An introduction to cheese
About 8 years ago, I shared an office with a nice American lady, and we got to the subject of cheese one day (doesn't everyone, eventually?). The conversation was largely based around the lack of variety in US supermarkets. From memory the breadth of the offering (for most American consumers, apparently) amounted to Montery Jack, Cheddar, and Swiss, all of which seemed to be based on the recipe for Kraft single slice cheese.
My office friend told me it got worse than this and that you could in fact get "Cheez Whiz" (sic) in a can (UHT cream style), spelt thus so as not to sully the name of the real stuff. Cheez Whiz is made by Kraft, coincidentally. We think this squirty cheese was invented for pasting onto saltines (crackers for the English), but we'd love some clarification.
I'd heard of alarming food in my time (baconnaise, meat in a cone etc), but this took the (savoury) biscuit. My friend actually brought me back a can of Cheez Whiz back from a trip to USA. It terrified me on a number of levels.
The world of artisan cheese making is a million miles away from Cheez Whiz. One of our favourite pastimes is selecting cheese ranges for our wine tasting events, and for our fine food tasting game, The Epicureanâ„¢. What though, is the best way to get to grips with all the different varieties of cheese out there?
The famous comment by Charles de Gaulle - "how can you govern a country which has 246 varieties of cheese" - gives you an idea of the breadth of what's on offer in France alone. There are many different ways to classify cheese, but our favourite methods are below. Note we are concentrating specifically on the classifications which determine texture, flavour and appearance - the most important bits!
TEXTURE
There are 3 different classifications of texture from hard (Parmesan, Mimolette), to semi hard (Cheshire), to soft (Mozzarella).
STRENGTH
As cheese ages, its strength increases. Some retailers helpfully provide a chart for their cheeses to help their customers understand what to expect.
RIND
Many people classify cheese this way, but in our experience it's not the most useful categorisation, as it's not terribly descriptive.
Bloomy rind cheeses are your Bries, Camemberts, Chaources etc. This bloomy rind is the light fluffy outer casing that generally implies the cheese within is soft.
Natural rind cheeses include Stilton, and (often) different types of goat's cheese.
Washed rind cheeses refer to cheese that is washed and brushed in liquid to give it a particular flavour and characteristic. A particularly well known example in the UK is Stinking Bishop, whose rind is washed with Perry.
MILK TYPE
This is important, because each milk type gives distinctive characteristics:
Cow's milk - the most used milk type, gives hard, typically dense and often full bodied cheeses, high in fact content.
Goat's cheeses are sharper in style, with more tang, and often a mouth coating quality.
Sheep's milk cheeses (our personal favourites) often have a famyardy, nutty quality.
Buffalo milk is most famously used in true Mozzarella, and in this instance tends to produce a delicate, lactic, creamy style.
AREA OF PRODUCTION
Like wine and whisky, the area of production is also important in cheesemaking. Milk has different characteristics depending on its source, and this will carry through to the end cheese.
One of the most enjoyable elements of cheese appreciation is experimentation. The more you taste, the more the above classifications become rounded out. The next time you are in a cheesemonger, ask for a sample of something new..
My office friend told me it got worse than this and that you could in fact get "Cheez Whiz" (sic) in a can (UHT cream style), spelt thus so as not to sully the name of the real stuff. Cheez Whiz is made by Kraft, coincidentally. We think this squirty cheese was invented for pasting onto saltines (crackers for the English), but we'd love some clarification.
I'd heard of alarming food in my time (baconnaise, meat in a cone etc), but this took the (savoury) biscuit. My friend actually brought me back a can of Cheez Whiz back from a trip to USA. It terrified me on a number of levels.
The world of artisan cheese making is a million miles away from Cheez Whiz. One of our favourite pastimes is selecting cheese ranges for our wine tasting events, and for our fine food tasting game, The Epicureanâ„¢. What though, is the best way to get to grips with all the different varieties of cheese out there?
The famous comment by Charles de Gaulle - "how can you govern a country which has 246 varieties of cheese" - gives you an idea of the breadth of what's on offer in France alone. There are many different ways to classify cheese, but our favourite methods are below. Note we are concentrating specifically on the classifications which determine texture, flavour and appearance - the most important bits!
TEXTURE
There are 3 different classifications of texture from hard (Parmesan, Mimolette), to semi hard (Cheshire), to soft (Mozzarella).
STRENGTH
As cheese ages, its strength increases. Some retailers helpfully provide a chart for their cheeses to help their customers understand what to expect.
RIND
Many people classify cheese this way, but in our experience it's not the most useful categorisation, as it's not terribly descriptive.
Bloomy rind cheeses are your Bries, Camemberts, Chaources etc. This bloomy rind is the light fluffy outer casing that generally implies the cheese within is soft.
Natural rind cheeses include Stilton, and (often) different types of goat's cheese.
Washed rind cheeses refer to cheese that is washed and brushed in liquid to give it a particular flavour and characteristic. A particularly well known example in the UK is Stinking Bishop, whose rind is washed with Perry.
MILK TYPE
This is important, because each milk type gives distinctive characteristics:
Cow's milk - the most used milk type, gives hard, typically dense and often full bodied cheeses, high in fact content.
Goat's cheeses are sharper in style, with more tang, and often a mouth coating quality.
Sheep's milk cheeses (our personal favourites) often have a famyardy, nutty quality.
Buffalo milk is most famously used in true Mozzarella, and in this instance tends to produce a delicate, lactic, creamy style.
AREA OF PRODUCTION
Like wine and whisky, the area of production is also important in cheesemaking. Milk has different characteristics depending on its source, and this will carry through to the end cheese.
One of the most enjoyable elements of cheese appreciation is experimentation. The more you taste, the more the above classifications become rounded out. The next time you are in a cheesemonger, ask for a sample of something new..