Cheesing it at Founding Fathers

Founding Farmers Funk Cheese Plate
Founding Farmers Funk Cheese Plate

We went to Founding Farmers — A restaurant run by a collective of 40,000+ American family farmers — to celebrate WWT’s birthday May 11 (even though he was out of town.)

The cheese was kept out in glass domes on the bar, so we figured the “local” cheeses must be good. We ordered an appetizer called: “We want the Funk, Give up the Funk!” $16. The bartender didn’t quite know which was which — though he says it’s hard because they get new cheese every week.

• Today’s special rind-ripened cow’s milk cheese:
We think this was: Thistle Hill Tarentaise, jersey cow cheese. North Pomfret, Vermont.

• Today’s special rind-ripened goat cheese — from NJ? Not sure about this one.

• HOLLY SPRINGS, Sweet Grass Dairy, Thomasville, GA
Holly Springs is our aged, raw goat’s milk cheese. Fresh milk from our herd of Saanen, La Mancha and Nubian goats is handcrafted into wheels and aged 2 months. With an ivory paste and a semi-firm texture, Holly Springs has a warm, nutty flavor that lends itself well to a variety of culinary applications.

• BAYLEY HAZEN BLUE, Jasper Hills Farm, Greensboro, VT
Bayley Hazen Blue is a natural rinded blue cheese. It is made with whole raw milk every other day, primarily with morning milk, which is lower in fat. Ayrshire milk is particularly well suited to the production of blue cheese because of its small fat globules, which are easily broken down during the aging process. Though drier and crumblier than most blues, its texture reminds one of chocolate and butter. It is aged between 4 and 6 months. Bayley Hazen is named after an old military road that traverses the Northeast Kingdom. The road, commissioned by General George Washington was built to carry troops to fight the English on a Canadian front. Though no battle ever took place, the road brought Greensboro its first settlers and continues to be used.

Since we still have some of this in the fridge from the Sheep & Wool Festival, we asked for a substitute: EVERONA PIEDMONT, Everona Farms, Rapidan, VA, sheep. They said it was some type of cheddar — we liked it, and it was sheepy — but we still aren’t sure what kind it was. It tasted familiar, and they think it was from NJ. Could it have been from Valley Shepherd — where we made cheese.

We think one was Mt Tam – one of our favorites from California’s Cowgirl Creamery: Triple cream says it all — like butter.

MS & LL & AKT

Sheep & Wool 2009

Everona cheese
Everona cheese

The Maryland Sheep & Wool festival this year was again very good.  We went on Saturday, and there were a zillion people there.  It didn’t rain, and thus was very nice.  We found out that the cheesemonger that used to show up (Menhennet) has been replaced by Everona.  We go there at 1pm on Saturday, and they had already old out of most of what they had brought, so we didn’t get any of their blues.

Smokey Piedmont
We’ve had their Piedmont before, so this was our chance to check out their smoked version.  It was very good. (10/27/2010 update: I bought some Smoked Piedmont again at the Crystal City Farmer’s Market but over til next season. Once again, we liked it – went will with some fresh pears; easy to eat in your hand.)

Shenandoah
A milder sheep milk cheese, which was also very good.

Understanding the living foods we eat

museum-plate

The evening at the Science Museum was very interesting. The speaker, Dr. Catherine Donnelly, is a Professor of Cheese (well, actually ‘Professor of Nutrition and Food Science’) at the U. of Vermont. Her talk was quite technical. There is a law that you can’t sell cheese made from raw milk unless it has been aged for at least 60 days. Her talk was mostly about this law, and the papers and experiments that have been done on it: where bacteria in cheese comes from, what kind of pathogens survive past 60 days, how to detect Listeria in food, and a lot of other stuff about microbiological safety of raw-milk cheese. There were some pictures, and a few charts and graphs. But really, it was very interesting.

She is also a founder of the Vermont Institute for Artisan Cheese.

And then we ate cheese: Mt Tam (Calif.), Montgomery’s Cheddar (England), Cabot Clothbound Cheddar (Vt.), Comte Reserve (France; we had a Comte at one of the Burlington tastings), Parmigiano-Reggiano (Italy), and Baley Hazen Blue (Vt). All of it cow.

Cheese we made arrives in DC

our wheel of NJ cheese
our wheel of NJ cheese
cut into our wheel
cut into our wheel

T&M came down to DC to visit and to celebrate his birthday.  They brought one of the wheels of cheese we made last October at Valley Shepherd.

Our own wheel of sheep cheese

Valley Shepherd
milk: sheep
type: gouda
aged: October to March

Our very good sheep’s mild cheese that we made at the Vally Shepherd Dairy in New Jersey.  It has been aged in their cave since October.  Very nice, with comments of: rich, creamy, earthy, leather

First of Valley Shepherd Cheese Eaten

First cheese wedge of NJ cheese
First cheese wedge of NJ cheese


Jan 31, 2009: The NJ folks picked up the first 3 cheese wheels at Valley Shepherd Creamery from our Oct 19, 2008 cheesemaking class. The phone message said, “The cheese is yummy.” Cheese eating party to be planned down South. M said it had complex flavors.

cheese from feast!

feast_cheese
We finally got a chance to stop by feast!, a cheese shop in Charlottesville, VA, and what a shop it was! The proprieter, Kate, was very knowledgeable and helpful on choosing the right cheese. We wanted local cheeses, and had the usual criteria: one brie/triple-cream, some sheep, and not much goat. Well, Kate certainly supplied us with what we wanted, and we ended up with this:

Delice de Bourgogne
milk: French cow
a very nice triple-creme cheese

Everona Piedmont
milk: Virginia cow

Grayson
Meadow Creek Dairy
milk: Virginia sheep
Very smelly. Did not get better with age. Creamy texture.

McClure
milk: Virginia cow
type: similar to Tallegio
Yes, very much like Tallegio (very smelly). NA liked this a lot.

Roaring 40’s blue
milk: Austrailian cow

Angela & Ken’s B-day

buy-jan-09

We drove to Burlington for the January birthdays (Angela and Ken).  We stopped by Harris-Teeter, which has a good selection of cheese (for a grocery store), and got Manchego (of course), and a blue that we hadn’t seen before.

Butter
Angela gave me a “cookbook” for Christmas, The Home Creamery, by Kathy Farrell-Kingsley. It describes how to make butter from whole cream, which we did, and it was delicious!

Goat Brie
Angela got this at Brookville in Cleveland Park. It was a hit, and everyone (but me) liked it. Well, I thought it was very good for goat cheese(!).

Manchego
Always a favorite.

Amish Blue
Actually it was from Wisconsin, but was a good blue.

Cheese and Landscape Photography

We went to hear Frank Gohlke, a landscape photographer and subject of the exhibition Accommodating Nature Now through March 3, 2009 at the American Art Museum, presented a selection of readings from his catalogue essay entitled Stories in the Dirt, Stories in the Air. Learned more about Wichita Falls, Texas than I ever knew — his hometown. Both black and white and color photos. Cowgirl Creamery sponsored the reception afterward, and they did an excellent job. Very cool cheese cutter — and they had to change the wire several times. They had Mt Tam (Brie like — one of our favs from there) and St George (parmesan like). The photo is after I started eating it, but they had a nice combo of the 2 cheeses, some nuts and a toasted fruit/nut bread. Much prettier than other cheese events where they just let people dig in — and the cheese gets messy. The usual cheese foursome attended this free program.

Mt Tam and St George from Cowgirl Creamery
Mt Tam and St George from Cowgirl Creamery

The Cheese Quiz

One time we were at a restaurant talking to someone, and they said “I like cheese”, but we doubted them.  Well, as you can tell from this blog that we really like cheese, so we decided to develop a quiz to see just how much someone really likes the stuff:

  • How many implements in your kitchen (plates, knives, serving trays, forks, etc.) are solely devoted to cheese?  (about 15)
  • How many pounds of blue cheese have you purchased at one time? (3 lbs)
  • Have you ever smuggled cheese into the country? (yes)
  • How far have you driven just to purchase cheese? (maybe 15 miles)
  • Does your cheesemonger know you by name? (well, not by name, but they recognize us)
  • Do you have rennet in your refrigerator? (yes)
  • How many cheese books do you have? (3)