, on the style of the German
- Fr&uuml;hst&uuml;ck original. (<i>See</i>.)</p>
-
- <p><b>de Lile, Boule</b></p>
-
- <p>French name for Belgian Oude Kaas.</p>
-
- <p><b>Demi-&Eacute;tuve</b></p>
-
- <p>Half-size &Eacute;tuve. (<i>See</i>.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Demi Petit Suisse</b></p>
-
- <p>The name for an extra small Petit Suisse to distinguish it
- from the Gros.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 215 --><a name="Page_215"
- id="Page_215"></a> <b>Demi-Sel</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, whole, creamy, lightly salted, resembles Gournay but
- slightly saltier; also like U.S. cream cheese, but softer and
- creamier.</p>
-
- <p><b>Demi-Sel, Croissant</b> <i>see</i> Croissant
- Demi-Sel.</p>
-
- <p><b>Derby, or Derbyshire</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; shape like Austrian Nagelkassa and the size of
- Cheshire though sometimes smaller. Dry, large, flat, round,
- flaky, sharp and tangy. A factory cheese said to be identical
- with Double Gloucester and similar to Warwickshire, Wiltshire
- and Leicester. The experts pronounce it "a somewhat inferior
- Cheshire, but deficient in its quality and the flavor of
- Cheddar." So it's unlikely to win in any cheese derby in spite
- of its name.</p>
-
- <p><b>Devonshire cream and cheese</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Devonshire cream is world famous for its thickness and
- richness. Superb with wild strawberries; almost a cream cheese
- by itself. Devonshire cream is made into a luscious cheese
- ripened on straw, which gives it a special flavor, such as that
- of French Foin or Hay cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dolce Verde</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>This creamy blue-vein variety is named Sweet Green, because
- cheesemongers are color-blind when it comes to the blue-greens
- and the green-blues.</p>
-
- <p><b>Domaci Beli Sir</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>"Sir" is not a title but the word for cheese. This is a
- typical ewe's-milker cured in a fresh sheep skin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Domestic Gruy&egrave;re</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>An imitation of a cheese impossible to imitate.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 216 --><a name="Page_216"
- id="Page_216"></a> <b>Domestic Swiss</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A</i></p>
-
- <p>Same as domestic Gruy&egrave;re, maybe more so, since it is
- made in ponderous 150-to 200-pound wheels, chiefly in Wisconsin
- and Ohio. The trouble is there is no Alpine pasturage and
- Emmentaler Valley in our country.</p>
-
- <p><b>Domiati</b><br />
- <i>Egypt</i></p>
-
- <p>Whole or partly skimmed cow's or buffalo's milk. Soft;
- white; no openings; mild and salty when fresh and cleanly acid
- when cured. It's called "a pickled cheese" and is very popular
- in the Near East.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dorset, Double Dorset, Blue Dorset, or Blue
- Vinny</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Blue mold type from Dorsetshire; crumbly, sharp; made in
- flat forms. "Its manufacture has been traced back 150 years in
- the family of F.E. Dare, who says that in all probability it
- was made longer ago than that." (<i>See</i> Blue Vinny.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Dotter</b><br />
- <i>N&uuml;rnberg, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>An entirely original cheese perfected by G. Leuchs in
- N&uuml;rnberg. He enriched skim milk with yolk of eggs and made
- the cheese in the usual way. When well ripened it is
- splendid.</p>
-
- <p><b>Doubles</b></p>
-
- <p>The English name cheese made of whole milk "double," such as
- Double Cottenham, Double Dorset, Double Gloucester. "Singles"
- are cheeses from which some of the cream has been removed.</p>
-
- <p><b>Double-cream</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Wensleydale.</p>
-
- <p><b>Double-cr&egrave;me</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>There are several of this name, made in the summer when milk
- is richest in cream. The full name is Fromage &agrave; la
- <!-- Page 217 -->
- <a name="Page_217"
- id="Page_217"></a>Double-cr&egrave;me, and Pommel is one
- well known. They are made throughout France in season and
- are much in demand.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dresdener Bierk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A celebrated hand cheese made in Dresden. The typical soft,
- skim milker, strong with caraway and drunk dissolved in beer,
- as well as merely eaten.</p>
-
- <p><b>Drinking cheeses</b></p>
-
- <p>Not only Dresdener, but dozens of regional hand cheeses in
- Germanic countries are melted in steins of beer or glasses of
- wine to make distinctive cheesed drinks for strong stomachs and
- noses. This peps up the drinks in somewhat the same way as ale
- and beer are laced with pepper sauce in some parts.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dry</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>From the drinking cheese just above to dry cheese is quite a
- leap. "This cheese, known as Sperrk&auml;se and
- Trockenk&auml;se, is made in the small dairies of the eastern
- part of the Bavarian Alps and in the Tyrol. It is an extremely
- simple product, made for home consumption and only in the
- winter season, when the milk cannot be profitably used for
- other purposes. As soon as the milk is skimmed it is put into a
- large kettle which can be swung over a fire, where it is kept
- warm until it is thoroughly thickened from souring. It is then
- broken up and cooked quite firm. A small quantity of salt and
- sometimes some caraway seed are added, and the curd is put into
- forms of various sizes. It is then placed in a drying room,
- where it becomes very hard, when it is ready for eating." (From
- U.S. Department of Agriculture <i>Bulletin</i> No. 608.)</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 218 --><a name="Page_218"
- id="Page_218"></a> <b>Dubreala</b> <i>see</i> Brina.</p>
-
- <p><b>Duel</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; skim milk; hand type; two by two by one-inch cube.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dunlop</b><br />
- <i>Scotland</i></p>
-
- <p>One of the national cheeses of Scotland, but now far behind
- Cheddar, which it resembles, although it is closer in texture
- and moister. Semihard; white; sharp; buttery; tangy and rich in
- flavor. It is one of the "toasting cheeses" resembling
- Lancashire, too, in form and weight. Made in Ayr, Lanark and
- Renfrew and sold in the markets of Kilmarnock, Kirkcudbright
- and Wigtown.</p>
-
- <p><b>Durak</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Mixed with butter; mellow and smoky. Costs three dollars a
- pound.</p>
-
- <p><b>Duralag, or Bgug-Panir</b><br />
- <i>Armenia</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep; semisoft to brittle hard; square; sharp but mellow
- and tangy with herbs. Sometimes salty from lying in a brine
- bath from two days to two months.</p>
-
- <p><b>Durmar, Rarush</b> <i>see</i> Rarush.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dutch</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese of skim milk, very perishable spread.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dutch cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>American vernacular for cottage or pot cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dutch Cream Cheese</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Made in England although called Dutch. Contains eggs, and is
- therefore richer than Dutch cream cheese in Holland itself. In
- America we call the original Holland-kind Dutch, cottage, pot,
- and farmer.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dutch Mill</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A specialty of Oakland, California.</p>
-
- <p><b>Dutch Red Balls</b></p>
-
- <p>English name for Edam.</p>
-
- <h3><!-- Page 219 --><a name="Page_219"
- id="Page_219"></a> <a name="AtoZ_E"
- id="AtoZ_E"></a><br />
- E</h3>
-
- <p><b>Echourgnac, Trappe d'</b><br />
- <i>P&eacute;rigord, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Trappist monastery Port-Salut made in Limousin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Edam</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Egg</b><br />
- <i>Finland</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard. One of the few cheeses made by adding eggs to the
- curds. Others are Dutch Cream Cheese of England; German Dotter;
- French Fromage Cuit (cooked cheese), and Westphalian.
- Authorities agree that these should be labeled "egg cheese" so
- the buyers won't be fooled by their richness. The Finns age
- their eggs even as the Chinese ripen their hundred-year-old
- eggs, by burying them in grain, as all Scandinavians do, and
- the Scotch as well, in the oat bin. But none of them is left a
- century to ripen, as eggs are said to be in China.</p>
-
- <p><b>Elbinger, or Elbing</b><br />
- <i>West Prussia</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; crumbly; sharp. Made of whole milk except in winter
- when it is skimmed. Also known as Werderk&auml;se and
- Niederungsk&auml;se.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ekiwani</b><br />
- <i>Caucasus</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep; white; sharp; salty with some of the brine it's
- bathed in.</p>
-
- <p><b>Elisavetpolen, or Eriwani</b><br />
- <i>Caucasus</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep; sweetish-sharp and slightly salty when fresh
- from the brine bath. Also called Kasach (Cossack), Tali, Kurini
- and Karab in different locales.</p>
-
- <p><b>Elmo Table</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, mellow, tasty.</p>
-
- <p><b>Emiliano</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; flavor varies from mild to sharp. Parmesan type.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 220 --><a name="Page_220"
- id="Page_220"></a> <b>Emmentaler</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>There are so many, many types of this celebrated Swiss all
- around the world that we're not surprised to find Lapland
- reindeer milk cheese listed as similar to Emmentaler of the
- hardest variety. (<i>See</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>,
- <i>also</i> Vacherin Fondu.)</p>
-
- <p><b>"En enveloppe"</b></p>
-
- <p>French phrase of packaged cheese, "in the envelope." Similar
- to English packet and our process. Raw natural cheese the
- French refer to frankly as <i>nu</i>, "in the nude."</p>
-
- <p><b>Engadine</b><br />
- <i>Graub&uuml;nden, Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; mild; tangy-sweet.</p>
-
- <p><b>English Dairy</b><br />
- <i>England and U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Extra-hard, crumbly and sharp. Resembles Cheddar and has
- long been imitated in the States, chiefly as a cooking
- cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Entrechaux, le Cachat d'</b> <i>see</i> Cachat.</p>
-
- <p><b>Epoisses, Fromage d'</b><br />
- <i>C&ocirc;te d'Or, Upper Burgundy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, small cylinder with flattened end, about five inches
- across. The season is from November to July. Equally proud of
- their wine and cheese, the Burgundians marry white wine or
- <i>marc</i> to d'Epoisses in making <i>confits</i> with that
- name.</p>
-
- <p><b>Erbo</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Gorgonzola. The Galvani cheesemakers of Italy who
- put out both Bel Paese and Taleggio also export Erbo to our
- shores.</p>
-
- <p><b>Erce</b><br />
- <i>Languedoc, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, smooth and sharp. A winter cheese in season only from
- November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Eriwani</b> <i>see</i> Elisavetpolen.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 221 --><a name="Page_221"
- id="Page_221"></a> <b>Ervy</b><br />
- <i>Champagne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; yellow rind; smooth; tangy; piquant; seven by
- two-and-a-half inches, weight four pounds. Resembles Camembert.
- A washed cheese, also known as Fromage de Troyes. In season
- November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Essex</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation of an extinct or at least dormant English
- type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Estrella</b> <i>see</i> Serra da Estrella.</p>
-
- <p><b>&Eacute;tuve and Demi-&Eacute;tuve</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; smooth; mellow. In full size and demi (half) size.
- In season all year.</p>
-
- <p><b>Evarglice</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Sharp, nutty flavor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Excelsior</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Season all year.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_F"
- id="AtoZ_F"></a><br />
- F</h3>
-
- <p><b>Factory Cheddar</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Very Old Factory Cheddar is the trade name for well-aged
- sharp Cheddar. New Factory is just that&mdash;mild, young and
- tractable&mdash;too tractable, in fact.</p>
-
- <p><b>Farm</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Known as Ferme; Maigre (thin); Fromage &agrave; la Pie
- (nothing to do with apple pie); and Mou (weak). About the same
- as our cottage cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Farmer</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>This is curd only and is nowadays mixed with pepper, lachs,
- nuts, fruits, almost anything. A very good base for your own
- fancy spread, or season a slab to fancy and bake it like a hoe
- cake, but in the oven.</p>
-
- <p><b>Farmhouse</b> <i>see</i> Herrg&aring;rdsost.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 222 --><a name="Page_222"
- id="Page_222"></a> <b>Farm Vale</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese of Somerset wrapped in tin foil and boxed in
- wedges, eight to a box.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fat cheese</b> <i>see</i> Frontage Gras and Maile
- Pener.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fenouil</b> <i>see</i> Tome de Savoie.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ferme</b> <i>see</i> Farm.</p>
-
- <p><b>Feta</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Feuille de Dreux</b><br />
- <i>B&eacute;arn, France</i></p>
-
- <p>November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>"Filled cheese"</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Before our processed and food cheese era some scoundrels in
- the cheese business over there added animal fats and margarine
- to skimmed milk to make it pass as whole milk in making cheese.
- Such adulteration killed the flavor and quality, and no doubt
- some of the customers. Luckily in America we put down this
- vicious counterfeiting with pure food laws. But such foreign
- fats are still stuffed into the skimmed milk of many foreign
- cheeses. To take the place of the natural butterfat the phony
- fats are whipped in violently and extra rennet is added to
- speed up coagulation.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fin de Si&egrave;cle</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Although this is an "all year" cheese its name dates it back
- to the years at the close of the nineteenth century.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fiore di Alpe</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sharp; tangy. Romantically named "Flowers of the
- Alps."</p>
-
- <p><b>Fiore Sardo</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Ewe's milk. Hard. Table cheese when immature; a condiment
- when fully cured.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 223 --><a name="Page_223"
- id="Page_223"></a> <b>Flandre, Tuile de</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A kind of Marolles.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fleur de Deauville</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A type of Brie, in season December to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fleur des Alpes</b> <i>see</i> Bel Paese and
- Millefiori.</p>
-
- <p><b>Floedeost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Like Gjedeost, but not so rich because it's made of cow's
- milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fl&oslash;tost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Although the name translates Cream Cheese it is made of
- boiled whey. Similar to Mysost, but fatter.</p>
-
- <p><b>Flower</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft and fragrant with petals of roses, violets, marigolds
- and such, delicately mixed in. Since the English are so fond of
- oriental teas scented with jasmine and other flowers, perhaps
- they imported the idea of mixing petals with their cheese,
- since there is no oriental cheese for them to import except
- bean curd.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fodder cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>A term for cheese made from fodder in seasons when there is
- no grass. Good fresh grass is the essence of all fine cheese,
- so silo or barn-fed cows can't give the kind of milk it
- takes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Foggiano</b><br />
- <i>Apulia, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A member of the big Pecorino family because it's made of
- sheep's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Foin, Fromage de</b> <i>see</i> Hay.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fondu, Vacherin</b> <i>see</i> Vacherin Fondu.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fontainebleau</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Named after its own royal commune. Soft; fresh cream;
- smooth; mellow; summer variety.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 224 --><a name="Page_224"
- id="Page_224"></a><b>Fontina</b> <i>Val d'Acosta,
- Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; goat; creamy; with a nutty flavor and delightful
- aroma.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fontine, de</b><br />
- <i>Franche-Comt&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A favorite all-year product.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fontinelli</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Semidry; flaky; nutty; sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fontini</b><br />
- <i>Parma, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; goat; similar to Swiss, but harder and sharper. From
- the same region as Parmesan.</p>
-
- <p><b>Food cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>An unattractive type of processed mixes, presumably with
- some cheese content to flavor it.</p>
-
- <p><b>Forez, also called d'Ambert</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>The process of making this is said to be very crude, and the
- ripening unusual. The cheeses are cylindrical, ten inches in
- diameter and six inches high. They are ripened by placing them
- on the floor of the cellar, covering with dirt, and allowing
- water to trickle over them. Many are spoiled by the unusual
- growths of mold and bacteria. The flavor of the best of these
- is said to resemble Roquefort. (From <i>Bulletin</i> No. 608 of
- the U.S. Department of Agriculture, to which we are indebted
- for descriptions of hundreds of varieties in this
- alphabet.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Formagelle</b><br />
- <i>Northwest Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, ripened specialty put up in half-pound packages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Formaggi di Pasta Filata</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A group of Italian cheeses made by curdling milk with
- rennet, warming and fermenting the curd, heating it until it is
- plastic, drawing it into ropes and then kneading and shaping
- while hot. Provolone, Caciocavallo and Mozzarella are in this
- group.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 225 --><a name="Page_225"
- id="Page_225"></a> <b>Formaggini, and Formaggini di
- Lecco</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Several small cheeses answer to this name, of which Lecco is
- typical. A Lombardy dessert cheese measuring 1&frac14; by two
- inches, weighing two ounces. It is eaten from the time it is
- fresh and sweet until it ripens to piquance. Sometimes made of
- cow and goat milk mixed, with the addition of oil and vinegar,
- as well as salt, pepper, sugar and cinnamon.</p>
-
- <p><b>Formaggio d'Oro</b><br />
- <i>Northwest Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, sharp, mountain-made.</p>
-
- <p><b>Formaggio Duro (Dry) and Formaggio Tenero</b> <i>see</i>
- Nostrale.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fort</b> <i>see</i> Fromage Fort.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fourme, Cantal, and la Tome</b><br />
- <i>Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>This is a big family in the rich cheese province of
- Auvergne, where many mountain varieties are baptized after
- their districts, such as Aubrac, Aurilla, Grand Murol,
- R&ocirc;che and Salers. (<i>See</i> Fourme d'Ambert and
- Cantal.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Fourme de Montebrison</b><br />
- <i>Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>This belongs to the Fourme clan and is in season from
- November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fourme de Salers</b> <i>see</i> Cantal, which it
- resembles so closely it is sometimes sold under that name.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fresa, or Pannedas</b><br />
- <i>Sardinia, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A soft, mild and sweet cooked cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fribourg</b><br />
- <i>Italy and Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; cooked-curd, Swiss type very similar to Spalen.
- (<i>See</i>)</p>
-
- <p><b>Frissche Kaas, Fresh cheese</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Dutch generic name for any soft, fresh spring cheese,
- although some is made in winter, beginning in November.</p>
-
- <p><b>Friesian</b> <i>see</i> West Friesian.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 226 --><a name="Page_226"
- id="Page_226"></a> <b>Fromage &agrave; la Creme</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p><span style="margin-left: 1em;">I. Sour milk drained and
- mixed with cream. Eaten with sugar. That of</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Gien is a noted produce, and
- so is d'Isigny.</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">II.
- Franche-Comt&eacute;&mdash;fresh sheep milk melted with fresh
- thick cream,</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">whipped egg whites and
- sugar.</span><br />
- III. Morvan&mdash;homemade cottage cheese. When milk has
- soured solid it is<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">hung in cheesecloth in a
- cool place to drain, then mixed with a</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">little fresh milk and served
- with cream.</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">IV. When Morvan or other
- type is put into a heart-shaped wicker basket</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">for a mold, and marketed in
- that, it becomes Coeur &agrave; la Cr&egrave;me,</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">heart of cream, to be eaten
- with sugar.</span></p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage &agrave; la Pie</b> <i>see</i> Fromage Blanc just
- below, and Farm</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage Bavarois &agrave; la Vanille</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Dessert cheese sweetened and flavored with vanilla and named
- after Bavaria where it probably originated.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage Blanc</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft cream or cottage cheese, called &agrave; la Pie, too,
- suggesting pie &agrave; la mode; also Farm from the place it's
- made. Usually eaten with salt and pepper, in summer only. It is
- the ascetic version of Fromage &agrave; la Cr&egrave;me,
- usually eaten with salt and pepper and without cream or sugar,
- except in the Province of Bresse where it is served with cream
- and called Fromage Blanc &agrave; la Cr&egrave;me.</p>
-
- <p>Every milky province has its own Blanc. In Champagne it's
- made of fresh ewe milk. In Upper Brittany it is named after
- Nantes and also called Fromage de
- <!-- Page 227 --><a name="Page_227"
- id="Page_227"></a> Cur&eacute;. Other districts devoted to
- it are Alsace-Lorraine, Auvergne, Languedoc, and
- Ile-de-France.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage Bleu</b> <i>see</i> Bleu d'Auvergne.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage Cuit (cooked cheese)</b><br />
- <i>Thionville, Lorraine, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Although a specialty of Lorraine, this cooked cheese is
- produced in many places. First it is made with fresh whole cow
- milk, then pressed and potted. After maturing a while it is
- de-potted, mixed with milk and egg yolk, re-cooked and
- re-potted.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage d'Aurigny</b> <i>see</i> Alderney.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Bayonne</b><br />
- <i>Bayonne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made with ewe's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de B&ocirc;ite</b><br />
- <i>Doubs, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, mountain-made, in the fall only. Resembles Pont
- l'Ev&ecirc;que.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Bourgogne</b></p>
-
- <p><i>see</i> Burgundy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Ch&egrave;vre de Chateauroux</b><br />
- <i>Berry, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A seasonal goat cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Cur&eacute;</b> <i>see</i> Nantais.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Fontenay-le Comt&eacute;</b><br />
- <i>Poitou, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Half goat and half cow milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Gascony</b> <i>see</i> Castillon.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Pau</b> <i>see</i> La Fonc&eacute;e.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de St. R&eacute;my</b> <i>see</i> Chevrets.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 228 --><a name="Page_228"
- id="Page_228"></a> <b>Fromage de Serac</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Half and half, cow and goat, from Serac des Allues.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Troyes</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Two cheeses have this name. (<i>See</i> Barberry and
- Ervy.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Vache</b></p>
-
- <p>Another name for Autun.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage de Monsieur Fromage</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>This Cheese of Mr. Cheese is as exceptional as its name. Its
- season runs from November to June. It comes wrapped in a green
- leaf, maybe from a grape vine, suggesting what to drink with
- it. It is semidry, mildly snappy with a piquant pungence all
- its own. The playful name suggests the celebrated dish,
- Poulette de Madame Poulet, Chick of Mrs. Chicken.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage Fort</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Several cooked cheeses are named Fort (strong) chiefly in
- the department of Aisne. Well-drained curd is melted, poured
- into a cloth and pressed, then buried in dry ashes to remove
- any whey left. After being fermented eight to ten days it is
- grated, mixed with butter, salt, pepper, wine, juniper berries,
- butter and other things, before fermenting some more.</p>
-
- <p>Similar extra-strong cheeses are the one in Lorraine called
- Fondue and Fromag&egrave;re of eastern France, classed as the
- strongest cheeses in all France.</p>
-
- <p><i>Fort No. I</i>: That of Flanders, potted with juniper
- berries, as the gin of this section is flavored, plus pepper,
- salt and white wine.</p>
-
- <p><i>Fort No. II</i>: That from Franche-Comt&eacute; Small dry
- goat cheeses pounded and <!-- Page 229 --><a name="Page_229"
- id="Page_229"></a> potted with thyme, tarragon, leeks,
- pepper and brandy. (<i>See</i> Hazebrook.)</p>
-
- <p><i>Fort No. III</i>: From Provence, also called Cachat
- d'Entrechaux. In production from May to November. Semihard,
- sheep milk, mixed with brandy, white wine, strong herbs and
- seasonings and well marinated.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage Gras (fat cheese)</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, round, fat ball called <i>t&ecirc;te de mort</i>,
- "death's head." Winter Brie is also called Gras but there is no
- relation. This macabre name incited Victor Meusy to these
- lines:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span><i>Les gens &agrave; l'humeur
- morose</i><br /></span> <span><i>Prennent la
- T&ecirc;te-de-Mort</i>.<br /></span> <span>People of a
- morose disposition<br /></span> <span>Take the Death's
- Head.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p><b>Fromage Mou</b></p>
-
- <p>Any soft cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromage Piquant</b> <i>see</i> Remoudon.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromag&egrave;re</b> <i>see</i> Canquillote.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fromages de Ch&egrave;vre</b><br />
- <i>Orl&eacute;anais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Small, dried goat-milkers.</p>
-
- <p><b>Fr&uuml;hst&uuml;ck</b></p>
-
- <p>Also known as breakfast and lunch cheese. Small rounds
- two-and-a-half to three inches in diameter. Limburger type.
- Cheeses on which many Germans and Americans break their
- fast.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ftinoporino</b><br />
- <i>Macedonia, Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep's-milker similar to Brinza.</p>
-
- <h3><!-- Page 230 --><a name="Page_230"
- id="Page_230"></a> <a name="AtoZ_G"
- id="AtoZ_G"></a><br />
- G</h3>
-
- <p><b>Gaisk&auml;sli</b><br />
- <i>Germany and Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>A general name for goat's milk cheese. Usually a small
- cylinder three inches in diameter and an inch-and-a-half thick,
- weighing up to a half pound. In making, the curds are set on a
- straw mat in molds, for the whey to run away. They are salted
- and turned after two days to salt the other side. They ripen in
- three weeks with a very pleasing flavor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gammelost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, golden-brown, sour-milker. After being pressed it is
- turned daily for fourteen days and then packed in a chest with
- wet straw. So far as we are concerned it can stay there. The
- color all the way through is tobacco-brown and the taste, too.
- It has been compared to medicine, chewing tobacco, petrified
- Limburger, and worse. In his <i>Encyclopedia of Food</i>
- Artemas Ward says that in Gammelost the ferments absorb so much
- of the curd that "in consequence, instead of eating cheese
- flavored by fungi, one is practically eating fungi flavored
- with cheese."</p>
-
- <p><b>Garda</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, creamy, fermented. A truly fine product made in the
- resort town on Gardasee where d'Annunzio retired. It is one of
- those luscious little ones exported in tin foil to America, and
- edible, including the moldy crust that could hardly be called a
- rind.</p>
-
- <p><b>Garden</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese with some greens or vegetables mixed in.</p>
-
- <p><b>Garlic</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A processed Cheddar type flavored with garlic.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 231 --><a name="Page_231"
- id="Page_231"></a> <b>Garlic-onion Link</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A strong processed Cheddar put up to look like links of
- sausage, nobody knows why.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gascony, Fromage de</b> <i>see Castillon.</i></p>
-
- <p><b>Gautrias</b><br />
- <i>Mayenne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, cylinder weighing about five pounds and resembling
- Port-Salut.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gavot</b><br />
- <i>Hautes-Alpes, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A good Alpine cheese whether made of sheep, goat or cow
- milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Geheimrath</b><br />
- <i>Netherlands</i></p>
-
- <p>A factory cheese turned out in small quantities. The color
- is deep yellow and it resembles a Baby Gouda in every way, down
- to the weight</p>
-
- <p><b>G&eacute;rardmer, de</b> <i>see</i> R&eacute;collet</p>
-
- <p><b>German-American adopted types</b></p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Bierk&auml;se Delikat Grinnen Hand Harzk&auml;se
- K&uuml;mmelk&auml;se Koppen Lager Liederkranz Mein Kaese
- M&uuml;nster Old Heidelberg Schafk&auml;se (sheep) Silesian
- Stein Tilsit Weisslack (piquant like Bavarian
- Allg&auml;uer)</p>
- </div>
-
- <p><b>G&eacute;rom&eacute;, la</b><br />
- <i>Vosges, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard: cylinders up to eleven pounds; brick-red rind;
- like M&uuml;nster, but larger. Strong, fragrant and
- <!-- Page 232 --><a name="Page_232"
- id="Page_232"></a>flavorsome, sometimes with aniseed. It
- stands high at home, where it is in season from October to
- April.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gervais</b><br />
- <i>Ile-de-France, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese like Neufch&acirc;tel, long made by Maison
- Gervais, near Paris. Sold in tiny tin-foil squares not much
- larger than old-time yeast. Like Petit Suisse, it makes a
- perfect luncheon dessert with honey.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gesundheitk&auml;se, Holsteiner</b> <i>see</i> Holstein
- Health.</p>
-
- <p><b>Getmesost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; goat; whey; sweet.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gex</b><br />
- <i>Pays de Gex, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; skim milk; blue-veined. A "little" Roquefort in
- season from November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gex Marbr&eacute;</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A very special type marbled with rich milks of cow, goat and
- sheep, mixed. A full-flavored ambassador of the big
- international Blues family, that are green in spite of their
- name.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gien</b> <i>see</i> Fromage &agrave; la Cr&egrave;me.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gislev</b><br />
- <i>Scandinavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; mild, made from skimmed cow's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gjetost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>A traditional chocolate-colored companion piece to
- Gammelost, but made with goat's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Glavis</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>The brand name of a cone of Sapsago. (<i>See</i>.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Glattk&auml;se, or Gelbk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Smooth cheese or yellow cheese. A classification of
- sour-milkers that includes Olm&uuml;tzer Quargel.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 233 --><a name="Page_233"
- id="Page_233"></a> <b>Cloire des Montagnes</b> <i>see</i>
- Damen.</p>
-
- <p><b>3/Dec/2004 15:38</b><br />
- <i>Gloucestershire, England</i></p>
-
- <p>There are two types:<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I. Double, the better of the
- two Gloucesters, is eaten only after six</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">months of ripening. "It has a
- pronounced, but mellow, delicacy of</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">flavor...the tiniest morsel
- being pregnant with savour. To measure</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">its refinement, it can undergo
- the same comparison as that we apply</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">to vintage wines. Begin with a
- small piece of Red Cheshire. If you</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">then pass to a morsel of
- Double Gloucester, you will find that the</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">praises accorded to the latter
- have been no whit exaggerated."</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>A Concise Encyclopedia of
- Gastronomy,</i> by Andr&eacute; L. Simon.</span><br />
- II. Single. By way of comparison, the spring and summer Single
- Gloucester<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">ripens in two months and is
- not as big as its "large grindstone"</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">brother. And neither is it
- "glorified Cheshire." It is mild and</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">"as different in qualify of
- flavour as a young and crisp wine is</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">from an old
- vintage."</span></p>
-
- <p><b>Glumse</b><br />
- <i>West Prussia, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A common, undistinguished cottage cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Glux</b><br />
- <i>Nivernais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Season, all year.</p>
-
- <p><b>Goat</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A frank and fair name for a semihard, brittle mouthful of
- flavor. Every country has its goat specialties. In Norway the
- milk is boiled dry, then fresh milk or cream added. In
- Czechoslovakia the peasants smoke the cheese up the kitchen
- chimney. No matter how you slice it, goat cheese is always
- notable or noble.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 234 --><a name="Page_234"
- id="Page_234"></a> <b>Gold-N-Rich</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Golden in color and rich in taste. Bland, as American taste
- demands. Like Bel Paese but not so full-flavored and a bit
- sweet. A good and deservedly popular cheese none the less,
- easily recognized by its red rind.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gomost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Usually made from cow's milk, but sometimes from goat's.
- Milk is curdled with rennet and condensed by heating until it
- has a butter-like consistency. (<i>See</i> Mysost.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Gorgonzola</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Besides the standard type exported to us (<i>See</i>
- <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.) there is White Gorgonzola,
- little known outside Italy where it is enjoyed by local
- caseophiles, who like it put up in crocks with brandy, too.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gouda</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gouda, Kosher</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>The same semihard good Gouda, but made with kosher rennet.
- It is a bit more mellow than most and, like all kosher
- products, is stamped by the Jewish authorities who prepare
- it.</p>
-
- <p><b>Goya</b><br />
- <i>Corrientes, Argentine</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, dry, Italian type for grating. Like all fine Argentine
- cheeses the milk of pedigreed herds fed on prime pampas grass
- distinguishes Goya from lesser Parmesan types, even back in
- Italy.</p>
-
- <p>It is interesting that the nitrate in Chilean soil makes
- their wines the best in America, and the richness of Argentine
- milk does the same for their cheeses, most of which are Italian
- imitations and some of which excel the originals.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 235 --><a name="Page_235"
- id="Page_235"></a> <b>Gournay</b><br />
- <i>Seine, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, similar to Demi-sel, comes in round and flat forms
- about &frac14; pound in weight. Those shaped like Bondons
- resemble corks about &frac34; of an inch thick and four inches
- long.</p>
-
- <p><b>Grana</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Another name for Parmesan. From "grains", the size of big
- shot, that the curd is cut into.</p>
-
- <p><b>Grana Lombardo</b><br />
- <i>Lombardy</i></p>
-
- <p>The same hard type for grating, named after its origin in
- Lombardy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Grana Reggiano</b><br />
- <i>Reggio, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A brand of Parmesan type made near Reggio and widely
- imitated, not only in Lombardy and Mantua, but also in the
- Argentine where it goes by a pet name of its
- own&mdash;Regianito.</p>
-
- <p><b>Grande Bornand, la</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>A luscious half-dried sheep's milker.</p>
-
- <p><b>Granular curd</b> <i>see</i> Stirred curd.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gras, or Velvet Kaas</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Named from its butterfat content and called "Moors Head",
- <i>T&ecirc;te de Maure</i>, in France, from its shape and size.
- The same is true of Fromage de Gras in France, called
- <i>T&ecirc;te de Mort</i>, "Death's Head". Gras is also the
- popular name for Brie that's made in the autumn in France and
- sold from November to May. (<i>See</i> Brie.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Gratairon</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat milk named, as so many are, from the place it is
- made.</p>
-
- <p><b>Graub&uuml;nden</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>A luscious half-dried sheep's milker.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 236 --><a name="Page_236"
- id="Page_236"></a> <b>Green Bay</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Medium-sharp, splendid White Cheddar from Green Bay,
- Wisconsin, the Limburger county.</p>
-
- <p><b>Grey</b><br />
- <i>Germany and Austrian Tyrol</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; sour skim milk with salty flavor from curing in
- brine bath. Named from the gray color that pervades the entire
- cheese when ripe. It has a very pleasant taste.</p>
-
- <p><b>Gruy&egrave;re</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>G&uuml;ssing, or Land-l-kas</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Brick. Skim milk. Weight between four and eight
- pounds.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_H"
- id="AtoZ_H"></a><br />
- H</h3>
-
- <p><b>Habas</b> <i>see</i> Caille.</p>
-
- <p><b>Habl&eacute; Cr&egrave;me Chantilly</b><br />
- <i>&Ouml;smo, Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft ripened dessert cheese made from pasteurized cream by
- the old Walla Creamery. Put up in five-ounce wedge-shaped boxes
- for export and sold for a high price, well over two dollars a
- pound, in fancy big city groceries. Truly an aristocrat of
- cheeses to compare with the finest French Brie or Camembert.
- <i>See</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hand</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hard</b><br />
- <i>Puerto Rico</i></p>
-
- <p>Dry; tangy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Harzk&auml;se, Harz</b><br />
- <i>Harz Mountains, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Tiny hand cheese. Probably the world's smallest soft cheese,
- varying from 2&frac12; inches by 1&frac12; down to &frac14; by
- 1&frac12;. Packed in little boxes, a dozen together, rubbing
- rinds, as close as sardines. And like Harz canaries, they
- thrive on seeds, chiefly caraway.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 237 --><a name="Page_237"
- id="Page_237"></a> <b>Harz&eacute;</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Port-Salut type from the Trappist monastery at
- Harz&eacute;.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hasandach</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Bland; sweet.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hausk&auml;se.</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Limburger type. Disk-shaped.</p>
-
- <p><b>Haute Marne</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; square.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hay, or Fromage au Foin</b><br />
- <i>Seine, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A skim-milker resembling "a poor grade of Livarot." Nothing
- to write home about, except that it is ripened on new-mown
- hay.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hazebrook</b></p>
-
- <p>There are two kinds:</p>
-
- <p><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I. Flemish; a Fromage Fort
- type with white wine, juniper, salt and</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">pepper. Excessively strong for
- bland American tasters.</span><br />
- II. Franche-Comt&eacute;, France; small dry goat's milker,
- pounded, potted and<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">marinated in a mixture of
- thyme, tarragon, leeks, pepper and brandy.</span></p>
-
- <p><b>Head</b></p>
-
- <p>Four cheeses are called Head:</p>
-
- <p>The French Death's Head.<br />
- Swiss Monk's Head.<br />
- Dutch Cat's Head.<br />
- Moor's Head.</p>
-
- <p>There's headcheese besides but that's made of a pig's head
- and is only a cheese by discourtesy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Health</b> <i>see</i> Holstein.</p>
-
- <p><b>Herbesthal</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Named from a valley full of rich <i>herbes</i> for
- grazing.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 238 --><a name="Page_238"
- id="Page_238"></a> <b>Herkimer</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Cheddar type; nearly white. <i>See</i>
- <a href="#Page_37">Chapter 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Herrg&aring;rdsost, Farm House or Manor House</b><br />
- <i>West Gothland and Jamtland, Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard Emmentaler type in two qualities: full cream and half
- cream. Weighs 25 to 40 pounds. It is the most popular cheese in
- all Sweden and the best is from West Gothland and Jutland.</p>
-
- <p><b>Herrg&aring;rdstyp</b> <i>see</i> Hush&aring;llsost.</p>
-
- <p><b>Herv&eacute;</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; made in cubes and peppered with <i>herbes</i> such as
- tarragon, parsley and chives. It flourishes from November to
- May and comes in three qualities: extra cream, cream, and part
- skim milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hickory Smoked</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Good smoke is often wasted on bad cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hohenburg</b> <i>see</i> Box No. II.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hohenheim</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; part skimmed milk; half-pound cylinders. (See Box No.
- I.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Hoi Poi</b><br />
- <i>China</i></p>
-
- <p>Soybean cheese, developed by vegetable rennet. Exported in
- jars.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hoja</b> <i>see</i> Queso de.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hollander</b><br />
- <i>North Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation Dutch Goudas and Edams, chiefly from Neukirchen in
- Holstein.</p>
-
- <p><b>Holstein Dairy</b> <i>see</i> Leather.</p>
-
- <p><b>Holsteiner, or Old Holsteiner</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Eaten best when old, with butter, or in the North, with
- dripping.</p>
-
- <p><b>Holstein Health, or Holsteiner
- Gesundheitk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Sour-milk curd pressed hard and then cooked in a tin kettle
- with a little cream and salt. When mixed and melted it is
- poured into half-pound molds and cooled.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 239 --><a name="Page_239"
- id="Page_239"></a> <b>Holstein Skim Milk or Holstein
- Magerk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Skim-milker colored with saffron. Its name, "thin cheese,"
- tells all.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hop, Hopfen</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Small, one inch by 2&frac12; inches, packed in hops to
- ripen. An ideal beer cheese, loaded with lupulin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hopi</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; goat; brittle; sharp; supposed to have been made first
- by the Hopi Indians out west where it's still at home.</p>
-
- <p>Horner's<br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>An old cream cheese brand in Redditch where Worcestershire
- sauce originated.</p>
-
- <p><b>Horse Cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>Not made of mare's milk, but the nickname for Caciocavallo
- because of the horse's head used to trademark the first edition
- of it.</p>
-
- <p><b>Hum</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Brand name of one of those mild little red Baby Goudas that
- make you say "Ho-hum."</p>
-
- <p><b>Hush&aring;llsost, Household Cheese</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Popular in three types: Popular in three types:<br />
- Herrg&aring;rdstyp&mdash;Farmhouse<br />
- V&auml;stg&ouml;tatyp&mdash;Westgotland<br />
- Sveciatyp&mdash;Swedish</p>
-
- <p><b>Hvid Gjetost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>A strong variety of Gjetost, little known and less liked
- outside of Scandinavia.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_I"
- id="AtoZ_I"></a><br />
- I</h3>
-
- <p><b>Icelandic</b></p>
-
- <p>In <i>Letters from Iceland</i>, W.H. Auden says: "The
- ordinary cheese is like a strong Dutch and good. There is also
- a brown sweet cheese, like the Norwegian." Doubtless the latter
- is Gjetost.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 240 --><a name="Page_240"
- id="Page_240"></a> <b>Ihlefield</b><br />
- <i>Mecklenburg, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A hand cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ilha, Queijo de</b><br />
- <i>Azores</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard "Cheese of the Isle," largely exported to mother
- Portugal, measuring about a foot across and four inches high.
- The one word, <i>Ilha</i>, Isle, covers the several Azorian
- Islands whose names, such as <i>Pico</i>, Peak, and
- <i>Terceiro</i>, Third, are sometimes added to their
- cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Imp&eacute;rial, Ancien</b> <i>see</i> Ancien.</p>
-
- <p><b>Imperial Club</b><br />
- <i>Canada</i></p>
-
- <p>Potted Cheddar; snappy; perhaps named after the famous
- French Ancien Imp&eacute;rial.</p>
-
- <p><b>Incanestrato</b><br />
- <i>Sicily, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Very sharp; white; cooked; spiced; formed into large round
- "heads" from fifteen to twenty pounds. <i>See</i> Majocchino, a
- kind made with the three milks, goat, sheep and cow, and
- enriched with olive oil besides.</p>
-
- <p><b>Irish Cheeses</b></p>
-
- <p>Irish Cheddar and Irish Stilton are fairly ordinary
- imitations named after their native places of manufacture:
- Ardagh, Galtee, Whitehorn, Three Counties, etc.</p>
-
- <p><b>Isigny</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Full name Fromage &agrave; la Cr&egrave;me d'Isigny.
- <i>(See.)</i> Cream cheese. The American cheese of this name
- never amounted to much. It was an attempt to imitate Camembert
- in the Gay Nineties, but it turned out to be closer to
- Limburger. (<i>See</i> <a href="#Page_11">Chapter 2</a>.)</p>
-
- <p>In France there is also Cr&egrave;me d'Isigny, thick fresh
- cream that's as famous as England's Devonshire and comes as
- close to being cheese as any cream can.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 241 --><a name="Page_241"
- id="Page_241"></a> <b>Island of Orl&eacute;ans</b><br />
- <i>Canada</i></p>
-
- <p>This soft, full-flavored cheese was doubtless brought from
- France by early emigr&eacute;s, for it has been made since 1869
- on the Orl&eacute;ans Island in the St. Lawrence River near
- Quebec. It is known by its French name, Le Fromage
- Raffin&eacute; de l'Ile d'Orl&eacute;ans, and lives up to the
- name "refined."</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_J"
- id="AtoZ_J"></a><br />
- J</h3>
-
- <p><b>Jack</b> <i>see</i> Monterey.</p>
-
- <p><b>Jochberg</b><br />
- <i>Tyrol, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Cow and goat milk mixed in a fine Tyrolean product, as all
- mountain cheese are. Twenty inches in diameter and four inches
- high, it weighs in at forty-five pounds with the rind on.</p>
-
- <p><b>Jonch&eacute;e</b><br />
- <i>Santonge, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A superior Caillebotte, flavored with rum, orange-flower
- water or, uniquely, black coffee.</p>
-
- <p><b>Josephine</b><br />
- <i>Silesia, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft and ladylike as its name suggests. Put up in small
- cylindrical packages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Journiac</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Julost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i>.</p>
-
- <p>Semihard; tangy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Jura Bleu, or Septmoncel</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard: blue-veined; sharp; tangy.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_K"
- id="AtoZ_K"></a><br />
- K</h3>
-
- <p><b>Kaas, Oude</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Flemish name for the French Boule de Lille.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 242 --><a name="Page_242"
- id="Page_242"></a> <b>Kackavalj</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Same as Italian Caciocavallo.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kaiser-k&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>This was an imperial cheese in the days of the kaisers and
- is still made under that once awesome name. Now it's just a
- jolly old mellow, yellow container of tang.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kajmar, or Serbian Butter</b><br />
- <i>Serbia and Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese, soft and bland when young but ages to a tang
- between that of any goat's-milker and Roquefort.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kamembert</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation Camembert.</p>
-
- <p><b>Karaghi La-La</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Nutty and tangy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kareish</b><br />
- <i>Egypt</i></p>
-
- <p>A pickled cheese, similar to Domiati.</p>
-
- <p><b>Karut</b><br />
- <i>India</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; mellow; for grating and seasoning.</p>
-
- <p><b>Karvi</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; caraway-seeded; comes in smallish packages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kash</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, white, somewhat stringy cheese named cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kashcavallo, Caskcaval</b><br />
- <i>Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>A good imitation of Italian Caciocavallo.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kasher, or Caher, Penner</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; white; sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kash Kwan</b><br />
- <i>Bulgaria and the Balkans</i></p>
-
- <p>An all-purpose goat's milk, Parmesan type, eaten sliced when
- young, grated when old. An attempt to imitate it in Chicago
- failed. It is sold in Near East quarters in New York,
- Washington and all big American cities.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 243 --><a name="Page_243"
- id="Page_243"></a> <b>Kaskaval</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>Identical with Italian Caciocavallo, widely imitated, and
- well, in Greece, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Transylvania and
- neighboring lands. As popular as Cheddar in England, Canada and
- U.S.A.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kasseri</b><br />
- <i>Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; ewe's milk, usually.</p>
-
- <p><b>Katschkawalj</b><br />
- <i>Serbia</i></p>
-
- <p>Just another version of the international Caciocavallo.</p>
-
- <p><b>Katzenkopf, Cat's Head</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Another name for Edam. (<i>See</i>
- <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Kaukauna Club</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Widely advertised processed cheese food.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kauna</b><br />
- <i>Lithuania</i></p>
-
- <p>A hearty cheese that's in season all the year around.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kefalotir, Kefalotyi</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavia, Greece and Syria</i></p>
-
- <p>Both of these hard, grating cheeses are made from either
- goat's or ewe's milk and named after their shape, resembling a
- Greek hat, or Kefalo.</p>
-
- <p><b>Keg-ripened</b><br />
- <i>see</i> Brand.</p>
-
- <p><b>King Christian IX</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Sharp with caraway. Popular with everybody.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kingdom Farm</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A, near Ithaca, N.Y.</i> The Rutherfordites or
- Jehovah's Witnesses make Brick, Limburger and M&uuml;nster that
- are said to be most delectable by those mortals lucky enough to
- get into the Kingdom Farm. Unfortunately their cheese is not
- available elsewhere.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kirgischerk&auml;se</b> <i>see</i> Krutt.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 244 --><a name="Page_244"
- id="Page_244"></a> <b>Kjarsgaard</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; skim; sharp; tangy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Klatschk&auml;se, Gossip Cheese</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A rich "ladies' cheese" corresponding to Damen; both
- designed to promote the flow of gossip in afternoon
- <i>Kaffee-klatsches</i> in the <i>Konditories</i>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kloster, Kloster K&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; ripe; finger-shaped, one by one by four inches. In
- Munich this was, and perhaps still is, carried by brew masters
- on their tasting tours "to bring out the excellence of a
- freshly broached tun." Named from being made by monks in early
- cloisters, down to this day.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kochenk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Luxembourg</i></p>
-
- <p>Cooked white dessert cheese. Since it is salt-free it is
- recommended for diets.</p>
-
- <p><b>Koch K&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>This translates "cooked cheese."</p>
-
- <p><b>Kochtounk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft, cooked and smoked. Bland flavor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kolos-monostor</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep; rectangular four-pounder, 8&frac12; by five by three
- inches. One of those college-educated cheeses turned out by the
- students and professors at the Agricultural School of
- Transylvania.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kolosvarer</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>A Trappist Port-Salut imitation made with water-buffalo
- milk, as are so many of the world's fine cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Komijnekaas, Komynekass</b><br />
- <i>North Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Spiked with caraway seeds and named after them.</p>
-
- <p><b>Konigsk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A regal name for a German imitation of Bel Paese.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 245 --><a name="Page_245"
- id="Page_245"></a> <b>Kopanisti</b><br />
- <i>Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Blue-mold cheese with sharp, peppery flavor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Koppen, Cup, or Bauden</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; goat; made in a cup-shaped mold that gives both
- its shape and name. Small, three to four ounces; sharp;
- pungent; somewhat smoky. Imitated in U.S.A. in half-pound
- packages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Korestin</b><br />
- <i>Russia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; mellow; cured in brine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kosher</b></p>
-
- <p>This cheese appears in many countries under several names.
- Similar to Limburger, but eaten fresh. It is stamped genuine by
- Jewish authorities, for the use of religious persons.
- (<i>See</i> Gouda, Kosher.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Krauterk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Brazil</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft-paste herb cheese put up in a tube by German Brazilians
- near the Argentine border. A rich, full-flavored adaptation of
- Swiss Krauterk&auml;se even though it is processed.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kreuterk&auml;se, Herb Cheese</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, grating cheese flavored with herbs; like Sapsago or
- Grunk&auml;se.</p>
-
- <p><b>Krutt, or Kirgischerk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Asian Steppes</i></p>
-
- <p>A cheese turned out en route by nomadic tribes in the
- Asiatic Steppes, from sour skim milk of goat, sheep, cow or
- camel. The salted and pressed curd is made into small balls and
- dried in the sun.</p>
-
- <p><b>K&uuml;hbacher</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, ripe, and chiefly interesting because of its name, Cow
- Creek, where it is made.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kuminost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; caraway-seeded.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 246 --><a name="Page_246"
- id="Page_246"></a> <b>Kumminost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>This is Bondost with caraway added.</p>
-
- <p><b>Kummin Ost</b><br />
- <i>Wisconsin, U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation of the Scandinavian, with small production in
- Wisconsin where so many Swedes and Norwegians make their home
- and their <i>ost</i>.</p>
-
- <p><b>K&uuml;mmel, Leyden, or Leidsche Kaas</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Caraway-seeded and named.</p>
-
- <p><b>K&uuml;mmelk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany and U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; sharp with caraway. Milwaukee K&uuml;mmelk&auml;se
- has made a name for itself as a nibble most suitable with most
- drinks, from beer to imported k&uuml;mmel liqueur.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_L"
- id="AtoZ_L"></a><br />
- L</h3>
-
- <p><b>Labneh</b><br />
- <i>Syria</i></p>
-
- <p>Sour-milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>La Fonc&eacute;e, or Fromage de Pau</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lager K&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Semidry and mellow. While <i>lager</i> means merely "to
- store," there is more than a subtle suggestion of lager beer
- here.</p>
-
- <p><b>Laguiole, Fromage de, and Guiole</b><br />
- <i>Aveyron, France</i></p>
-
- <p>An ancient Cantal type said to have flourished since the
- Roman occupation. Many consider Laguiole superior to Cantal. It
- is in full season from November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lamothe-Bougon, La Mothe St. Heray</b><br />
- <i>Poitou</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat cheese made from May to November.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 247 --><a name="Page_247"
- id="Page_247"></a> <b>Lancashire, or Lancaster</b><br />
- <i>North England</i></p>
-
- <p>White; crumbly; sharp; a good Welsh Rabbit cheese if you can
- get it. It is more like Cheshire than Cheddar. This most
- popular variety in the north of England is turned out best at
- Fylde, near the Irish Sea. It is a curiosity in manufacture,
- for often the curds used are of different ages, and this is
- accountable for a loose, friable texture. Deep orange in
- color.</p>
-
- <p><b>Land-l-kas, or G&uuml;ssing</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Skim-milker, similar to U.S. Brick. Square loaves, four to
- eight pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Langlois Blue</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A Colorado Blue with an excellent reputation, though it can
- hardly compete with Roquefort.</p>
-
- <p><b>Langres</b><br />
- <i>Haute-Marne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; fermented whole milk; farm-made; full-flavored,
- high-smelling Limburger type, similar to Maroilles. Ancient of
- days, said to have been made since the time of the Merovingian
- kings. Cylindrical, five by eight inches, they weigh one and a
- half to two pounds. Consumed mostly at home.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lapland</b><br />
- <i>Lapland</i></p>
-
- <p>Reindeer milk. Resembles hard Swiss. Of unusual shape, both
- round and flat, so a cross-section looks like a dumbbell with
- angular ends.</p>
-
- <p><b>Laredo</b><br />
- <i>Mexico</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; creamy; mellow, made and named after the North Mexico
- city.</p>
-
- <p><b>Larron</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A kind of Maroilles.</p>
-
- <p><b>Latticini</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Trade name for a soft, water-buffalo product as creamy as
- Camembert.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 248 --><a name="Page_248"
- id="Page_248"></a> <b>Laumes, les</b><br />
- <i>Burgundy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made from November to July.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lauterbach</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Breakfast cheese</p>
-
- <p><b>Leaf</b> <i>see</i> Tschil.</p>
-
- <p><b>Leather, Leder, or Holstein Dairy</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A skim-milker with five to ten percent buttermilk, all from
- the great <i>milch</i> cows up near Denmark in
- Schleswig-Holstein. A technical point in its making is that
- it's "broken up with a harp or a stirring stick and stirred
- with a Danish stirrer."</p>
-
- <p><b>Lebanie</b><br />
- <i>Syria</i></p>
-
- <p>Dessert cottage cheese often served with yogurt.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lecco, Formaggini di</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; cow or goat; round dessert variety; representative of
- a cheese family as big as the human family of most
- Italians.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lees</b> <i>see</i> Appenzeller, Festive, No. II.</p>
-
- <p><b>LeGu&eacute;yin</b><br />
- <i>Lorraine, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Half-dried; small; salted; peppered and sharp. The salt
- <i>and</i> pepper make it unusual, though not as peppery as
- Italian Pepato.</p>
-
- <p><b>Leicester</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; shallow; flat millstone of Cheddar-like cheese
- weighing forty pounds. Dark orange and mild to red and strong,
- according to age. With Wiltshire and Warwickshire it belongs to
- the Derbyshire type.</p>
-
- <p>An ancient saying is: "Leicester cheese and water cress were
- just made for each other."</p>
-
- <p><b>Leidsche Kaas</b> <i>see</i> Leyden.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 249 --><a name="Page_249"
- id="Page_249"></a> <b>Leonessa</b></p>
-
- <p>A kind of Pecorino.</p>
-
- <p><b>Leroy</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Notable because it's a natural cheese in a mob of modern
- processed.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lerroux</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat; in season from February to September and not eaten in
- fall or winter months.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lescin</b><br />
- <i>Caucasus</i></p>
-
- <p>Curious because the sheep's milk that makes it is milked
- directly into a sack of skin. It is made in the usual way,
- rennet added, curd broken up, whey drained off, curd put into
- forms and pressed lightly. But after that it is wrapped in
- leaves and ropes of grass. After curing two weeks in the
- leaves, they are discarded, the cheese salted and wrapped up in
- leaves again for another ripening period.</p>
-
- <p>The use of a skin sack again points the association of
- cheese and wine in a region where wine is still drunk from skin
- bags with nozzles, as in many wild and mountainous parts.</p>
-
- <p><b>Les Petits Bressans</b><br />
- <i>Bresse, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Small goat cheeses named from food-famous Bresse, of the
- plump pullets, and often stimulated with brandy before being
- wrapped in fresh vine leaves, like Les Petits Banons.</p>
-
- <p><b>Les Petits Fromages</b> <i>see</i> Petits Fromages and
- Thiviers.</p>
-
- <p><b>Le Vacherin</b></p>
-
- <p>Name given to two entirely different varieties:<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I. Vacherin &agrave; la
- Main</span><br />
- II. Vacherin Fondu. (<i>See</i> Vacherin.)</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 250 --><a name="Page_250"
- id="Page_250"></a> <b>Levroux</b><br />
- <i>Berry, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A goat cheese in season from May to December.</p>
-
- <p><b>Leyden, Komijne Kaas, Caraway Cheese</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard, tangy with caraway. Similar Delft. There are two
- kinds of Leyden that might be called Farm Fat and Factory Thin,
- for those made on the farms contain 30 to 35% fat, against 20%
- in the factory product.</p>
-
- <p><b>Liederkranz</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_37">Chapter
- 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Limburger</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lincoln</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese that keeps two to three weeks. This is in
- England, where there is much less refrigeration than in the
- U.S.A., and that's a big break for most natural cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lindenhof</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; aromatic; sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lipta, Liptauer, Liptoiu</b><br />
- <i>Hungary</i></p>
-
- <p>A classic mixture with condiments, especially the great
- peppers from which the world's best paprika is made. Liptauer
- is the regional name for Brinza, as well, and it's made in the
- same manner, of sheep milk and sometimes cow. Salty and
- spready, somewhat oily, as most sheep-milkers are. A fairly
- sharp taste with a suggestion of sour milk. It is sold in
- various containers and known as "pickled cheese." (<i>See</i>
- <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Lipto</b><br />
- <i>Hungary</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; sheep; white; mild and milky taste. A close relative
- of both Liptauer and Brinza.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 251 --><a name="Page_251"
- id="Page_251"></a> <b>Little Nippy</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Processed cheese with a cute name, wrapped up both plain and
- smoky, to "slice and serve for cheese trays, mash or whip for
- spreading," but no matter how you slice, mash and whip it, it's
- still processed.</p>
-
- <p><b>Livarot</b><br />
- <i>Calvados, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft paste, colored with annatto-brown or deep red (also,
- uncommonly, fresh and white). It has the advantage over
- Camembert, made in the same region, in that it may be
- manufactured during the summer months when skim milk is
- plentiful and cheap. It is formed in cylinders, six by two
- inches, and ripened several months in the even temperature of
- caves, to be eaten at its best only in January, February and
- March. By June and afterward it should be avoided. Similar to
- Mignot II. Early in the process of making, after ripening ten
- to twelve days, the cheeses are wrapped in fresh <i>laiche</i>
- leaves, both to give flavor and help hold in the ammonia and
- other essentials for making a strong, piquant Livarot.</p>
-
- <p><b>Livlander</b><br />
- <i>Russia</i></p>
-
- <p>A popular hand cheese. A most unusual variety because the
- cheese itself is red, not the rind.</p>
-
- <p><b>Locatelli</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A brand of Pecorino differing slightly from Bomano
- Pecorino.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lodigiano, or Lombardo</b><br />
- <i>Lodi, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Sharp; fragrant; sometimes slightly bitter; yellow.
- Cylindrical; surface colored dark and oiled. Used for grating.
- Similar to Parmesan but not as fine in quality.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 252 --><a name="Page_252"
- id="Page_252"></a> <b>Longhorn</b><br />
- <i>Wisconsin, U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>This fine American Cheddar was named from its resemblance to
- the long horn of a popular milking breed of cattle, or just
- from the Longhorn breed of cow that furnished the makings.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lorraine</b><br />
- <i>Lorraine, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; small; delicate; unique because it's seasoned with
- pistachio nuts besides salt and pepper. Eaten while quite
- young, in two-ounce portions that bring a very high price.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lumburger</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft and tangy dessert cheese. The opposite of Limburger
- because it has no odor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Lunch</b><br />
- <i>Germany and U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>The same as Breakfast and Fr&uuml;hst&uuml;ck. A Limburger
- type of eye-opener.</p>
-
- <p><b>L&uuml;neberg</b><br />
- <i>West Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Swiss type; saffron-colored; made in a copper kettle; not as
- strong as Limburger, or as mild as Emmentaler, yet piquant and
- aromatic, with a character of its own.</p>
-
- <p><b>Luxembourg</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Tiny tin-foiled type of Liederkranz. A mild, bland, would-be
- Camembert.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_M"
- id="AtoZ_M"></a><br />
- M</h3>
-
- <p><b>Maconnais</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; goat's milk; two inches square by one and a half
- inches thick.</p>
-
- <p><b>Macqueline</b><br />
- <i>Oise, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft Camembert type, made in the same region, but sold at a
- cheaper price.</p>
-
- <p><b>Madridejos</b><br />
- <i>Spain</i></p>
-
- <p>Named for Madrid where it is made.</p>
-
- <p><b>Magdeburger-kuhk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>"Cow cheese" made in Magdeburg.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 253 --><a name="Page_253"
- id="Page_253"></a> <b>Magerk&auml;se</b> <i>see</i> Holstein
- Skim Milk</p>
-
- <p><b>Maggenga, Sorte</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A term for Parmesan types made between April and
- September.</p>
-
- <p><b>Maguis</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Also called Fromage Mou. Soft; white; sharp; spread.</p>
-
- <p><b>Maigre</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A name for Brie made in summer and inferior to both the
- winter Gras and spring Migras.</p>
-
- <p><b>Maile</b><br />
- <i>Crimea</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep; cooked; drained; salted; made into forms and put into
- a brine bath where it stays sometimes a year.</p>
-
- <p><b>Maile Pener (Fat Cheese)</b><br />
- <i>Crimea</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep; crumbly; open texture and pleasing flavor when
- ripened.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mainauer</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; full cream; round; red outside, yellow within.
- Weight three pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mainzer Hand</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>Typical hand cheese, kneaded by hand thoroughly, which makes
- for quality, pressed into flat cakes by hand, dried for a week,
- packed in kegs or jars and ripened in the cellar six to eight
- weeks. As in making bread, the skill in kneading Mainzer makes
- a worthy craft.</p>
-
- <p><b>Majocchino</b><br />
- <i>Sicily, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>An exceptional variety of the three usual milks mixed
- together: goat, sheep and cow, flavored with spices and olive
- oil. A kind of Incanestrato.</p>
-
- <p><b>Malakoff</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A form of Neufch&acirc;tel about a half inch by two inches,
- eaten fresh or ripe.</p>
-
- <p><b>Manicamp</b><br />
- <i>French Flanders</i></p>
-
- <p>In season from October to July.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 254 --><a name="Page_254"
- id="Page_254"></a> <b>Mano, Queso de</b><br />
- <i>Venezuela</i></p>
-
- <p>A kind of Venezuelan hand cheese, as its Spanish name
- translates. (<i>See</i> Venezuelan.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Manor House</b> <i>see</i> Herrg&aring;rdsost.</p>
-
- <p><b>Manteca, Butter</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Cheese and butter combined in a small brick of butter with a
- covering of Mozzarella. This is for slicing&mdash;not for
- cooking&mdash;which is unusual for any Italian cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Manur, or Manuri</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep or cow's milk heated to boiling, then cooled "until
- the fingers can be held in it". A mixture of fresh whey and
- buttermilk is added with the rennet. "The curd is lifted from
- the whey in a cloth and allowed to drain, when it is kneaded
- like bread, lightly salted, and dried."</p>
-
- <p><b>Maque&eacute;</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Another name for Fromage Mou, Soft Cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Marches</b><br />
- <i>Tuscany, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Ewe's milk; hard.</p>
-
- <p><b>Margarine</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>An oily cheese made with oleomargarine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Margherita</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; cream; small.</p>
-
- <p><b>Marienhofer</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Limburger type. About 4&frac12; inches square and 1&frac12;
- inches thick; weight about a pound. Wrapped in tin foil.</p>
-
- <p><b>M&auml;rkisch, or M&auml;rkisch Hand</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; smelly; hand type.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 255 --><a name="Page_255"
- id="Page_255"></a> <b>Maroilles, Marolles, Marole</b><br />
- <i>Flanders, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft and semihard, half way between Pont l'Ev&ecirc;que
- and Limburger. Full flavor, high smell, reddish brown rind,
- yellow within. Five inches square and 2&frac14; inches thick;
- some larger.</p>
-
- <p><b>Martha Washington Aged Cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Made by Kasper of Bear Creek, Wisconsin. (<i>See under</i>
- Wisconsin in <a href="#Page_37">Chapter 4</a>.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Mascarpone, or Macherone</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; white; delicate fresh cream from Lombardy. Usually
- packed in muslin or gauze bags, a quarter to a half pound.</p>
-
- <p><b>McIntosh</b><br />
- <i>Alaska</i></p>
-
- <p>An early Klondike Cheddar named by its maker, Peter
- McIntosh, and described as being as yellow as that "Alaskan
- gold, which brought at times about ounce for ounce over
- mining-camp counters." <i>The Cheddar Box</i> by Dean
- Collins.</p>
-
- <p><b>McLaren's</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Pioneer club type of snappy Cheddar in a pot, originally
- made in Canada, now by Kraft in the U.S A.</p>
-
- <p><b>Meadowbloom</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Made by the Iowa State College at Ames.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mecklenburg Skim</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>No more distinguished than most skim-milkers.</p>
-
- <p><b>Meilbou</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made in the Champagne district.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mein K&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Sharp; aromatic; trade-marked package.</p>
-
- <p><b>Melfa</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Excellent for a processed cheese. White; flavorsome. Packed
- in half moons.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 256 --><a name="Page_256"
- id="Page_256"></a> <b>Melun</b><br />
- <i>France</i> Brown-red rind, yellow inside; high-smelling.
- There is also a Brie de Melun.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mentelto</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Sharp; goat; from the Mentelto mountains</p>
-
- <p><b>Merignac</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat.</p>
-
- <p><b>Merovingian</b><br />
- <i>Northeast France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; white; creamy; sharp; historic since the time of
- the Merovingian kings.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mersem</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Lightly cooked.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mesitra</b><br />
- <i>Crimea</i></p>
-
- <p>Eaten when fresh and unsalted; also when ripened. Soft,
- ewe's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mesost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Whey; sweetish.</p>
-
- <p><b>Metton</b><br />
- <i>Franche-Comt&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Season October to June.</p>
-
- <p><b>Meuse</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; piquant; aromatic.</p>
-
- <p><b>Midget Salami Provolone</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>This goes Baby Goudas and Edams one better by being a sort
- of sausage, too.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mignot</b><br />
- <i>Calvados, France</i></p>
-
- <p><i>White, No. I:</i> Soft; fresh; in small cubes or
- cylinders; in season only in summer, April to September.</p>
-
- <p><i>Passe, No. II:</i> Soft but ripened, and in the same
- forms, but only seasonal in winter, October to March. Similar
- to Pont l'Ev&ecirc;que and popular for more than a century. It
- goes specially well with Calvados cider, fresh, hard or
- distilled.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 257 --><a name="Page_257"
- id="Page_257"></a> <b>Migras</b></p>
-
- <p>Name given to spring Brie&mdash;midway between fat winter
- Gras and thin summer Maigre.</p>
-
- <p><b>Milano, Stracchino di Milano, Fresco, Quardo</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Bel Paese. Yellow, with thin rind. 1&frac12; to
- 2&frac34; inches thick, 3 to 6&frac12; pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Milk Mud</b> <i>see</i> Schlickermilch.</p>
-
- <p><b>Millefiori</b><br />
- <i>Milan, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A Thousand Flowers&mdash;as highly scented as its
- sentimental name. Yet no cheeses are so freshly fragrant as
- these flowery Alpine ones.</p>
-
- <p><b>Milltown Bar</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Robust texture and flavor reminiscent of free-lunch and
- old-time bars.</p>
-
- <p><b>Milk cheeses</b></p>
-
- <p>Milks that make cheese around the world:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>Ass Buffalo Camel Chamois Elephant Goat Human
- (<i>see</i> Mother's milk) Llama Mare Reindeer Sea cow
- (Amazonian legend) Sheep Whale (legendary; see Whale
- Cheese) Yak Zebra Zebu</p>
- </div>
-
- <p>U.S. pure food laws prohibit cheeses made of unusual or
- strange animal's milk, such as camel, llama and zebra.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 258 --><a name="Page_258"
- id="Page_258"></a> <b>Milwaukee K&uuml;mmelk&auml;se<br />
- and Hand K&auml;se</b> <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Aromatic with caraway, brought from Germany by early
- emigrants and successfully imitated.</p>
-
- <p><b>Minas</b><br />
- <i>Brazil</i></p>
-
- <p>Name for the Brazilian state of Minas Geraes, where it is
- made. Semihard; white; round two-pounder; often chalky. The two
- best brands are one called Primavera, Spring, and another put
- out by the Swiss professors who teach the art at the
- Agricultural University in the State Capital, Bello
- Horizonte.</p>
-
- <p><b>Minnesota Blue</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A good national product known from coast to coast. Besides
- Blue, Minnesota makes good all-American Brick and Cheddar,
- natural nationals to be proud of.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mintzitra</b><br />
- <i>in Macedonia; and</i><br />
- <b>Mitzithra</b><br />
- <i>in Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep; soft; succulent; and as pleasantly greasy as other
- sheep cheeses from Greece. It's a by-product of the fabulous
- Feta.</p>
-
- <p><b>Modena, Monte</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Made in U.S.A. during World War II. Parmesan-type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mohawk Limburger Spread</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A brand that comes in one-pound jars.</p>
-
- <p><b>Moliterno</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Caciocavallo. <i>(See.)</i></p>
-
- <p><b>Monceau</b><br />
- <i>Champagne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard, similar to Maroilles.</p>
-
- <p><b>Moncenisio</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Gorgonzola.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 259 --><a name="Page_259"
- id="Page_259"></a> <b>Mondseer, Mondseer Schachtelk&auml;se,
- Mondseer Schlossk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>This little family with a lot of long names is closely
- related to the M&uuml;nster tribe, with very distant
- connections with the mildest branch of the Limburgers.</p>
-
- <p>The Schachtelk&auml;se is named from the wooden boxes in
- which it is shipped, while the Schlossk&auml;se shows its class
- by being called Castle Cheese, probably because it is richer
- than the others, being made of whole milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Money made of cheese</b><br />
- <i>China</i></p>
-
- <p>In the Chase National Bank collection of moneys of the world
- there is a specimen of "Cheese money" about which the curator,
- Farran Zerbee, writes: "A specimen of the so-called 'cheese
- money' of Northern China, 1850-70, now in the Chase Bank
- collection, came to me personally some thirty years ago from a
- woman missionary, who had been located in the field where she
- said a cake form of condensed milk, and referred to as
- 'cheese,' was a medium of exchange among the natives. It, like
- other commodities, particularly compressed tea, was prized as a
- trading medium in China, in that it had value as nutriment and
- was sufficiently appreciated by the population as to be
- exchangeable for other articles of service."</p>
-
- <p><b>Monk's Head</b> <i>see</i> T&ecirc;te de Moine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Monostorer</b><br />
- <i>Transylvania, Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>Ewe's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Monsieur</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; salted; rich in flavor.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 260 --><a name="Page_260"
- id="Page_260"></a> <b>Monsieur Fromage</b> <i>see</i>
- Fromage de Monsieur Fromage.</p>
-
- <p><b>Montana</b><br />
- <i>Catalonia</i></p>
-
- <p>A mountain cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Montasio</b><br />
- <i>Austria and Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Usually skimmed goat and cow milk mixed. When finished, the
- rind is often rubbed with olive oil or blackened with soot. It
- is eaten both fresh, white and sweet, and aged, when it is
- yellow, granular and sharp, with a characteristic flavor.
- Mostly used when three to twelve months old, but kept much
- longer and grated for seasoning. Widely imitated in
- America.</p>
-
- <p><b>Montauban de Bretagne, Fromage de</b><br />
- <i>Brittany, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A celebrated cheese of Brittany.</p>
-
- <p><b>Montavoner</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Sour and sometimes sweet milk, made tasty with dried herbs
- of the <i>Achittea</i> family.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mont Blanc</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>An Alpine cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mont Cenis</b><br />
- <i>Southeastern France</i> Usually made of all three available
- milks, cow, goat and sheep; it is semi-hard and blue-veined
- like the other Roquefort imitations, Gex and Septmoncel.
- Primitive methods are still used in the making and sometimes
- the ripening is done by <i>penicillium</i> introduced in moldy
- bread. Large rounds, eighteen by six to eight inches, weighing
- twenty-five pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mont-des-Cats</b><br />
- <i>French Flanders</i></p>
-
- <p>Trappist monk-made Port-Salut.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 261 --><a name="Page_261"
- id="Page_261"></a> <b>Montdidier</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A fresh cream.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mont d'or, le, or Mont Dore</b><br />
- <i>Lyonnais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; whole milk; originally goat, now cow; made throughout
- the Rhone Valley. Fat, golden-yellow and "relished by
- financiers" according to Victor Meusy. Between Brie and Pont
- l'Ev&ecirc;que but more delicate than either, though not
- effeminate. Alpin and Riola are similar. The best is still
- turned out at Mont d'Or, with runners-up in St. Cyr and St.
- Didier.</p>
-
- <p><b>Montavoner</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>A sour-milker made fragrant with herbs added to the
- curd.</p>
-
- <p><b>Monterey</b><br />
- <i>Mexico</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sharp; perhaps inspired by Montery Jack that's made in
- California and along the Mexican border.</p>
-
- <p><b>Monterey Jack</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_37">Chapter
- 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Month&eacute;ry</b><br />
- <i>Seine-et-Oise, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Whole or partly skimmed milk; soft in quality and large in
- size, weighing up to 5&frac12; pounds. Notable only for its
- patriotic tri-color in ripening, with whitish mold that turns
- blue and has red spots.</p>
-
- <p><b>Montpellier</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep.</p>
-
- <p><b>Moravian</b><br />
- <i>Czechoslovakia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard and sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Morbier</b><br />
- <i>Bresse, France</i></p>
-
- <p>In season from November to July.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mostoffait</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A little-known product of Champagne.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 262 --><a name="Page_262"
- id="Page_262"></a> <b>Mother's milk</b></p>
-
- <p>In his book about French varieties, <i>Les Fromages</i>,
- Maurice des Ombiaux sums up the many exotic milks made into
- cheese and recounts the story of Paul Bert, who served a cheese
- "white as snow" that was so delicately appetizing it was
- partaken of in "religious silence." All the guests guessed, but
- none was right. So the host announced it was made of <i>"lait
- de femme"</i> and an astounded turophile exclaimed, "Then all
- of us are cannibals."</p>
-
- <p><b>Mountain</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; yellow; sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mountain, Azuldoch</b> <i>see</i> Azuldoch.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mount Hope</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Yellow; mellow; mild and porous California Cheddar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mouse or Mouse Trap</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Common name for young, green, cracked, leathery or rubbery
- low-grade store cheese fit only to bait traps. When it's aged
- and sharp, however, the same cheese can be bait for
- caseophiles.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mozzarella</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; water-buffalo milk; moistly fresh and unripened;
- bland, white cooking cheese put up in balls or big bowl-like
- cups weighing about a half pound and protected with wax paper.
- The genuine is made at Cardito, Aversa, Salernitano and in the
- Mazzoni di Capua. Like Ricotta, this is such a popular cheese
- all over America that it is imitated widely, and often badly,
- with a bitter taste.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mozzarella-Affumicata, also called Scamozza</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; smooth; white; bland; un-salted. Put up in pear
- shapes of about one pound, with tan rind, from smoking.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 263 --><a name="Page_263"
- id="Page_263"></a> Eaten chiefly sliced, but prized, both
- fresh and smoked, in true Italian one-dish meals such as
- Lasagne and Pizza.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mozzarinelli</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A pet name for a diminutive edition of Mozzarella.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mrsav</b> <i>see</i> Sir Posny.</p>
-
- <p><b>M&uuml;nster</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>German originally, now made from Colmar, Strassburg and
- Copenhagen to Milwaukee in all sorts of imitations, both good
- and bad. Semihard; whole milk; yellow inside, brick-red
- outside; flavor from mild to strong, depending on age and
- amount of caraway or anise seed added. Best in winter season,
- from November to April.</p>
-
- <p>M&uuml;nster is a world-wide classic that doubles for both
- German and French. G&eacute;rom&eacute; is a standard French
- type of it, with a little longer season, beginning in April,
- and a somewhat different flavor from anise seed. Often, instead
- of putting the seeds inside, a dish of caraway is served with
- the cheese for those who like to flavor to taste.</p>
-
- <p>In Alsace, M&uuml;nster is made plain and also under the
- name of M&uuml;nster au Cumin because of the caraway.</p>
-
- <p>American imitations are much milder and marketed much
- younger. They are supposed to blend the taste of Brick and
- Limburger; maybe they do.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mustard</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A processed domestic, Gruy&egrave;re type.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 264 --><a name="Page_264"
- id="Page_264"></a> <b>Myjithra</b></p>
-
- <p>Imitated with goat's milk in Southern Colorado.</p>
-
- <p><b>Mysost, Mytost</b><br />
- <i>Scandinavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Made in all Scandinavian countries and imitated in the
- U.S.A. A whey cheese, buttery, mild and sweetish with a caramel
- color all through, instead of the heavy chocolate or dark
- tobacco shade of Gjetost. Frimost is a local name for it. The
- American imitations are cylindrical and wrapped in tin
- foil.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_N"
- id="AtoZ_N"></a><br />
- N</h3>
-
- <p><b>Nagelkassa (Fresh), Fresh Clove Cheese, called Nageles in
- Holland</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Skim milk; curd mixed with caraway and cloves called nails,
- <i>nagel</i>, in Germany and Austria. The large flat rounds
- resemble English Derby.</p>
-
- <p><b>Nantais, or Fromage du Cur&eacute;, Cheese of the
- Curate</b><br />
- <i>Brittany, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A special variety dedicated to some curate of Nantes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Nessel</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; whole milk; round and very thin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Neufch&acirc;tel, or Petit Suisse</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; whole milk; small loaf. See Ancien Imp&eacute;rial,
- Bondon, and <a href="#Page_129">Chapter 9</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>New Forest</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream cheese from the New Forest district.</p>
-
- <p><b>Nieheimer</b><br />
- <i>Westphalia, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Sour milk; with salt and caraway seed added, sometimes beer
- or milk. Covered lightly with straw and packed in kegs with
- hops to ripen. Both beer and hops in one cheese is unique.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 265 --><a name="Page_265"
- id="Page_265"></a> <b>Niolo</b><br />
- <i>Corsica</i></p>
-
- <p>In season from October to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Noekkelost or N&ouml;gelost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to spiced Leyden or Edam with caraway, and shaped
- like a Gouda.</p>
-
- <p><b>Nordlands-Ost "Kalas"</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Trade name for an American imitation of a Scandinavian
- variety, perhaps suggested by Swedish Nordost.</p>
-
- <p><b>Nordost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; white; baked; salty and smoky.</p>
-
- <p><b>North Wilts</b><br />
- <i>Wiltshire, England</i></p>
-
- <p>Cheddar type; smooth; hard rind; rich but delicate in
- flavor. Small size, ten to twelve pounds; named for its
- locale.</p>
-
- <p><b>Nostrale</b><br />
- <i>Northwest Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>An ancient-of-days variety of which there are two
- kinds:<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I. <i>Formaggio Duro:</i>
- hard, as its name says, made in the spring</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">when the cows are in the
- valley.</span><br />
- II. <i>Formaggio Tenero:</i> soft and richer, summer-made with
- milk<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">from lush
- mountain-grazing.</span></p>
-
- <p><b>Notruschki (cheese bread)</b><br />
- <i>Russia</i></p>
-
- <p>Made with Tworog cheese and widely popular.</p>
-
- <p><b>Nova Scotia Smoked</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>The name must mean that the cheese was smoked in the Nova
- Scotia manner, for it is smoked mostly in New York City, like
- sturgeon, to give the luxurious flavor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Nuworld</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>This semisoft newcomer arrived about 1954 and is advertised
- as a brand-new variety. It is made in the Midwest and packed in
- small, heavily waxed portions
- <!-- Page 266 --><a name="Page_266"
- id="Page_266"></a> to preserve all of its fine, full aroma
- and flavor.</p>
-
- <p>A cheese all America can be proud of, whether it is an
- entirely new species or not.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_O"
- id="AtoZ_O"></a><br />
- O</h3>
-
- <p><b>Oaxaca</b> <i>see</i> Asadero.</p>
-
- <p><b>Oka, or La Trappe</b><br />
- <i>Canada</i></p>
-
- <p>Medium soft; aromatic; the Port-Salut made by Trappist monks
- in Canada after the secret method of the order that originated
- in France. <i>See</i> Trappe.</p>
-
- <p><b>Old English Club</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Not old, not English, and representing no club we know
- of.</p>
-
- <p><b>Old Heidelberg</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, piquant rival of Liederkranz.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ol&eacute;ron Isle, Fromage d'Ile</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A celebrated sheep cheese from this island of
- Ol&eacute;ron.</p>
-
- <p><b>Olive Cream</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Ground olives mixed to taste with cream cheese. Olives rival
- pimientos for such mildly piquant blends that just suit the
- bland American taste. A more exciting olive cream may be made
- with Greek Calatma olives and Feta sheep cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Olivet</b><br />
- <i>Orl&eacute;ans, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft sheep cheese sold in three forms:<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">I. Fresh; summer, white; cream
- cheese.</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">II. Olivet-Bleu&mdash;mold
- inoculated; half-ripened.</span><br />
- III. Olivet-Cendr&eacute;, ripened in the ashes. Season,
- October to June.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 267 --><a name="Page_267"
- id="Page_267"></a> <b>Olm&uuml;tzer Quargel, also
- Olm&uuml;tzer Bierk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; skim milk-soured; salty. The smallest of hand cheeses,
- only &frac12; of an inch thick by 1&frac12; inches in diameter.
- Packed in kegs to ripen into beer cheese and keep the liquid
- contents of other kegs company. A dozen of these little ones
- are packed together in a box ready to drop into wine or beer
- drinks at home or at the bar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Oloron, or Fromage de la Vallee d'ossour</b><br />
- <i>B&eacute;arn, France</i></p>
-
- <p>In season from October to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Onion with garlic links</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A</i></p>
-
- <p>Processed and put up like frankfurters, in links.</p>
-
- <p><b>Oporto</b><br />
- <i>Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sharp; tangy. From the home town of port wine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Orkney</b><br />
- <i>Scotland</i></p>
-
- <p>A country cheese of the Orkney Islands where it is buried in
- the oat bin to ripen, and kept there between meals as well.
- Oatmeal and Scotch country cheese are natural affinities.
- Southey, Johnson and Boswell have all remarked the fine savor
- of such cheese with oatcakes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Orl&eacute;ans</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Named after the Orl&eacute;ans district Soft; creamy;
- tangy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ossetin, Tuschninsk, or Kasach</b><br />
- <i>Caucasus</i></p>
-
- <p>Comes in two forms:<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I. Soft and mild sheep or
- cow cheese ripened in brine for two months.</span><br />
- II. Hard, after ripening a year and more in brine. The type
- made of<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">sheep milk is the
- better.</span></p>
-
- <p><b>Ostiepek, Oschtjepek, Oschtjpeka</b><br />
- <i>Czechoslovakia</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep in the Carpathian Mountains supply the herb-rich milk
- for this type, similar to Italian Caciocavallo.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 268 --><a name="Page_268"
- id="Page_268"></a> <b>Oswego</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>New York State Cheddar of distinction.</p>
-
- <p><b>Oude Kaas</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Popular in France as Boule de Lille.</p>
-
- <p><b>Oust, Fromage de</b><br />
- <i>Roussillon, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Of the Camembert family.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ov&aacute;r</b><br />
- <i>Hungarian</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft to semihard, reddish-brown rind, reddish-yellow
- inside. Mild but pleasantly piquant It has been called
- Hungarian Tilsit.</p>
-
- <p><b>Oveji Sir</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavian Alpine</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, mountain-sheep cheese of quality Cellar-ripened three
- months. Weight six to ten pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Oxfordshire</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>An obsolescent type, now only of literary interest because
- of Jonathan Swift's little story around it, in the eighteenth
- century:</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p>"An odd land of fellow, who when the cheese came upon
- the table, pretended to faint; so somebody said, Pray take
- away the cheese.'</p>
-
- <p>"'No,' said I, 'pray take away the fool. Said I
- well?'</p>
-
- <p>"To this Colonel Arwit rejoins: 'Faith, my lord, you
- served the coxcomb right enough; and therefore I wish we
- had a bit of your lordship's Oxfordshire cheese.'"</p>
- </div>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_P"
- id="AtoZ_P"></a><br />
- P</h3>
-
- <p><b>Pabstett</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A</i></p>
-
- <p>The Pabst beer people got this out during Prohibition, and
- although beer and cheese are brothers under their ferment, and
- Prohibition has long since been
- <!-- Page 269 --><a name="Page_269"
- id="Page_269"></a> done away with, the relation of the
- processed paste to a natural cheese is still as distant as
- near beer from regular beer.</p>
-
- <p><b>Packet cheese</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>This corresponds to our process cheese and is named from the
- package or packet it comes in.</p>
-
- <p><b>Paglia</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Italian-influenced Canton of Ticino. Soft. A copy of
- Gorgonzola. A Blue with a pleasant, aromatic flavor, and of
- further interest because in Switzerland, the motherland of
- cheese, it is an imitation of a foreign type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pago</b><br />
- <i>Dalmatia, Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>A sheep-milk specialty made on the island of Pago in
- Dalmatia, in weights from &frac12; to eight pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Paladru</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>In season from November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Palpuszta</b><br />
- <i>Hungary</i></p>
-
- <p>Fairly strong Limburger type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pannarone</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Gorgonzola type with white curd but without blue
- veining.</p>
-
- <p><b>Parenica</b><br />
- <i>Hungary</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep. Caciocavallo type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Parmesan, Parmigiano</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>The grand mogul of all graters. Called "The hardest cheese
- in the world." It enlivens every course from onion soup to
- cheese straws with the demitasse, and puts spirit into the
- sparse Lenten menu as <i>Pasta al Pesto</i>, powdered Parmesan,
- garlic, olive oil and basil, pounded in a mortar with a
- pestle.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 270 --><a name="Page_270"
- id="Page_270"></a> <b>Passauer Rahmk&auml;se, Cr&egrave;me
- de Passau</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>Noted Bavarian cream cheese, known in France as Cr&egrave;me
- de Passau.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pasta Cotta</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>The ball or <i>grana</i> of curd used in making
- Parmesan.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pasta Filata</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A "drawn" curd, the opposite of the little balls or grains
- into which Grana is chopped.(<i>See</i> Formaggi di Pasta
- Filata.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Pasteurized Process Cheese Food</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>This is the ultimate desecration of natural fermented
- cheese. Had Pasteur but known what eventual harm his discovery
- would do to a world of cheese, he might have stayed his
- hand.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pastorella</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, rich table cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Patagras</b><br />
- <i>Cuba</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Gouda.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pecorino</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Italian cheese made from ewe's milk. Salted in brine.
- Granular.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pelardon de Rioms</b><br />
- <i>Languedoc, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A goat cheese in season from May to November.</p>
-
- <p><b>Peneteleu</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>One of the international Caciocavallo family.</p>
-
- <p><b>Penicillium Glaucum and Penicillium Album</b></p>
-
- <p>Tiny mushroom spores of <i>Penicillium Glaucum</i> sprinkled
- in the curd destined to become Roquefort, sprout and grow into
- "blue" veins that impart the characteristic flavor. In twelve
- to fifteen days a second spore develops on the surface,
- snow-white <i>Penicillium Album</i>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pennich</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Mellow sheep cheese packed in the skin of sheep or lamb.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 271 --><a name="Page_271"
- id="Page_271"></a> <b>Pennsylvania Hand Cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>This German original has been made by the Pennsylvania Dutch
- ever since they arrived from the old country. Also Pennsylvania
- pot, or cooked.</p>
-
- <p><b>Penroque</b><br />
- <i>Pennsylvania, U.S.A</i></p>
-
- <p>Cow milk imitation Roquefort, inoculated with <i>Penicillium
- Roqueforti</i> and ripened in "caverns where nature has
- duplicated the ideal condition of the cheese-curing caverns of
- France." So any failure of Penroque to rival real Roquefort is
- more likely to be the fault of mother cow than mother
- nature.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pepato</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; stinging, with whole black peppers that make the lips
- burn. Fine for fire-eaters.</p>
-
- <p>An American imitation is made in Northern Michigan.</p>
-
- <p><b>Persill&eacute; de Savoie</b><br />
- <i>Savoie, France</i></p>
-
- <p>In season from May to January, flavored with parsley in a
- manner similar to that of sage in Vermont Cheddar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Petafina, La</b><br />
- <i>Dauphin&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat or cow milk mixed together, with yeast of dried cheese
- added, plus salt and pepper, olive oil, brandy and
- absinthe.</p>
-
- <p><b>Petit Carr&eacute;</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh, unripened Ancien Imp&eacute;rial.</p>
-
- <p><b>Petit Gruy&egrave;re</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation Gruy&egrave;re, pasteurized, processed and made
- almost unrecognizable and inedible. Six tin-foil wedges to a
- box; also packaged with a couple of crackers for bars, one
- wedge for fifteen cents, where free lunch is forbidden. This is
- a fair sample of one of several foreign imitations that are
- actually worse than we can do at home.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 272 --><a name="Page_272"
- id="Page_272"></a> <b>Petit Moule</b><br />
- <i>Ile-de-France, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A pet name for Coulommiers.</p>
-
- <p><b>Petit Suisse</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh, unsalted cream cheese. The same as Neufch&acirc;tel
- and similar to Coulommiers. It comes in two sizes:<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gros&mdash;a largest
- cylinder</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Demi&mdash;a small
- one</span></p>
-
- <p>Keats called this "the creamy curd," and another writer has
- praised its "La Fontaine-like simplicity." Whether made in
- Normandy, Switzerland, or Petropolis, Brazil, by early Swiss
- settlers, it is ideal with honey.</p>
-
- <p><b>Petit Vacher</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>"Little Cowboy," an appropriate name for a small cow's-milk
- cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Petits Bourgognes</b><br />
- <i>Lower Burgundy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; sheep; white, small, tangy. Other notable Petits also
- beginning with B are Banons and Bressans.</p>
-
- <p><b>Petits Fromages de Chasteaux, les</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Small, sheep cream cheeses from Lower Limousin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Petits Fromages de Ch&egrave;vre</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Little cheeses from little goats grazing on the little
- mountains of Provence.</p>
-
- <p><b>Petits Pots de Caill&eacute; de Poitiers</b><br />
- <i>Poitou, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Clotted milk in small pots.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pfister</b><br />
- <i>Cham, Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Emmentaler type, although differing in its method of making
- with fresh skim milk. It is named for Pfister Huber who was the
- first to manufacture it, in Chain.</p>
-
- <p><b>Philadelphia Cream</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>An excellent cream cheese that has been standard for seventy
- years. Made in New York State in spite of its name.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 273 --><a name="Page_273"
- id="Page_273"></a> <b>Picnic</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Handy-size picnic packing of mild American Cheddar. Swiss
- has long been called picnic cheese in America, its home away
- from home.</p>
-
- <p><b>Picodon de Dieule Fit</b><br />
- <i>Dauphin&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>In season from May to December.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pie, Fromage &agrave; la</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Another name for Fromage Blanc or Farm; soft, creamy
- cottage-cheese type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pie Cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A</i></p>
-
- <p>An apt American name for any round store cheese that can be
- cut in wedges like a pie. Perfect with apple or mince or any
- other pie. And by the way, in these days when natural cheese is
- getting harder to find, any piece of American Cheddar cut in
- pie wedges before being wrapped in cellophane is apt to be the
- real thing&mdash;if it has the rind on. The wedge shape is
- used, however, <i>without any rind</i>, to make processed
- pastes pass for "natural" even without that identifying word,
- and with misleading labels such as old, sharp Cheddar and "aged
- nine months." That's long enough to make a baby, but not a
- "natural" out of a processed "Cheddar."</p>
-
- <p><b>Pimiento</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Because pimiento is the blandest of peppers, it just suits
- our bland national taste, especially when mixed with
- Neufch&acirc;tel, cream, club or cottage. The best is homemade,
- of course, with honest, snappy old Cheddar mashed and mixed to
- taste, with the mild Spanish pepper that equals the Spanish
- olive as a partner in such spreads.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pimp</b> <i>see</i> Mainzer Hand Cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pineapple</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_37">Chapter
- 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 274 --><a name="Page_274"
- id="Page_274"></a> <b>Piora</b><br />
- <i>Tessin, Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Whole milk, either cow's or a mixture of goat's and
- cow's.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pippen</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Borden brand of Cheddar. Also Pippen Roll</p>
-
- <p><b>Pithiviers au Foin</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Orl&eacute;ans variety ripened on hay from October to
- May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Poitiers</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat's milker named from its Poitou district.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pommel</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>All year. Double cream; unsalted.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ponta Delgada</b><br />
- <i>Azores</i></p>
-
- <p>Semifirm; delicate; piquant</p>
-
- <p><b>Pontgibaud</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Roquefort Ripened at a very low temperature.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pont l'Ev&ecirc;que</b></p>
-
- <p>Characterized as a classic French <i>fromage</i> "with
- Huge-like Romanticism." (<i>See</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.) An imported brand is called "The Inquisitive Cow."</p>
-
- <p><b>Poona</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; mellow; New York Stater of distinctive flavor.
- Sold in two-pound packs, to be kept four or five hours at room
- temperature before serving.</p>
-
- <p><b>Port-Salut, Port du Salut</b> <i>see</i>
- <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Port, Blue Links</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>"Blue" flavored with red port and put up in pseudo-sausage
- links.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pot cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Cottage cheese with a dry curd, not creamed. An old English
- favorite for fruited cheese cakes with perfumed plums, lemons,
- almonds and macaroons. <!-- Page 275 --><a name="Page_275"
- id="Page_275"></a> In Ireland it was used in connection with
- the sheep-shearing ceremonies, although itself a common cow
- curd. Pennsylvania pot cheese is cooked.</p>
-
- <p><b>Potato</b><br />
- <i>Germany and U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Made in Thuringia from sour cow milk with sheep or goat
- sometimes added. "The potatoes are boiled and grated or mashed.
- One part of the potato is thoroughly mixed or kneaded with two
- or three parts of die curd. In the better cheese three parts of
- potatoes are mixed with two of curd. During the mixing, salt
- and sometimes caraway seed are added. The cheese is allowed to
- stand for from two to four days while a fermentation takes
- place. After this the curd is sometimes covered with beer or
- cream and is finally placed in tubs and allowed to ripen for
- fourteen days. A variety of this cheese is made in the U.S. It
- is probable, however, that it is not allowed to ripen for quite
- so long a period as the potato cheese of Europe. In all other
- essentials it appears to be the same." From U.S. Department of
- Agriculture <i>Bulletin</i> No. 608.</p>
-
- <p><b>Potato Pepper</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Italian Potato cheese is enlivened with black pepper, like
- Pepato, only not so stony hard.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pots de Cr&egrave;me St. Gervais</b><br />
- <i>St. Gervais-sur-mer, France</i></p>
-
- <p>The celebrated cream that rivals English Devonshire and is
- eaten both as a sweet and as a fresh cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pouligny-St. Pierre</b><br />
- <i>Touraine, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A celebrated cylindrical cheese made in Indre. Season from
- May to December.</p>
-
- <p><b>Poustagnax, le</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A fresh cow-milk cheese of Gascony.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 276 --><a name="Page_276"
- id="Page_276"></a> <b>Prato</b><br />
- <i>Brazil</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard, very yellow imitation of the Argentine imitation
- of Holland Dutch. Standard Brazilian dessert with guava or
- quince paste. Named not from "dish" but the River Plate
- district of the Argentine from whence it was borrowed long
- ago.</p>
-
- <p><b>Prattigau</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Aromatic and sharp, Limburger type, from skim milk. Named
- for its home valley.</p>
-
- <p><b>Prestost or Saaland Flarr</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Gouda, but unique&mdash;the curd being mixed with
- whiskey, packed in a basket, salted and cellared, wrapped in a
- cloth changed daily; and on the third day finally washed with
- whiskey.</p>
-
- <p><b>Primavera, Spring</b><br />
- <i>Minas Geraes, Brazil</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard white brand of Minas cheese high quality, with a
- springlike fragrance.</p>
-
- <p><b>Primost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; whey; unripened; light brown; mild flavor.</p>
-
- <p><b>Primula</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>A blend of French Brie and Petit Gruy&egrave;re, mild table
- cheese imitate in Norway, sold in small packages. Danish
- Appetitost is similar, but with caraway added.</p>
-
- <p><b>Processed</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>From here around the world. Natural cheese melted and
- modified by emulsification with a harmless agent and thus
- changed into a plastic mass.</p>
-
- <p><b>Promessi</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Small soft-cream cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Provatura</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A water-buffalo variety. This type of milk makes a good
- beginning for a fine cheese, no matter how it is made.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 277 --><a name="Page_277"
- id="Page_277"></a> <b>Providence</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Port-Salut from the Trappist monastery at Briquebec.</p>
-
- <p><b>Provole, Provolone, Provolocine, Provoloncinni,
- Provoletti, and Provolino</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>All are types, shapes and sizes of Italy's most widely known
- and appreciated cheese. It is almost as widely but badly
- imitated in the U.S.A., where the final "e" and "i" are
- interchangeable.</p>
-
- <p>Cured in string nets that stay on permanently to hang
- decoratively in the home kitchen or dining room. Like straw
- Chianti bottles, Provolones weigh from <i>bocconi</i>
- (mouthful), about one pound, to two to four pounds. There are
- three-to five-pound Provoletti, and upward with huge Salamis
- and Giants. Small ones come ball, pear, apple, and all sorts of
- decorative shapes, big ones become monumental sculptures that
- are works of art to compare with butter and soap modeling.</p>
-
- <p><b>P'teux, le, or Fromage Cuit</b><br />
- <i>Lorraine, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Cooked cheese worked with white wine instead of milk, and
- potted.</p>
-
- <p><b>Puant Macere</b><br />
- <i>Flanders</i></p>
-
- <p>"The most candidly named cheese in existence." In season
- from November to June.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pultost or Knaost</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Sour milk with some buttermilk, farm made in mountains.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pusztador</b><br />
- <i>Hungary</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard, Limburger-Romadur type. Full flavor, high
- scent.</p>
-
- <p><b>Pyrenees, Fromage des</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A fine mountain variety.</p>
-
- <h3><!-- Page 278 --><a name="Page_278"
- id="Page_278"></a> <a name="AtoZ_Q"
- id="AtoZ_Q"></a><br />
- Q</h3>
-
- <p><b>Quartiolo</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Term used to distinguish Parmesan-type cheese made between
- September and November.</p>
-
- <p><b>Quacheq</b><br />
- <i>Macedonia, Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep, eaten both fresh and ripened.</p>
-
- <p><b>Quargel</b> <i>see</i> Olm&uuml;tzer.</p>
-
- <p><b>Quartirolo</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, cow's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queijos&mdash;Cheeses of the Azores, Brazil and
- Portugal</b> <i>see</i> under their local or regional names:
- Alemtejo, Azeit&atilde;o, Cardiga, Ilha, Prato and Serra da
- Estrella.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso Anejo</b><br />
- <i>Mexico</i></p>
-
- <p>White, dry, skim milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso de Bola</b><br />
- <i>Mexico</i></p>
-
- <p>Whole milk, similar to Edam.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso de Cavallo</b><br />
- <i>Venezuela</i></p>
-
- <p>Pear-shaped cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Quesos Cheeses: Blanco, Cartera and Palma Metida</b>
- <i>see</i> Venezuela.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso de Cincho</b><br />
- <i>Venezuela</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, round orange balls weighing four pounds and wrapped in
- palm leaves.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso de Crema</b><br />
- <i>Costa Rica</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to soft Brick.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso de Hoja, Leaf Cheese</b><br />
- <i>Puerto Rico</i></p>
-
- <p>Named from its appearance when cut, like leaves piled on top
- of each other.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 279 --><a name="Page_279"
- id="Page_279"></a> <b>Queso de Mano</b><br />
- <i>Venezuela</i></p>
-
- <p>Aromatic, sharp, in four-ounce packages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso del Fais, Queso de la Tierra</b><br />
- <i>Puerto Rico</i></p>
-
- <p>White; pressed; semisoft Consumed locally,</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso de Prensa</b><br />
- <i>Puerto Rico</i></p>
-
- <p>The name means pressed cheese. It is eaten either fresh or
- after ripening two or three months.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso de Puna</b><br />
- <i>Puerto Rico</i></p>
-
- <p>Like U.S. cottage or Dutch cheese, eaten fresh.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queso de Tapara</b><br />
- <i>Venezuela</i></p>
-
- <p>Made in Carora, near Barqisimeto, called <i>tapara</i> from
- the shape and tough skin of that local gourd. "It is very good
- fresh, but by the time it arrives in Carora it is often bad and
- dry." D.K.K. in <i>Bueno Provecho.</i></p>
-
- <p><b>Queso Fresco</b><br />
- <i>El Salvador</i></p>
-
- <p>Cottage-cheese type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queville</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Queyras</b> <i>see</i> Champol&eacute;on.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_R"
- id="AtoZ_R"></a><br />
- R</h3>
-
- <p><b>Raba&ccedil;al</b><br />
- <i>Coimbra, Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; sheep or goat; thick, round, four to five inches
- in diameter. Pleasantly oily, if made from sheep milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rabbit Cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A playful name for Cheddar two to three years old.</p>
-
- <p><b>Radener</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; skim, similar to Emmentaler; made in Mecklenburg.
- Sixteen by four inches, weight 32 pounds.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 280 --><a name="Page_280"
- id="Page_280"></a> <b>Radolfzeller Cream</b><br />
- <i>Germany, Switzerland, Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to M&uuml;nster.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ragnit</b> <i>see</i> Tilsit.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rahmk&auml;se, Allg&auml;uer</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>Cream.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rainbow</b><br />
- <i>Mexico</i></p>
-
- <p>Mild; mellow.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ramadoux</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; sweet cream; formed in cubes. Similar to
- Herv&eacute;</p>
-
- <p><b>Rammil or Rammel</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Andr&eacute; Simon calls this "the best cheese made in
- Dorsetshire." Also called Rammilk, because made from whole or
- "raw milk." Practically unobtainable today.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rangiport</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A good imitation of Port-Salut made in Seine-et-Oise.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rarush Durmar</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Brittle; mellow; nutty.</p>
-
- <p><b>R&auml;cherk&auml;se</b></p>
-
- <p>The name for all smoked cheese in Germanic countries, where
- it is very popular.</p>
-
- <p><b>Raviggiolo</b><br />
- <i>Tuscany, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Ewe's milk. Uncooked; soft; sweet; creamy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rayon or Raper</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>A blind Emmentaler called Rayon is shipped young to Italy,
- where it is hardened by aging and then sold as Raper, for
- grating and seasoning.</p>
-
- <p><b>Reblochon or Roblochon</b><br />
- <i>Savoy</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep; soft; whole milk; in season from October to June.
- Weight one to two pounds. A cooked cheese imitated as Brizecon
- in the same section.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 281 --><a name="Page_281"
- id="Page_281"></a> <b>R&eacute;collet de
- G&eacute;rardmer</b><br />
- <i>Vosges, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A harvest variety similar to G&eacute;rom&eacute;, made from
- October to April</p>
-
- <p><b>Red</b><br />
- <i>Russia</i></p>
-
- <p><i>see</i> Livlander.</p>
-
- <p><b>Red Balls</b><br />
- <i>Dutch</i></p>
-
- <p><i>see</i> Edam.</p>
-
- <p><b>Reggiano</b> <i>see</i> Grana.</p>
-
- <p><b>Regianito</b><br />
- <i>Argentine</i></p>
-
- <p>Italian Reggiano type with a name of its own, for it is not
- a mere imitation in this land of rich milk and extra fine
- cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Reichk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>Patriotically hailed as cheese of the empire, when Germany
- had one.</p>
-
- <p><b>Reindeer</b><br />
- <i>Lapland, Iceland, Sweden, Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>In all far northern lands a type of Swiss is made from
- reindeer milk It is lightly salted, very hard; and the Lapland
- production is curiously formed, like a dumbbell with angular
- instead of round ends.</p>
-
- <p><b>Relish cream cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Mixed with any piquant relish and eaten fresh.</p>
-
- <p><b>Remoudon, or Fromage Piquant</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>The two names combine in re-ground piquant cheese, and
- that's what it is. The season is winter, from November to
- June.</p>
-
- <p><b>Requeij&atilde;o</b><br />
- <i>Portugal and Brazil</i></p>
-
- <p>Recooked.</p>
-
- <p><b>Resurrection</b> <i>see</i> Welsh.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rhubarbe</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A type of Roquefort which, in spite of its name, is no
- relation to our pie plant.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 282 --><a name="Page_282"
- id="Page_282"></a> <b>Riceys</b> <i>see</i> Champenois.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ricotta Romano</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft and fresh. The best is made from sheep buttermilk.
- Creamy, piquant, with subtle fragrance. Eaten with sugar and
- cinnamon, sometimes with a dusting of powdered coffee.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ricotta</b><br />
- <i>Italy and U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh, moist, unsalted cottage cheese for sandwiches,
- salads, lasagne, blintzes and many Italian dishes. It is also
- mixed with Marsala and rum and relished for dessert Ricotta may
- be had in every Little Italy, some of it very well made and,
- unfortunately, some of it a poor substitute whey cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ricotta Salata</b></p>
-
- <p>Hard; grayish white. Although its flavor is milk it is too
- hard and too salty for eating as is, and is mostly used for
- grating.</p>
-
- <p><b>Riesengebirge</b><br />
- <i>Bohemia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; goat or cow; delicate flavor, lightly smoked in
- Bohemia's northern mountains.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rinnen</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>This traditional Pomeranian sour-milk, caraway-seeded
- variety is named from the wooden trough in which it is laid to
- drain.</p>
-
- <p><b>Riola</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; sheep or goat; sharp; resembles Mont d'Or but takes
- longer to ripen, two to three months.</p>
-
- <p><b>Robbiole<br />
- Robbiola<br />
- Robbiolini</b><br />
- <i>Lombardy</i><br />
- <i>Italian</i></p>
-
- <p>Very similar to Crescenza (<i>see</i>.) Alpine winter cheese
- of fine quality. The form is circular and flat, weighing from
- eight ounces to two pounds, while Robbiolini, the baby of the
- family tips the scale at just under four ounces.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 283 --><a name="Page_283"
- id="Page_283"></a> <b>Roblochon, le</b></p>
-
- <p>Same as Reblochon. A delicious form of it is made of
- half-dried sheep's milk in Le Grand Bornand.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rocamadur</b><br />
- <i>Limousin, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Tiny sheep milk cheese weighing two ounces. In season
- November to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rocroi</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>From the Champagne district.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rokadur</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation Roquefort.</p>
-
- <p><b>Roll</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard cylinder, eight by nine inches, weighing twenty
- pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rollot or Rigolot</b><br />
- <i>Picardy and Montdidier, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; fermented; mold-inoculated; resembles Brie and
- Camembert, but much smaller. In season October to May. This is
- Picardy's one and only cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Roma</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft cream.</p>
-
- <p><b>Romadour, Romadura, and other national
- spellings</b><br />
- <i>Germany, Austria, Hungary, Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>A great Linburger. The eating season is from November to
- April. It is not a summer cheese, especially in lands where
- refrigeration is scarce. Fine brands are exported to America
- from several countries.</p>
-
- <p><b>Romano, Romano Vacchino</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Strong: flavoring cheese like Parmesan and Pecorino.</p>
-
- <p><b>Romanello</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Romano Vacchino and Old Monterey Jack. Small
- grating cheese, cured one year.</p>
-
- <p><b>Roquefort</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>King of cheeses, with its "tingling Rabelaisian pungency."
- <i>See</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 284 --><a name="Page_284"
- id="Page_284"></a> <b>Roquefort cheese dressing,
- bottled</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Made with genuine imported Roquefort, but with cottonseed
- oil instead of olive, plain instead of wine vinegar, sugar,
- salt, paprika, mustard, flour and spice oil.</p>
-
- <p><b>Roquefort de Corse</b><br />
- <i>Corsica, France</i></p>
-
- <p>This Corsican imitation is blue-colored and correctly made
- of sheep milk, but lacks the chalk caves of Auvergne for
- ripening.</p>
-
- <p><b>Roquefort de Tournemire</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Another Blue cheese of sheep milk from Languedoc, using the
- royal Roquefort name.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rougerets, les</b><br />
- <i>Lyonnais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A typical small goat cheese from Forez, in a section where
- practically every variety is made with goat milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rouennais</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>This specialty, named after its city, Rouen, is a winter
- cheese, eaten from October to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Round Dutch</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>An early name for Edam.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rouy, le</b><br />
- <i>Normandy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>From the greatest of the cheese provinces, Normandy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Royal Brabant</b><br />
- <i>Belgium</i></p>
-
- <p>Whole milk. Small, Limburger type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Royal Sentry</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Processed Swiss made in Denmark and shipped to Americans who
- haven't yet learned that a European imitation can be as bad as
- an American one. This particular pasteurized process-cheese
- spread puts its ingredients in finer type than any accident
- insurance policy: Samsoe (Danish Swiss) cheese, cream, water,
- non-fat dry milk solids, cheese whey solids and disodium
- phosphate.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ruffec, Fromage de</b><br />
- <i>Saintonge, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh; goat.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 285 --><a name="Page_285"
- id="Page_285"></a> <b>Runesten</b><br />
- <i>Denmark and U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Herrg&aring;rdsost. Small eyes. "Wheel" weighs
- about three pounds. Wrapped in red transparent film.</p>
-
- <p><b>Rush Cream Cheese</b><br />
- <i>England and France</i></p>
-
- <p>Not named from the rush in which many of our cheeses are
- made, but from the rush mats and nets some fresh cream cheeses
- are wrapped and sewed up in to ripen. According to an old
- English recipe the curds are collected with an ordinary
- fish-slice and placed in a rush shape, covered with a cloth
- when filled. Lay a half-pound weight in a saucer and set this
- on top of the strained curd for a few hours, and then increase
- the weight by about a half pound. Change the cloths daily until
- the cheese looks mellow, then put into the rush shape with the
- fish slice. The formula in use in France, where willow
- heart-shape baskets are sold for making this cheese, is as
- follows: Add one cup new warm milk to two cups freshly-skimmed
- cream. Dissolve in this one teaspoon of fine sugar and one
- tablespoon common rennet or thirty drops of Hauser's extract of
- rennet. Let it remain in a warm place until curd sets. Rush and
- straw mats are easily made by cutting the straw into lengths
- and stringing them with a needle and thread. The mats or
- baskets should not be used a second time.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_S"
- id="AtoZ_S"></a><br />
- S</h3>
-
- <p><b>Saaland Pfarr, or Prestost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Firm; sharp; biting; unique of its kind because it is made
- with whiskey as an ingredient and the finished product is also
- washed with whiskey.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 286 --><a name="Page_286"
- id="Page_286"></a> <b>Saanen</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard and as mellow as all good Swiss cheese. This is the
- finest cheese in the greatest cheese land; an Emmentaler also
- known as Hartk&auml;se, Reibk&auml;se and Wallisk&auml;se, it
- came to fame in the sixteenth century and has always fetched an
- extra price for its quality and age. It is cooked much dryer in
- the making, so it takes longer to ripen and then keeps longer
- than any other. It weighs only ten to twenty pounds and the
- eyes are small and scarce. The average period needed for
- ripening is six years, but some take nine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sage, or Green cheese</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>This is more of a cream cheese, than a Cheddar, as Sage is
- in the U.S.A. It is made by adding sage leaves and a greening
- to milk by the method described in <a href="#Page_37">Chapter
- 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Affrique</b><br />
- <i>Guyenne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>This gourmetic center, hard by the celebrated town of
- Roquefort, lives up to its reputation by turning out a
- toothsome goat cheese of local renown.</p>
-
- <p>We will not attempt to describe it further, since like most
- of the host of cheeses honored with the names of Saints, it is
- seldom shipped abroad.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Agathon</b><br />
- <i>Brittany, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Season, October to July.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Amand-Montrond</b><br />
- <i>Berry, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made from goat's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Benoit</b><br />
- <i>Loiret, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft Olivet type distinguished by charcoal being added to
- the salt rubbed on the outside of the finished cheese. It
- ripens in twelve to fifteen days in summer, and eighteen to
- twenty in winter. It is about six inches in diameter.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 287 --><a name="Page_287"
- id="Page_287"></a> <b>Saint-Claude</b><br />
- <i>Franche-Comt&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; blue; goat; mellow; small; square; a quarter to a
- half pound. The curd is kept five to six hours only before
- salting and is then eaten fresh or put away to ripen.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Cyr</b> <i>see</i> Mont d'Or.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Didier au Mont d'Or</b> <i>see</i> Mont d'Or.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Florentin</b><br />
- <i>Burgundy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A lusty cheese, soft but salty, in season from November to
- July.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Flour</b><br />
- <i>Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Another seasonal specialty from this province of many
- cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Gelay</b><br />
- <i>Poitou, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made from goat's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Gervais, Pots de Creme, or Le Saint
- Gervais</b><br />
- <i>see</i> Pots de Cr&egrave;me.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Heray</b> <i>see</i> La Mothe.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Honor&eacute;</b><br />
- <i>Nivernais, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A small goat cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Hubert</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Brie.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Ivel</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh dairy cream cheese containing <i>Lactobacillus
- acidophilus</i>. Similar to the yogurt cheese of the U.S.A.,
- which is made with <i>Bacillus Bulgaricus.</i></p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Laurent</b><br />
- <i>Roussillon, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Mountain sheep cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Lizier</b><br />
- <i>B&eacute;arn, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A white, curd cheese.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 288 --><a name="Page_288"
- id="Page_288"></a> <b>Saint-Loup, Fromage de</b><br />
- <i>Poitou and Vend&eacute;e, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Half-goat, half-cow milk, in season February to
- September</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Marcellin</b><br />
- <i>Dauphin&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>One of the very best of all goat cheeses. Three by &frac34;
- inches, weighing a quarter of a pound. In season from March to
- December. Sometimes sheep milk may be added, even cow's, but
- this is essentially a goat cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Moritz</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft and tangy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Nectaire, or Senecterre</b><br />
- <i>Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Noted as one of the greatest of all French goat cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Olivet</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Pierre-Pouligny</b> <i>see</i>
- Pouligny-Saint-Pierre.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Reine</b> <i>see</i> Alise.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-R&eacute;my, Fromage de</b><br />
- <i>Haute-Sa&ocirc;ne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft Pont l'Ev&ecirc;que type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Stefano</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>Bel Paese type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saint-Winx</b><br />
- <i>Flanders, France</i></p>
-
- <p>The fromage of Saint-Winx is a traditional leader in this
- Belgian border province noted for its strong, spiced dairy
- products.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sainte-Anne d'Auray</b><br />
- <i>Brittany, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A notable Port-Salut made by Trappist monks.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sainte-Marie</b><br />
- <i>Franche-Comt&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A creamy concoction worthy of its saintly name.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 289 --><a name="Page_289"
- id="Page_289"></a> <b>Sainte-Maure, le, or Fromage de
- Sainte-Maure-de-Touraine</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made in Touraine from May to November. Similar to
- Valen&ccedil;ay.</p>
-
- <p><b>Salamana</b><br />
- <i>Southern Europe</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft sheep's milk cheese stuffed into bladderlike sausage,
- to ripen. It has authority and flavor when ready to spread on
- bread, or to mix with cornmeal and cook into a highly
- cheese-flavored porridge.</p>
-
- <p><b>Salame</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft cream cheese stuffed into skins like salami sausages.
- Salami-sausage style of packing cheese has always been common
- in Italy, from Provolone down, and now&mdash;both as salami and
- links&mdash;it has became extremely popular for processed and
- cheese foods throughout America.</p>
-
- <p><b>Salers, Bleu de</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>One of the very good French Blues.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saligny</b><br />
- <i>Champagne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>White cheese made from sheep's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saloio</b><br />
- <i>Lisbon, Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>An aromatic farm-made hand cheese of skim milk. Short
- cylinder, 1&frac12; to two inches in diameter, weighing a
- quarter of a pound. Made near the capital, Lisbon, on many
- small farms.</p>
-
- <p><b>Salonite</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Favorite of Emperor Augustus a couple of thousand years
- ago.</p>
-
- <p><b>Saltee</b><br />
- <i>Ireland</i></p>
-
- <p>Firm; highly colored; tangy; boxed in half-pound slabs. The
- same as Whitethorn except for the added color. Whitethorn is as
- white as its name implies.</p>
-
- <p><b>Salt-free cheese, for diets</b></p>
-
- <p>U.S. cottage; French fresh goat cheese; and Luxembourg
- Kochenk&auml;se.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 290 --><a name="Page_290"
- id="Page_290"></a> <b>Sams&ouml;</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; white; sharp; slightly powdery and sweetish. This is
- the pet cheese of Erik Blegvad who illustrated this book.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sandwich Nut</b></p>
-
- <p>An American mixture of chopped nuts with Cream cheese or
- Neufch&acirc;tel.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sapsago</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sardegna</b><br />
- <i>Sardinia</i></p>
-
- <p>A Romano type made in Sardinia.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sardinian</b><br />
- <i>Sardinia, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>The typical hard grating cheese of this section of
- Italy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sardo</b><br />
- <i>Sardinia, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sharp; for table and for seasoning. Imitated in the
- Argentine. There is also a Pecorino named Sardo.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sarraz or Sarrazin</b><br />
- <i>Vaud, Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Roquefort type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sassenage</b><br />
- <i>Dauphiny, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; bluer and stronger than Stilton. This makes a
- French trio of Blues with Septmoncel and Gex, all three of
- which are made with the three usual milks mixed: cow, goat and
- sheep. A succulent fermented variety for which both Grenoble
- and Sassenage are celebrated.</p>
-
- <p><b>Satz</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard cheese made in Saxony.</p>
-
- <p><b>Savoy, Savoie</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; mellow; tangy Port-Salut made by Trappist monks in
- Savoy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sbrinz</b><br />
- <i>Argentine</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; dry; nutty; Parmesan grating type.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 291 --><a name="Page_291"
- id="Page_291"></a> <b>Scanno</b><br />
- <i>Abruzzi, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft as butter; sheep; burnt taste, delicious with fruits.
- Blackened rind, deep yellow interior.</p>
-
- <p><b>Scarmorze or Scamorze</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; buffalo milk; mild Provolone type. Also called Pear
- from being made in that shape, oddly enough also in pairs, tied
- together to hang from rafters on strings in ripening rooms or
- in the home kitchen. Fine when sliced thick and fried in olive
- oil. A specialty around Naples. Light-tan oiled rind, about
- 3&frac12; by five inches in size. Imitated in Wisconsin and
- sold as Pear cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schabziger</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schafk&auml;se (Sheep Cheese)</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; part sheep milk; smooth and delightful.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schamser, or Rheinwald</b><br />
- <i>Canton Graubiinden, Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Large skim-milker eighteen by five inches, weighing forty to
- forty-six pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schlickermilch</b></p>
-
- <p>This might be translated "milk mud." It's another name for
- Bloder, sour milk "waddle" cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schlesische Sauermilchk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Silesia, Poland</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sour-milker; made like hand cheese. Laid on
- straw-covered shelves, dried by a stove in winter and in open
- latticed sheds in summer. When very dry and hard, it is put to
- ripen in a cellar three to eight weeks and washed with warm
- water two or three times a week.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schlesischer Weichquarg</b><br />
- <i>Silesia, Poland</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, fresh skim, sour curd, broken up and cooked at
- 100&deg; for a short time. Lightly pressed in a cloth sack
- twenty-<!-- Page 292 -->
- <a name="Page_292"
- id="Page_292"></a>four hours, then kneaded and shaped by
- hand, as all hand cheeses are. Sometimes sharply flavored
- with onions or caraway. Eaten fresh, before the strong hand
- cheese odor develops.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schloss, Schlossk&auml;se, or Bismarck</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>This Castle cheese, also named for Bismarck and probably a
- favorite of his, together with Bismarck jelly doughnuts, is an
- aristocratic Limburger that served as a model for
- Liederkranz.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schmierk&auml;se</b></p>
-
- <p>German cottage cheese that becomes smearcase in America.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schnitzelbank Pot</b> <i>see</i> Liederkranz,
- <a href="#Page_37">Chapter 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sch&ouml;nland</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation of Italian Bel Paese, also translated "beautiful
- land."</p>
-
- <p><b>Sch&uuml;tzenk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Romadur-type. Small rectangular blocks weighing less than
- four ounces and wrapped in tin foil.</p>
-
- <p><b>Shottengsied</b><br />
- <i>Alpine</i></p>
-
- <p>A whey cheese made and consumed locally in the Alps.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schwarzenberger</b><br />
- <i>Hungary and Bohemia</i></p>
-
- <p>One part skim to two parts fresh milk. It takes two to three
- months to ripen.</p>
-
- <p><b>Schweizerk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>German for Swiss cheese. (<i>See</i> Emmentaler.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Schweizerost Dansk, Danish Swiss Cheese</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>A popular Danish imitation of Swiss Swiss cheese that is
- nothing wonderful.</p>
-
- <p><b>Select Brick</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_158">Chapter
- 12</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Selles-sur Cher</b><br />
- <i>Berry, France</i></p>
-
- <p>A goat cheese, eaten from February to September.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 293 --><a name="Page_293"
- id="Page_293"></a> <b>S&eacute;necterre</b><br />
- <i>Puy-de-D&ocirc;me, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, whole-milk; cylindrical, weighing about 1&frac12;
- pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Septmoncel</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; skim; blue-veined; made of all three milks: cow,
- goat and sheep. An excellent "Blue" ranked above Roquefort by
- some, and next to Stilton. Also called Jura Bleu, and a member
- of the triple milk triplets with Gex and Sassenage.</p>
-
- <p><b>Serbian</b><br />
- <i>Serbia</i></p>
-
- <p>Made most primitively by dropping heated stones into a
- kettle of milk over an open fire. After the rennet is added,
- the curd stands for an hour and is separated from the whey by
- being lifted in a cheesecloth and strained. It is finally put
- in a wooden vessel to ripen. First it is salted, then covered
- each day with whey for eight days and finally with fresh milk
- for six.</p>
-
- <p>Syria also makes a cheese called Serbian from goat's milk.
- It is semisoft.</p>
-
- <p><b>Serbian Butter</b> <i>see</i> Kajmar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Serra da Estrella, Queijo da (Cheese of the Star Mountain
- Range)</b><br />
- <i>Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>The finest of several superb mountain-sheep cheeses in
- Portugal. Other milk is sometimes added, but sheep is standard.
- The milk is coagulated by an extract of thistle or cardoon
- flowers in two to six hours. It is ripened in circular forms
- for several weeks and marketed in rounds averaging five pounds,
- about ten by two inches. The soft paste inside is pleasantly
- oily and delightfully acid.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sharp-flavored cheese</b></p>
-
- <p>U.S. aged Cheddars, including Monterey Jack; Italian Romano
- Fecorino, Old <!-- Page 294 --><a name="Page_294"
- id="Page_294"></a> Asiago, Gorgonzola, Incanestrato and
- Caciocavallo; Spanish de Fontine; Aged Roumanian
- Kaskaval.</p>
-
- <p><b>Shefford</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_11">Chapter
- 2</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Silesian</b><br />
- <i>Poland and Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>White; mellow; caraway-seeded. Imitated in the U.S.A. (see
- Schlesischer.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Sir cheeses</b></p>
-
- <p>In Yugoslavia, Montenegro and adjacent lands Sir or Cyr
- means cheese. Mostly this type is made of skimmed sheep milk
- and has small eyes or holes, a sharp taste and resemblance to
- both American Brick and Limburger. They are much fewer than the
- Saint cheeses in France.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sir Iz Mjesine</b><br />
- <i>Dalmatia, Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Primitively made by heating skim sheep milk in a bottle over
- an open fire, coagulating it quickly with pig or calf rennet,
- breaking up the curd with a wooden spoon and stirring it by
- hand over the fire. Pressed into forms eight inches square and
- two inches thick, it is dried for a day and either eaten fresh
- or cut into cubes, salted, packed in green sheep or goat hides,
- and put away to ripen.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sir Mastny</b><br />
- <i>Montenegro</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh sheep milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sir Posny</b><br />
- <i>Montenegro</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; skim sheep milk; white, with many small holes. Also
- answers to the names of Tord and Mrsav.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sir, Twdr</b> <i>see</i> Twdr Sir.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sir, Warshawski</b> <i>see</i> Warshawski Syr.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 295 --><a name="Page_295"
- id="Page_295"></a> <b>Siraz</b><br />
- <i>Serbia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; whole milk. Mellow.</p>
-
- <p><b>Skyr</b><br />
- <i>Iceland</i></p>
-
- <p>The one standard cheese of the country. A cross between
- Devonshire cream and cream cheese, eaten with sugar and cream.
- It is very well liked and filling, so people are apt to take
- too much. A writer on the subject gives this bit of useful
- information for travelers: "It is not advisable, however, to
- take coffee and Skyr together just before riding, as it gives
- you diarrhea."</p>
-
- <p><b>Slipcote, or Colwick</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; unripened; small; white; rich as butter. The curd is
- put in forms six by two inches for the whey to drain away. When
- firm it is placed between cabbage leaves to ripen for a week or
- two, and when it is taken from the leaves the skin or coat
- becomes loose and easily slips off&mdash;hence the name. In the
- middle of the eighteenth century it was considered the best
- cream cheese in England and was made then, as today, in
- Wissenden, Rutlandshire.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sm&auml;ltost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft and melting.</p>
-
- <p><b>Smearcase</b></p>
-
- <p>Old English corruption of German Schmierk&auml;se, long used
- in America for cottage cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Smoked Block</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>A well-smoked cheese in block form.</p>
-
- <p><b>Smoked Mozzarella</b> <i>see</i> Mozzarella
- Affumicata.</p>
-
- <p><b>Smoked Szekely</b><br />
- <i>Hungary</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; sheep; packed like sausage in skins or bladders and
- smoked.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 296 --><a name="Page_296"
- id="Page_296"></a> <b>Smokelet</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i>.</p>
-
- <p>A small smoked cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Soaked-curd cheese</b> <i>see</i> Washed-curd cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sorbais</b><br />
- <i>Champagne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; whole milk; fermented; yellow, with reddish brown
- rind. Full flavor, high smell. Similar to Maroilles in taste
- and square shape, but smaller.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sorte Maggenga and Sorte Vermenga</b></p>
-
- <p>Two "sorts" of Italian Parmesan.</p>
-
- <p><b>Soumaintrain, Fromage de</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; fine; strong variety from Upper Burgundy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Soybean</b><br />
- <i>China</i></p>
-
- <p>Because this cheese is made of vegetable milk and often
- developed with a vegetable rennet, it is rated by many as a
- regular cheese. But our occidental kind with animal milk and
- rennet is never eaten by Chinese and the mere mention of it has
- been known to make them shiver.</p>
-
- <p><b>Spalen or Stringer</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>A small Emmentaler of fine reputation made in the Canton of
- Unterwalden from whole and partly skimmed milk and named from
- the vessel in which five or six are packed and transported
- together.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sperrk&auml;se</b> <i>see</i> Dry.</p>
-
- <p><b>Spiced</b><br />
- <i>International</i></p>
-
- <p>Many a bland cheese is saved from oblivion by the addition
- of spice, to give it zest. One or more spices are added in the
- making and thoroughly mixed with the finished product, so the
- cheese often takes the name of the spice: Kuminost
- <!-- Page 297 --><a name="Page_297"
- id="Page_297"></a> or Kommenost for cumin; Caraway in
- English and several other languages, among them K&uuml;mmel,
- Nokkelost and Leyden; Friesan Clove and Nagelkass; Sage;
- Thyme, cloverleaf Sapsago; whole black pepper Pepato,
- etc.</p>
-
- <p><b>Spiced and Spiced Spreads</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Government standards for spiced cheeses and spreads specify
- not less than 1&frac12; ounces of spice to 100 pounds of
- cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Spiced Fondue</b> <i>see</i> Vacherin Fondu.<br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p><b>Spitz Spitzkase</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Small cylinder, four by one and a half inches. Caraway
- spiced, Limburger-like. <i>see</i> Backsteiner.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sposi</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; small; cream.</p>
-
- <p><b>Spra</b><br />
- <i>Greek</i></p>
-
- <p>Sharp and pleasantly salty, packed fresh from the brine bath
- in one-pound jars. As tasty as all Greek cheeses because they
- are made principally from sheep milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>St&auml;ngenkase</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Limburger type.</p>
-
- <p>Stein K&auml;se<br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Aromatic, piquant "stone." A beer stein accompaniment well
- made after the old German original.</p>
-
- <p><b>Steinbuscher-K&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; firm; full cream; mildly sour and pungent. Brick
- forms, reddish and buttery. Originated in Frankfurt. Highly
- thought of at home but little known abroad.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 298 --><a name="Page_298"
- id="Page_298"></a> <b>Steppe</b><br />
- <i>Russia, Germany, Austria, Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>German colonists made and named this in Russia. Rich and
- mellow, it tastes like Tilsiter and is now made in Denmark for
- export, as well as in Germany and Austria for home
- consumption.</p>
-
- <p>Stilton <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Stirred curd cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Cheddar, but more granular, softer in texture and
- marketed younger.</p>
-
- <p><b>Stracchino</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; goat; fresh cream; winter; light yellow; very sharp,
- rich and pungent. Made in many parts of Italy and eaten sliced,
- never grated. A fine cheese of which Taleggio is the leading
- variety. See in <a href="#Page_17">Chapter 3</a>. Also see
- Certoso Stracchino.</p>
-
- <p>Stracchino Crescenza is an extremely soft and highly colored
- member of this distinguished family.</p>
-
- <p><b>Stravecchio</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Well-aged, according to the name. Creamy and mellow.</p>
-
- <p><b>Stringer</b> <i>see</i> Spalen.</p>
-
- <p><b>Styria</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Whole milk. Cylindrical form.</p>
-
- <p><b>Suffolk</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>An old-timer, seldom seen today. Stony-hard, horny "flet
- milk" cartwheels locally nicknamed "bang." Never popular
- anywhere, it has stood more abuse than Limburger, not for its
- smell but for its flinty hardness.</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Hunger will break
- through stone walls and anything</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">except a Suffolk
- cheese."</span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <!-- Page 299 --><a name="Page_299"
- id="Page_299"></a> <span>"Those that made me were
- uncivil<br /></span> <span>For they made me harder
- than the devil.<br /></span> <span>Knives won't
- cut me; fire won't sweat me;<br /></span>
- <span>Dogs bark at me, but can't eat
- me."<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p><b>Surati, Panir</b><br />
- <i>India</i></p>
-
- <p>Buffalo milk. Uncolored.</p>
-
- <p><b>Suraz</b><br />
- <i>Serbia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard and semisoft.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sveciaost</b><br />
- <i>Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>A national pride, named for its country, Swedish cheese, to
- match Swiss cheese and Dutch cheese. It comes in three
- qualities: full cream, &frac34; cream, and half cream. Soft;
- rich; ready to eat at six weeks and won't keep past six months.
- A whole-hearted, whole-milk, wholesome cheese named after the
- country rather than a part of it as most <i>osts</i> are.</p>
-
- <p><b>Sweet-curd</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard Cheddar, differing in that the milk is set sweet and
- the curd cooked firmer and faster, salted and pressed at once.
- When ripe, however, it is hardly distinguishable from the usual
- Cheddar made by the granular process.</p>
-
- <p><b>Swiss</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>In 1845 emigrants from Galrus, Switzerland, founded New
- Galrus, Wisconsin and, after failing at farming due to cinch
- bugs gobbling their crops, they turned to cheesemaking and have
- been at it ever since. American Swiss, known long ago as picnic
- cheese, has been their standby, and only in recent years these
- Wisconsin Schweizers have had competition from Ohio and other
- states who turn out the typical cartwheels, which still look
- like the genuine imported Emmentaler.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 300 --><a name="Page_300"
- id="Page_300"></a> <b>Szekely</b><br />
- <i>Transylvania, Hungary</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; sheep; packed in links of bladders and sometimes
- smoked. This is the type of foreign cheese that set the popular
- style for American processed links, with wine flavors and
- everything.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_T"
- id="AtoZ_T"></a><br />
- T</h3>
-
- <p><b>Taffel, Table, Taffelost</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>A Danish brand name for an ordinary slicing cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tafi</b><br />
- <i>Argentina</i></p>
-
- <p>Made in the rich province of Tucuman.</p>
-
- <p><b>Taiviers, les Petits Fromages de</b><br />
- <i>P&eacute;rigord, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Very small and tasty goat cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Taleggio</b><br />
- <i>Lombardy, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, whole-milk, Stracchino type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tallance</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tamie</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Port-Salut made by Trappist monks at Savoy from their method
- that is more or less a trade secret. Tome de Beaumont is an
- imitation produced not far away.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tanzenberger</b><br />
- <i>Carinthia, Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Limburger type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tao-foo or Tofu</b><br />
- <i>China, Japan, the Orient</i></p>
-
- <p>Soybean curd or cheese made from the "milk" of soybeans. The
- beans are ground and steeped, made into a paste that's boiled
- so the starch dissolves with the casein. After being strained
- off, the "milk" is coagulated with a solution of gypsum. This
- is then handled in the <!-- Page 301 --><a name="Page_301"
- id="Page_301"></a>same way as animal milk in making ordinary
- cow-milk cheeses. After being salted and pressed in molds it
- is ready to be warmed up and added to soups and cooked
- dishes, as well as being eaten as is.</p>
-
- <p><b>Teleme</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Brinza and sometimes called Branza de Bralia.
- Made of sheep's milk and rapidly ripened, so it is ready to eat
- in ten days.</p>
-
- <p><b>Terzolo</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Term used to designate Parmesan-type cheese made in
- winter.</p>
-
- <p><b>T&ecirc;te &agrave; T&ecirc;te, T&ecirc;te de Maure,
- Moor's Head</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Round in shape. French name for Dutch Edam.</p>
-
- <p><b>T&ecirc;te de Moine, Monk's Head</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A soft "head" weighing ten to twenty pounds. Creamy, tasty,
- summer Swiss, imitated in Jura, France, and also called
- Bellelay.</p>
-
- <p><b>T&ecirc;te de Mort</b> <i>see</i> Fromage Gras for this
- death's head.</p>
-
- <p><b>"The Tempting cheese of Fyvie"</b><br />
- <i>Scotland</i></p>
-
- <p>Something on the order of Eve's apple, according to the
- Scottish rhyme that exposes it:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>The first love token ye gae me<br /></span>
- <span>Was the tempting cheese of Fyvie.<br /></span>
- <span>O wae be to the tempting cheese,<br /></span>
- <span>The tempting cheese of Fyvie,<br /></span>
- <span>Gat me forsake my ain gude man<br /></span>
- <span>And follow a fottman laddie.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p><b>Texel</b></p>
-
- <p>Sheep's milk cheese of three or four pounds made on the
- island of Texel, off the coast of the Netherlands.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 302 --><a name="Page_302"
- id="Page_302"></a> <b>Thenay</b><br />
- <i>Vend&ocirc;me, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Resembles Camembert and Vend&ocirc;me.</p>
-
- <p><b>Thion</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>A fine Emmentaler.</p>
-
- <p><b>Three Counties</b><br />
- <i>Ireland</i></p>
-
- <p>An undistinguished Cheddar named for the three counties that
- make most of the Irish cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Thuringia Caraway</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A hand cheese spiked with caraway.</p>
-
- <p><b>Thyme</b><br />
- <i>Syria</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft and mellow, with the contrasting pungence of thyme. Two
- other herbal cheeses are flavored with thyme&mdash;both French:
- Fromage Fort II, Hazebrook II.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tibet</b><br />
- <i>Tibet</i></p>
-
- <p>The small, hard, grating cheeses named after the country
- Tibet, are of sheep's milk, in cubes about two inches on all
- sides, with holes to string them through the middle, fifty to a
- hundred on each string. They suggest Chinese strings of cash
- and doubtless served as currency, in the same way as Chinese
- cheese money. (<i>See under</i> Money.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Tignard</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep or goat; blue-veined; sharp; tangy; from Tigne
- Valley in Savoy. Similar to Gex, Sassenage and Septmoncel.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tijuana</b><br />
- <i>Mexico</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sharp; biting; named from the border race-track
- town.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tillamook</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_37">Chapter
- 4</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tilsit, or Tilsiter K&auml;se, also called
- Ragnit</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>This classical variety of East Prussia is similar to
- American Brick. Made of whole milk, with many small holes that
- give it an open texture, as in Port-Salut, which it also
- resembles, although it is stronger and coarser.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 303 --><a name="Page_303"
- id="Page_303"></a>Old Tilsiter is something special in
- aromatic tang, and attempts to imitate it are made around
- the world. One of them, Ov&aacute;r, is such a good copy it
- is called Hungarian Tilsit. There are American, Danish, and
- Canadian&mdash;even Swiss&mdash;imitations.</p>
-
- <p>The genuine Tilsit has been well described as "forthright in
- flavor; a good snack cheese, but not suitable for elegant
- post-prandial dallying."</p>
-
- <p><b>Tilziski</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>A Montenegrin imitation Tilsiter.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tome de Beaumont</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Whole cow's milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tome, la</b><br />
- <i>Auvergne, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Also called Fourme, Cantal, or Fromage de Cantal. A kind of
- Cheddar that comes from Ambert, Aubrac, Aurillac, Grand-Murol,
- R&ocirc;che, Salers, etc.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tome de Ch&egrave;vre</b><br />
- <i>Savoy, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft goat cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tome de Savoie</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft paste; goat or cow. Others in the same category are:
- Tome des Beagues, Tome au Fenouil, Tome Doudane.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tomelitan Gruy&egrave;re</b><br />
- <i>Norway</i></p>
-
- <p>Imitation of French Gruy&egrave;re in 2&frac12; ounce
- packages.</p>
-
- <p><b>Topf or Topfk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A cooked cheese to which Pennsylvania pot is similar. Sour
- skim milk cheese, eaten fresh and sold in packages of one
- ounce. When cured it is flaky.</p>
-
- <p><b>Toscano, or Pecorino Toscano</b><br />
- <i>Tuscany, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep's milk cheese like Romano but softer, and therefore
- used as a table cheese.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 304 --><a name="Page_304"
- id="Page_304"></a> <b>Toscanello</b><br />
- <i>Tuscany, Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>A smaller edition of Toscano.</p>
-
- <p><b>Touareg</b><br />
- <i>Berber, Africa</i></p>
-
- <p>Skim milk often curdled with Korourou leaves. The soft curd
- is then dipped out onto mats like pancake batter and sun dried
- for ten days or placed by a fire for six, with frequent
- turning. Very hard and dry and never salted. Made from Lake
- Tchad to the Barbary States by Berber tribes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tour Eiffel</b><br />
- <i>Berry, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Besides naming this Berry cheese, Tour Eiffel serves as a
- picturesque label and trademark for a brand of Camembert.</p>
-
- <p><b>Touloumisio</b><br />
- <i>Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Feta.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tournette</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Small goat cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tourne de ch&egrave;vre</b><br />
- <i>Dauphin&eacute;, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Goat cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Trappe, la, or Oka</b><br />
- <i>Canada</i></p>
-
- <p>Truly fine Port-Salut named for the Trappist order and its
- Canadian monastery.</p>
-
- <p><b>Trappist</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#Page_17">Chapter
- 3</a>.</p>
-
- <p><b>Trappist</b><br />
- <i>Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Trappist Port-Salut imitation.</p>
-
- <p><b>Trauben (Grape)</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Swiss or Gruy&egrave;re aged in Swiss Neuch&acirc;tel wine
- and so named for the grape.</p>
-
- <p><b>Travnik, Travnicki</b><br />
- <i>Albania, Russia, Yugoslavia</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, sheep whole milk with a little goat sometimes and
- occasionally skim milk. More than a century of success in
- Europe, Turkey and adjacent lands where it is also known as
- Arnauten, Arnautski Sir and Vlasic.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 305 --><a name="Page_305"
- id="Page_305"></a>When fresh it is almost white and has a
- mild, pleasing taste. It ripens to a stronger flavor in from
- two weeks to several months, and is not so good if holes
- should develop in it. The pure sheep-milk type when aged is
- characteristically oily and sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Traz os Montes</b><br />
- <i>Portugal</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; sheep; oily; rich; sapid. For city turophiles
- nostalgically named "From the Mountains." All sheep cheese is
- oily, some of it a bit muttony, but none of it at all
- tallowy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Trecce</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Small, braided cheese, eaten fresh.</p>
-
- <p><b>Triple Aurore</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Normandy cheese in season all the year around.</p>
-
- <p><b>Troo</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Made and consumed in Touraine from May to January.</p>
-
- <p><b>Trouville</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, fresh, whole milk. Pont l'Ev&ecirc;que type of
- superior quality.</p>
-
- <p><b>Troyes, Fromage de</b> <i>see</i> Barberey and Ervy.</p>
-
- <p><b>Truckles</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>No. I: Wiltshire, England. Skimmed milk; blue-veined variety
- like Blue Vinny. The quaint word is the same as used in truckle
- or trundle bed. On Shrove Monday Wiltshire kids went from door
- to door singing for a handout:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Pray, dame, something,<br /></span> <span>An
- apple or a dumpling,<br /></span> <span>Or a piece of
- Truckle cheese<br /></span> <span>Of your own
- making.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 306 --><a name="Page_306"
- id="Page_306"></a>No. II: Local name in the West of England
- for a full cream Cheddar put up in loaves.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tschil</b><br />
- <i>Armenia</i></p>
-
- <p>Also known as Leaf, Telpanir and Zwirn. Skim milk of either
- sheep or cows. Made into cakes and packed in skins in a land
- where wine is drunk from skin canteens, often with Tschil.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tuile de Flandre</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>A type of Marolles.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tullum Penney</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Salty from being soaked in brine.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tuna, Prickly Pear</b><br />
- <i>Mexico</i></p>
-
- <p>Not an animal milk cheese, but a vegetable one, made by
- boiling and straining the pulp of the cactuslike prickly pear
- fruit to cheeselike consistency. It is chocolate-color and
- sharp, piquantly pleasant when hard and dry. It is sometimes
- enriched with nuts, spices and/or flowers. It will keep for a
- very long time and has been a dessert or confection in Mexico
- for centuries.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tuscano</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; cream color; a sort of Tuscany Parmesan.</p>
-
- <p><b>Twdr Sir</b><br />
- <i>Serbia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft sheep skim-milk cheese with small holes and a sharp
- taste. Pressed in forms two by ten to twelve inches in
- diameter. Similar to Brick or Limburger.</p>
-
- <p><b>Twin Cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Outstanding American Cheddar marketed by Joannes Brothers,
- Green Bay, Wisconsin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tworog</b><br />
- <i>Russia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard sour milk farm (not factory) made. It is used in
- the cheese bread called Notruschki.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 307 --><a name="Page_307"
- id="Page_307"></a> <b>Tybo</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>Made in Copenhagen from pasteurized skim milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tyrol Sour</b><br />
- <i>German</i></p>
-
- <p>A typical Tyrolean hand cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tzgone</b><br />
- <i>Dalmatia</i></p>
-
- <p>The opposite number of Tzigen, just below.</p>
-
- <p><b>Tzigenk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft; skimmed sheep, goat or cow milk. White; sharp and
- salty; originated in Dalmatia.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_U"
- id="AtoZ_U"></a><br />
- U</h3>
-
- <p><b>Urda</b><br />
- <i>Rumania</i></p>
-
- <p>Creamy; sweet; mild.</p>
-
- <p><b>Uri</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; brittle; white; tangy. Made in the Canton of Uri.
- Eight by eight to twelve inches, weight twenty to forty
- pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Urseren</b><br />
- <i>Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>Mild flavored. Cooked curd.</p>
-
- <p><b>Urt, Fromage d'</b></p>
-
- <p>Soft Port-Salut type of the Basque country.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_V"
- id="AtoZ_V"></a><br />
- V</h3>
-
- <p><b>Vacherin</b><br />
- <i>France and Switzerland</i></p>
-
- <p>I. Vacherin &agrave; la Main. Savoy, France. Firm, leathery
- rind, soft interior like Brie or Camembert; round, five to six
- by twelve inches in diameter. Made in summer to eat in winter.
- When fully ripe it is almost a cold version of the great dish
- called Fondue. Inside the hard-rind container is a velvety,
- spicy, aromatic cream, more runny than Brie, so it can be eaten
- with a spoon, dunked in, or spread on bread. The local name is
- Tome de Montague.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 308 --><a name="Page_308"
- id="Page_308"></a>II. Vacherin Fondu, or Spiced Fondu.
- Switzerland. Although called Fondu from being melted, the
- No. I Vacherin comes much closer to our conception of the
- dish Fondue, which we spell with an "e."</p>
-
- <p>Vacherin No. II might be called a re-cooked and spiced
- Emmentaler, for the original cheese is made, and ripened about
- the same as the Swiss classic and is afterward melted, spiced
- and reformed into Vacherin.</p>
-
- <p><b>Val-d'Andorre, Fromage du</b><br />
- <i>Andorra, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Valdeblore, le</b><br />
- <i>Nice, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard, dried, small Alpine goat cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Valen&ccedil;ay, or Fromage de Valen&ccedil;ay</b><br />
- <i>Touraine, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; cream; goat milk; similar to Saint-Maure. In season
- from May to December. This was a favorite with Francis I.</p>
-
- <p><b>Valio</b><br />
- <i>Finland</i></p>
-
- <p>One-ounce wedges, six to a box, labeled pasteurized process
- Swiss cheese, made by the Cooperative Butter Export
- Association, Helsinki, Finland, to sell to North Americans to
- help them forget what real cheese is.</p>
-
- <p><b>Valsic</b><br />
- <i>Albania</i></p>
-
- <p>Crumbly and sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Varalpenland</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Alpine. Piquant, strong in flavor and smell.</p>
-
- <p><b>Varennes, Fromage de</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, fine, strong variety from Upper Burgundy.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 309 --><a name="Page_309"
- id="Page_309"></a> <b>V&auml;sterbottenost</b><br />
- <i>West Bothnia</i></p>
-
- <p>Slow-maturing. One to one-and-a-half years in ripening to a
- pungent, almost bitter taste.</p>
-
- <p><b>V&auml;stg&ouml;taost</b><br />
- <i>West Gothland, Sweden</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; sweet and nutty. Takes a half year to mature.
- Weight twenty to thirty pounds.</p>
-
- <p><b>Vend&ocirc;me, Fromage de</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; sheep; round and flat; like la Cendr&eacute;e in being
- ripened under ashes. There is also a soft Vend&ocirc;me sold
- mostly in Paris.</p>
-
- <p><b>Veneto, Venezza</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Parmesan type, similar to Asiago. Usually sharp.</p>
-
- <p><b>Vic-en-Bigorre</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Winter cheese of B&eacute;arn in season October to May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Victoria</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>The brand name of a cream cheese made in Guilford.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ville Saint-Jacques</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Ile-de-France winter specialty in season from November to
- May.</p>
-
- <p><b>Villiers</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft, one-pound squares made in Haute-Marne.</p>
-
- <p><b>Viry-vory, or Vary</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh cream cheese.</p>
-
- <p><b>Viterbo</b><br />
- <i>Italy</i></p>
-
- <p>Sheep milk usually curdled with wild artichoke, <i>Cynara
- Scolymus</i>. Strong grating and seasoning type of the
- Parmesan-Romano-Pecorino family.</p>
-
- <p><b>Vize</b><br />
- <i>Greece</i></p>
-
- <p>Ewe's milk; suitable for grating.</p>
-
- <p><b>Void</b><br />
- <i>Meuse, France</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft associate of Pont l'Ev&ecirc;que and Limburger.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 310 --><a name="Page_310"
- id="Page_310"></a> <b>Volvet Kaas</b><br />
- <i>Holland</i></p>
-
- <p>The name means "full cream" cheese and that&mdash;according
- to law&mdash;has 45% fat in the dry product (<i>See</i>
- Gras.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Vorarlberg Sour-milk</b><br />
- <i>Greasy</i></p>
-
- <p>Hard; greasy; semicircular form of different sizes, with
- extra-strong flavor and odor. The name indicates that it is
- made of sour milk.</p>
-
- <p><b>Vory, le</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Fresh cream variety like Neufch&acirc;tel and Petit
- Suisse.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_W"
- id="AtoZ_W"></a><br />
- W</h3>
-
- <p><b>Warshawski Syr</b><br />
- <i>Poland</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; fine nutty flavor; named for the capital city of
- Poland.</p>
-
- <p><b>Warwickshire</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>Derbyshire type.</p>
-
- <p><b>Washed-curd cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Cheddar. The curd is washed to remove acidity and
- any abnormal flavors.</p>
-
- <p><b>Wedesslborg</b><br />
- <i>Denmark</i></p>
-
- <p>A mild, full cream loaf of Danish blue that can be very good
- if fully ripened.</p>
-
- <p><b>Weisschmiere</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Weisslacker, a slow-ripening variety that takes
- four months.</p>
-
- <p><b>Weisslacker, White Lacquer</b><br />
- <i>Bavaria</i></p>
-
- <p>Soft; piquant; semisharp; Allg&auml;uer-type put up in
- cylinders and rectangles, 4&frac12; by 4 by 3&frac12;, weighing
- 2&frac12; pounds. One of Germany's finest soft cheeses.</p>
-
- <p><b>Welsh cheeses</b></p>
-
- <p>The words Welsh and cheese have become synonyms down the
- ages. Welsh "cheeses can be attractive: the pale, mild
- Caerphilly was famous at one time, and nowadays has usually a
- factory flavor. A soft cream cheese can be obtained at some
- farms, and sometimes holds the same delicate melting
- sensuousness <!-- Page 311 --><a name="Page_311"
- id="Page_311"></a>that is found in the poems of John
- Keats.</p>
-
- <p>"The 'Resurrection Cheese' of Llanfihangel Abercowyn is no
- longer available, at least under that name. This cheese was so
- called because it was pressed by gravestones taken from an old
- church that had fallen into ruins. Often enough the cheeses
- would be inscribed with such wording as 'Here lies Blodwen
- Evans, aged 72.'" (From <i>My Wales</i> by Rhys Davies.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Wensleydale</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I. England, Yorkshire.
- Hard; blue-veined; double cream; similar to</span><br />
- Stilton. This production of the medieval town of Wensleydale
- in the Ure Valley is also called Yorkshire-Stilton and is in
- season from June to September. It is put up in the same
- cylindrical form as Stilton, but smaller. The rind is
- corrugated from the way the wrapping is put on.</p>
-
- <p>II. White; flat-shaped; eaten fresh; made mostly from
- January through the Spring, skipping the season when the
- greater No. I is made (throughout the summer) and beginning to
- be made again in the fall and winter.</p>
-
- <p><b>Werder, Elbinger and Niederungsk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>West Prussia</i></p>
-
- <p>Semisoft cow's-milker, mildly acid, shaped like Gouda.</p>
-
- <p><b>West Friesian</b><br />
- <i>Netherlands</i></p>
-
- <p>Skim-milk cheese eaten when only a week old. The honored
- antiquity of it is preserved in the anonymous English
- couplet:</p>
-
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <span>Good bread, good butter and good
- cheese<br /></span> <span>Is good English and good
- Friese.<br /></span>
- </div>
- </div>
-
- <p><!-- Page 312 --><a name="Page_312"
- id="Page_312"></a> <b>Westphalia Sour Milk, or
- Brioler</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Sour-milk hand cheese, kneaded by hand. Butter and/or egg
- yolk is mixed in with salt, and either pepper or caraway seeds.
- Then the richly colored curd is shaped by hand into small balls
- or rolls of about one pound. It is dried for a couple of hours
- before being put down cellar to ripen. The peculiar flavor is
- due partly to the seasonings and partly to the curd being
- allowed to putrify a little, like Limburger, before
- pressing.</p>
-
- <p>This sour-milker is as celebrated as Westphalian raw ham. It
- is so soft and fat it makes a sumptuous spread, similar to
- Tilsit and Brinza. It was named Brioler from the "Gute Brioler"
- inn where it was perfected by the owner, Frau Westphal, well
- over a century ago.</p>
-
- <p>The English sometimes miscall it Bristol from a
- Hobson-Jobson of the name Briol.</p>
-
- <p><b>Whale Cheese</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>In <i>The Cheddar Box,</i> Dean Collins tells of an ancient
- legend in which the whales came into Tillamook Bay to be
- milked; and he poses the possible origin of some waxy
- fossilized deposits along the shore as petrified whale-milk
- cheese made by the aboriginal Indians after milking the
- whales.</p>
-
- <p><b>White, Fromage Blanc</b><br />
- <i>France</i></p>
-
- <p>Skim-milk summer cheese made in many parts of the country
- and eaten fresh, with or without salt.</p>
-
- <p><b>White Cheddar</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Any Cheddar that isn't colored with anatto is known as White
- Cheddar. Green Bay brand is a fine example of it.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 313 --><a name="Page_313"
- id="Page_313"></a> <b>White Gorgonzola</b></p>
-
- <p>This type without the distinguishing blue veins is little
- known outside of Italy where it is highly esteemed. (<i>See</i>
- Gorgonzola.)</p>
-
- <p><b>White Stilton</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>This white form of England's royal blue cheese lacks the
- aristocratic veins that are really as green as Ireland's
- flag.</p>
-
- <p><b>Whitethorn</b><br />
- <i>Ireland</i></p>
-
- <p>Firm; white; tangy; half-pound slabs boxed. Saltee is the
- same, except that it is colored.</p>
-
- <p><b>Wilstermarsch-K&auml;se Holsteiner Marsch</b><br />
- <i>Schleswig-Holstein, Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>Semihard; full cream; rapidly cured; Tilsit type; very fine;
- made at Itzehoe.</p>
-
- <p><b>Wiltshire or Wilts</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>A Derbyshire type of sharp Cheddar popular in Wiltshire.
- (<i>See</i> North Wilts.)</p>
-
- <p><b>Wisconsin Factory Cheeses</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Have the date of manufacture stamped on the rind, indicating
- by the age whether the flavor is "mild, mellow, nippy, or
- sharp." American Cheddar requires from eight months to a year
- to ripen properly, but most of it is sold green when far too
- young.</p>
-
- <p>Notable Wisconsiners are Loaf, Limburger, Redskin and
- Swiss.</p>
-
- <p><b>Withania</b><br />
- <i>India</i></p>
-
- <p>Cow taboos affect the cheesemaking in India, and in place of
- rennet from calves a vegetable rennet is made from withania
- berries. This names a cheese of agreeable flavor when ripened,
- but, unfortunately, it becomes acrid with age.</p>
-
- <h3><!-- Page 314 --><a name="Page_314"
- id="Page_314"></a> <a name="AtoZ_Y"
- id="AtoZ_Y"></a><br />
- Y</h3>
-
- <p><b>Yoghurt, or Yogurt</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Made with <i>Bacillus bulgaricus</i>, that develops the
- acidity of the milk. It is similar to the English Saint
- Ivel.</p>
-
- <p><b>York, York Curd and Cambridge York</b><br />
- <i>England</i></p>
-
- <p>A high-grade cream cheese similar to Slipcote, both of which
- are becoming almost extinct since World War II. Also, this type
- is too rich to keep any length of time and is sold on the straw
- mat on which it is cured, for local consumption.</p>
-
- <p><b>Yorkshire-Stilton</b><br />
- <i>Cotherstone, England</i></p>
-
- <p>This Stilton, made chiefly at Cotherstone, develops with age
- a fine internal fat which makes it so extra-juicy that it's a
- general favorite with English epicures who like their game well
- hung.</p>
-
- <p><b>York State</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Short for New York State, the most venerable of our
- Cheddars.</p>
-
- <p><b>Young America</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>A mild, young, yellow Cheddar.</p>
-
- <p><b>Yo-yo</b><br />
- <i>U.S.A.</i></p>
-
- <p>Copying pear-and apple-shaped balls of Italian Provolone
- hanging on strings, a New York cheesemonger put out a Cheddar
- on a string, shaped like a yo-yo.</p>
-
- <h3><a name="AtoZ_Z"
- id="AtoZ_Z"></a><br />
- Z</h3>
-
- <p><b>Ziegel</b><br />
- <i>Austria</i></p>
-
- <p>Whole milk, or whole milk with cream added. Aged only two
- months.</p>
-
- <p><b>Ziegenk&auml;se</b><br />
- <i>Germany</i></p>
-
- <p>A general name in Germanic lands for cheeses made of goat's
- milk. Altenburger is a leader among Ziegenk&auml;se.</p>
-
- <p><!-- Page 315 --><a name="Page_315"
- id="Page_315"></a> <b>Ziger</b></p>
-
- <p><span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I. This whey product is
- not a true cheese, but a cheap form of food</span><br />
- made in all countries of central Europe and called albumin
- cheese, Recuit, Ricotta, Broccio, Brocotte, Serac, Ceracee,
- etc. Some are flavored with cider and others with vinegar.
- There is also a whey bread.</p>
-
- <p>II. Similar to Corsican Broccio and made of sour sheep milk
- instead of whey. Sometimes mixed with sugar into small
- cakes.</p>
-
- <p><b>Zips</b> <i>see</i> Brinza.</p>
-
- <p><b>Zomma</b><br />
- <i>Turkey</i></p>
-
- <p>Similar to Caciocavallo.</p>
-
- <p><b>Zwirn</b> <i>see</i> Tschil.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p><!-- Page 316 --><a name="Page_316"
- id="Page_316"></a> &nbsp;</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div>
- <img src="images/316.gif"
- width="500"
- height="237"
- alt="Illustration" />
- </div>
-
- <h2>Index of Recipes</h2>
- <!-- NOTE: Page Numbers in this document are numbered higher by 5 than
- the numbers in the printed book, due to the title and table of contents pages. -->
-
- <p>American Cheese Salad, <a href="#Page_133">128</a><br />
- Angelic Camembert, <a href="#Page_125">120</a><br />
- Apple and Cheese Salad, <a href="#Page_135">130</a><br />
- Apple Pie &agrave; la Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_124">119</a><br />
- Apple Pie Adorned, <a href="#Page_124">119</a><br />
- Apple Pie, Cheese-crusty, <a href="#Page_124">119</a><br />
- Asparagus and Cheese, Italian,
- <a href="#Page_115">110</a><br />
- au Gratin<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Eggs,
- <a href="#Page_130">125</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Potatoes,
- <a href="#Page_130">125</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomatoes,
- <a href="#Page_130">125</a></span><br />
- <br />
- Blintzes, <a href="#Page_116">111</a><br />
- Brie or Camembert Salad, <a href="#Page_133">128</a><br />
- <br />
- Camembert, Angelic, <a href="#Page_125">120</a><br />
- Champagned Roquefort or Gorgonzola,
- <a href="#Page_127">122</a><br />
- Cheddar Omelet, <a href="#Page_140">135</a><br />
- Cheese and Nut Salad, <a href="#Page_133">128</a><br />
- Cheese and Pea Salad, <a href="#Page_135">130</a><br />
- Cheese Cake, Pineapple, <a href="#Page_122">117</a><br />
- Cheese Charlotte, <a href="#Page_138">133</a><br />
- Cheese-crusty Apple Pie, <a href="#Page_124">119</a><br />
- Cheese Custard, <a href="#Page_123">118</a><br />
- Cheese Pie, Open-faced, <a href="#Page_123">118</a><br />
- Cheese Sauce, Plain, <a href="#Page_136">131</a><br />
- Cheese Waffles, <a href="#Page_117">112</a><br />
- Cheesed Mashed Potatoes, <a href="#Page_142">137</a><br />
- Chicken Cheese Soup, <a href="#Page_132">127</a><br />
- Cottage Cheese Pancakes, <a href="#Page_117">112</a><br />
- Christmas Cake Sandwiches, <a href="#Page_125">120</a><br />
- Cold Dunking, <a href="#Page_138">133</a><br />
- Custard, Cheese, <a href="#Page_123">118</a><br />
- <br />
- Dauphiny Ravioli, <a href="#Page_114">109</a><br />
- Diablotins, <a href="#Page_140">135</a><br />
- Dumpling, Napkin, <a href="#Page_117">112</a><br />
- Dunking, Cold, <a href="#Page_138">133</a><br />
- <br />
- Eggs au Gratin, <a href="#Page_130">125</a><br />
- <br />
- <!-- Page 317 --><a name="Page_317"
- id="Page_317"></a> Flan au Fromage,
- <a href="#Page_124">119</a><br />
- Fondue<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">&agrave; l'Italienne,
- <a href="#Page_89">84</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">All-American,
- <a href="#Page_90">85</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">au Fromage,
- <a href="#Page_95">90</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Baked Tomato,
- <a href="#Page_94">89</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Brick,
- <a href="#Page_97">92</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Catsup Tummy Fondiddy,
- Quickie, <a href="#Page_96">91</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheddar Dunk Bowl,
- <a href="#Page_98">93</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_97">92</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese, and Corn,
- <a href="#Page_97">92</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese and Rice,
- <a href="#Page_96">91</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chives,
- <a href="#Page_93">88</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Comtois,
- <a href="#Page_93">88</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Corn and Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_97">92</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Neufch&acirc;tel Style,
- <a href="#Page_87">82</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">100% American,
- <a href="#Page_95">90</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parmesan,
- <a href="#Page_91">86</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Quickie Catsup Tummy Fondiddy,
- <a href="#Page_96">91</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rice, and Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_96">91</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sapsago Swiss,
- <a href="#Page_91">86</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato,
- <a href="#Page_94">89</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato
- Baked,<a href="#Page_94">89</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Vacherin-Fribourg,
- <a href="#Page_93">88</a></span><br />
- Fritters, Italian, <a href="#Page_114">109</a><br />
- Fritto Misto, Italian, <a href="#Page_142">137</a><br />
- <br />
- Garlic on Cheese, <a href="#Page_115">110</a><br />
- Gorgonzola and Banana Salad, <a href="#Page_134">129</a><br />
- Green Cheese Salad Julienne, <a href="#Page_132">127</a><br />
- <br />
- Italian Asparagus and Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_115">110</a><br />
- Italian Fritters, <a href="#Page_114">109</a><br />
- Italian Fritto Misto, <a href="#Page_142">137</a><br />
- Italian-Swiss Scallopini, <a href="#Page_113">108</a><br />
- <br />
- Little Hats, Cappelletti, <a href="#Page_113">108</a><br />
- <br />
- Meal-in-One Omelet, A, <a href="#Page_140">135</a><br />
- Miniature Pizzas, <a href="#Page_112">107</a><br />
- <br />
- Napkin Dumpling, <a href="#Page_117">112</a><br />
- Neapolitan Baked Lasagne, <a href="#Page_113">108</a><br />
- <br />
- Omelet<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheddar,
- <a href="#Page_140">135</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Meal-in-One,
- <a href="#Page_140">135</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parmesan,
- <a href="#Page_140">135</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato,
- <a href="#Page_141">136</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">with Cheese Sauce,
- <a href="#Page_141">136</a></span><br />
- Onion Soup, <a href="#Page_131">126</a><br />
- Onion Soup au Gratin, <a href="#Page_131">126</a><br />
- Open-faced Cheese Pie, <a href="#Page_123">118</a><br />
- <br />
- Pancakes, Cottage Cheese, <a href="#Page_117">112</a><br />
- Parmesan Omelet, <a href="#Page_140">135</a><br />
- Parsleyed Cheese Sauce, <a href="#Page_136">131</a><br />
- Pfeffern&uuml;sse and Caraway,
- <a href="#Page_139">134</a><br />
- Pineapple Cheese Cake, <a href="#Page_122">117</a><br />
- Piroghs, Polish, <a href="#Page_142">137</a><br />
- Pizza, <a href="#Page_111">106</a><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_112">107</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dough,
- <a href="#Page_111">106</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Miniature,
- <a href="#Page_112">107</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato Paste,
- <a href="#Page_112">107</a></span><br />
- Polish Piroghs, <a href="#Page_142">137</a><br />
- Potatoes au Gratin, <a href="#Page_130">125</a><br />
- Potatoes, Mashed, Cheesed, <a href="#Page_142">137</a><br />
- Puffs<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Breakfast,
- <a href="#Page_105">100</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese, New England,
- <a href="#Page_105">100</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cream Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_105">100</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Danish Fondue,
- <a href="#Page_105">100</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fried,
- <a href="#Page_104">99</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">New England Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_105">100</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parmesan,
- <a href="#Page_104">99</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Roquefort,
- <a href="#Page_104">99</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Three-in-One,
- <a href="#Page_103">98</a></span><br />
- <br />
- Rabbit<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">After-Dinner,
- <a href="#Page_60">55</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">All-American Succotash,
- <a href="#Page_82">77</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">American Woodchuck,
- <a href="#Page_68">63</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Anchovy,
- <a href="#Page_75">70</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Asparagus,
- <a href="#Page_73">68</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Basic</span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">No. 1 (with beer),
- <a href="#Page_54">49</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 2em;">No. 2 (with milk),
- <a href="#Page_55">50</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Blushing Bunny,
- <a href="#Page_68">63</a></span><br />
- <!-- Page 318 --><a name="Page_318"
- id="Page_318"></a>
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Border-hopping Bunny,
- <a href="#Page_65">60</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Bouquet of the Sea,"
- <a href="#Page_74">69</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Buttermilk,
- <a href="#Page_81">76</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Celery and Onion,
- <a href="#Page_72">67</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chipped Beef,
- <a href="#Page_71">66</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cream Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_80">75</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Crumby,
- <a href="#Page_75">70</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Crumby Tomato,
- <a href="#Page_76">71</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Curry,
- <a href="#Page_81">76</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Danish,
- <a href="#Page_82">77</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Devil's Own, The,
- <a href="#Page_70">65</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dr. Maginn's,
- <a href="#Page_59">54</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dried Beef,
- <a href="#Page_71">66</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dutch,
- <a href="#Page_77">72</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Easy English,
- <a href="#Page_83">78</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Eggnog,
- <a href="#Page_82">77</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fish, Fresh or Dried,
- <a href="#Page_74">69</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fluffy, Eggy,
- <a href="#Page_69">64</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Frijole,
- <a href="#Page_65">60</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gherkin,
- <a href="#Page_76">71</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ginger Ale,
- <a href="#Page_81">76</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Golden Buck,
- <a href="#Page_64">59</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Golden Buck II,
- <a href="#Page_64">59</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Grilled Sardine,
- <a href="#Page_74">69</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Grilled Tomato,
- <a href="#Page_70">65</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Grilled Tomato and Onion,
- <a href="#Page_70">65</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gruy&egrave;re,
- <a href="#Page_78">73</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Kansas Jack,
- <a href="#Page_71">66</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lady Llanover's Toasted,
- <a href="#Page_57">52</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Latin-American Corn,
- <a href="#Page_72">67</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mexican Chilaly,
- <a href="#Page_69">64</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mushroom-Tomato,
- <a href="#Page_72">67</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Onion Rum Tum Tiddy,
- <a href="#Page_67">62</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Original Recipe, Ye,
- <a href="#Page_62">57</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Oven,
- <a href="#Page_63">58</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Oyster,
- <a href="#Page_73">68</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pink Poodle,
- <a href="#Page_79">74</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pumpernickel,
- <a href="#Page_77">72</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reducing,
- <a href="#Page_80">75</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Roe,
- <a href="#Page_74">69</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rum Tum Tiddy,
- <a href="#Page_66">61</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rum Tum Tiddy, Onion,
- <a href="#Page_67">62</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rum Tum Tiddy, Sherry,
- <a href="#Page_67">62</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Running,
- <a href="#Page_68">63</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sardine, Grilled,
- <a href="#Page_74">69</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sardine, Plain,
- <a href="#Page_74">69</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Savory Eggy Dry,
- <a href="#Page_80">75</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Scotch Woodcock,
- <a href="#Page_68">63</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sea-food,
- <a href="#Page_73">68</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sherry,
- <a href="#Page_78">73</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sherry Rum Tum Tiddy,
- <a href="#Page_67">62</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Smoked Cheddar,
- <a href="#Page_75">70</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Smoked fish,
- <a href="#Page_75">70</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">South African Tomato,
- <a href="#Page_66">61</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spanish Sherry,
- <a href="#Page_79">74</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Stieff Recipe, The,
- <a href="#Page_56">51</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Swiss Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_78">73</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato,
- <a href="#Page_66">61</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato and Onion, Grilled,
- <a href="#Page_70">65</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato, Crumby,
- <a href="#Page_76">71</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato, Grilled,
- <a href="#Page_70">65</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato Soup,
- <a href="#Page_67">62</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato, South American,
- <a href="#Page_66">61</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Venerable Yorkshire Buck, The,
- <a href="#Page_64">59</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Yale College,
- <a href="#Page_64">59</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Yorkshire,
- <a href="#Page_63">58</a></span><br />
- Ramekins<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">&agrave; la Parisienne,
- <a href="#Page_108">103</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Casserole,
- <a href="#Page_110">105</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese I,
- <a href="#Page_106">101</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese II,
- <a href="#Page_107">102</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese III,
- <a href="#Page_107">102</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese IV,
- <a href="#Page_108">103</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Frying Pan,
- <a href="#Page_110">105</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mor&eacute;zien,
- <a href="#Page_109">104</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Puff Paste,
- <a href="#Page_110">105</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Roquefort-Swiss,
- <a href="#Page_109">104</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Swiss-Roquefort,
- <a href="#Page_109">104</a></span><br />
- Ravioli, Dauphiny, <a href="#Page_114">109</a><br />
- Roquefort, Champagned, <a href="#Page_127">122</a><br />
- Roquefort Cheese Salad Dressing,
- <a href="#Page_135">130</a><br />
- Rosie's Swiss Breakfast Cheese Salad,
- <a href="#Page_134">129</a><br />
- <br />
- <!-- Page 319 --><a name="Page_319"
- id="Page_319"></a> Salad<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">American Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_133">128</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Apple and Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_135">130</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Brie,
- <a href="#Page_133">128</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Camembert,
- <a href="#Page_133">128</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese and Nut,
- <a href="#Page_133">128</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese and Pea,
- <a href="#Page_135">130</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gorgonzola and Banana,
- <a href="#Page_134">129</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Green Cheese Salad Julienne,
- <a href="#Page_132">127</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Rosie's Swiss Breakfast
- Cheese, <a href="#Page_134">129</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Swiss Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_134">129</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Three-in-One Mold,
- <a href="#Page_133">128</a></span><br />
- Sandwiches<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Alpine Club,
- <a href="#Page_146">141</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Boston Beany, Open-face,
- <a href="#Page_146">141</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheeseburgers,
- <a href="#Page_146">141</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Deviled Rye,
- <a href="#Page_147">142</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Egg, Open-faced,
- <a href="#Page_147">142</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">French-fried Swiss,
- <a href="#Page_147">142</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Grilled Chicken-Ham-Cheddar,
- <a href="#Page_147">142</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He-man, Open-faced,
- <a href="#Page_148">143</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">International,
- <a href="#Page_148">143</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Jurassiennes, or Cro&ucirc;tes
- Comtoises, <a href="#Page_148">143</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">K&uuml;mmelk&auml;se,
- <a href="#Page_148">143</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Limburger Onion, or Catsup,
- <a href="#Page_148">143</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Meringue, Open-faced,
- <a href="#Page_149">144</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Neufch&acirc;tel and Honey,
- <a href="#Page_149">144</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Newfoundland Toasted Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_153">148</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Oskar's Ham-Cam,
- <a href="#Page_149">144</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pickled Camembert,
- <a href="#Page_150">145</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Queijo da Serra,
- <a href="#Page_150">145</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Roquefort Nut,
- <a href="#Page_150">145</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Smoky, Sturgeon-smoked,
- <a href="#Page_150">145</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tangy,
- <a href="#Page_151">146</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Toasted Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_153">148</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Unusual&mdash;of&nbsp;
- Flowers, Hay and Clover,
- <a href="#Page_151">146</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Vegetarian,
- <a href="#Page_151">146</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Witch's,
- <a href="#Page_152">147</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Xochomilco,
- <a href="#Page_152">147</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Yolk Picnic,
- <a href="#Page_152">147</a></span><br />
- Sauce<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_136">131</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mornay,
- <a href="#Page_136">131</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parsleyed Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_136">131</a></span><br />
- Sauce Mornay, <a href="#Page_136">131</a><br />
- Scallopini, Italian-Swiss, <a href="#Page_113">108</a><br />
- Schnitzelbank Pot, <a href="#Page_42">37</a><br />
- Souffl&eacute;<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Basic,
- <a href="#Page_100">95</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese-Corn,
- <a href="#Page_101">96</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese Fritter,
- <a href="#Page_103">98</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese-Mushroom,
- <a href="#Page_102">97</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese-Potato,
- <a href="#Page_102">97</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese-Sea-food,
- <a href="#Page_102">97</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese-Spinach,
- <a href="#Page_101">96</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cheese-Tomato,
- <a href="#Page_101">96</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Corn-Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_101">96</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mushroom-Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_102">97</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parmesan,
- <a href="#Page_100">95</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parmesan-Swiss,
- <a href="#Page_101">96</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Potato-Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_102">97</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sea-food-Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_102">97</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spinach-Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_101">96</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Swiss,
- <a href="#Page_101">96</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tomato-Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_101">96</a></span><br />
- Soup<br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chicken Cheese,
- <a href="#Page_132">127</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Onion,
- <a href="#Page_131">126</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Onion, au Gratin,
- <a href="#Page_131">126</a></span><br />
- <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Supa Shetgia,
- <a href="#Page_138">133</a></span><br />
- Spanish Flan&mdash;Quesillo, <a href="#Page_141">136</a><br />
- Straws, <a href="#Page_138">133</a><br />
- Stuffed Celery, <a href="#Page_137">132</a><br />
- Supa Shetgia, <a href="#Page_138">133</a><br />
- Swiss Cheese Salad, <a href="#Page_134">129</a><br />
- <br />
- Three-in-One Mold, <a href="#Page_133">128</a><br />
- Tomato Omelet, <a href="#Page_141">136</a><br />
- Tomatoes au Gratin, <a href="#Page_130">125</a><br />
- <br />
- Vatroushki, <a href="#Page_116">111</a><br />
- <br />
- Waffles, Cheese, <a href="#Page_117">112</a></p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr style="width: 65%;" />
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <h2><a name="ABOUT_THE_AUTHOR"
- id="ABOUT_THE_AUTHOR"></a>
- <!-- Page 320 --><a name="Page_320"
- id="Page_320"></a> <img src="images/320.gif"
- width="125"
- height="100"
- alt="Illustration: house" /> ABOUT THE AUTHOR</h2>
- <hr style="width: 75%;" />
-
- <p>Bob Brown, after living thirty years in as many foreign
- lands and enjoying countless national cheeses at the source,
- returned to New York and summed them all up in this book.</p>
-
- <p>Born in Chicago, he was graduated from Oak Park High School
- and entered the University of Wisconsin at the exact moment
- when a number of imported Swiss professors in this great dairy
- state began teaching their students how to hole an
- Emmentaler.</p>
-
- <p>After majoring in beer and free lunch from Milwaukee to
- Munich, Bob celebrated the end of Prohibition with a book
- called <i>Let There Be Beer!</i> and then decided to write
- another about Beer's best friend, Cheese. But first he
- collaborated with his mother Cora and wife Rose on <i>The Wine
- Cookbook</i>, still in print after nearly twenty-five years.
- This first manual on the subject in America paced a baker's
- dozen food-and-drink books, including: <i>America Cooks, 10,000
- Snacks, Fish and Seafood</i> and <i>The South American
- Cookbook</i>.</p>
-
- <p>For ten years he published his own weekly magazines in Rio
- de Janeiro, Mexico City and London. In the decade before that,
- from 1907 to 1917, he wrote more than a thousand short stories
- and serials under his full name, Robert Carlton Brown. One of
- his first books, <i>What Happened to Mary</i>, became a best
- seller and was the first five-reel movie. This put him in
- <i>Who's Who</i> in his early twenties.</p>
-
- <p>In 1928 he retired to write and travel. After a couple of
- years spent in collecting books and bibelots throughout
- <!-- Page 321 --><a name="Page_321"
- id="Page_321"></a> the Orient, he settled down in Paris with
- the expatriate group of Americans and invented the Reading
- Machine for their delectation. Nancy Cunard published his
- <i>Words</i> and Harry Crosby printed <i>1450-1950</i> at
- the Black Sun Press, while in Cagnes-sur-Mer Bob had his own
- imprint Roving Eye Press, that turned out <i>Demonics; Gems,
- a Censored Anthology; Globe-gliding</i> and <i>Readies for
- Bob Brown's Machine</i> with contributions by Gertrude
- Stein, Ezra Pound, Kay Boyle, James T. Farrell <i>et
- al.</i></p>
-
- <p>The depression drove him back to New York, but a decade
- later he returned to Brazil that had long been his home away
- from home. There he wrote <i>The Amazing Amazon</i>, with his
- wife Rose, making a total of thirty books bearing his name.</p>
-
- <p>After the death of his wife and mother, Bob Brown closed
- their mountain home in Petropolis, Brazil, and returned to New
- York where he remarried and now lives, in the Greenwich Village
- of his free-lancing youth. With him came the family's working
- library in a score of trunks and boxes, that formed the basis
- of a mail-order book business in which he specializes today in
- food, drink and other out-of-the-way items.</p>
-
- <p>&nbsp;</p>
-
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><!-- Page 322 --><a name="Page_322"
- id="Page_322"></a> [Compiler's Notes: Moved page on
- author's other books from page 1 of project to follow
- the title page.<br />
- Removed publisher's copyright information from page
- 3.<br />
- Removed references to Introduction, as it was omitted from
- the book project.<br />
- Added A to Z links to the Appendix in the Table of
- Contents]</p>
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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