Being Norwegian, i just had a slice of Jarlsberg with dinner. But too many to list - really love the soft French triple creams, tho. So much cheese, so little time!
This sounds amazing. I'm going to check with a couple semi-local cheese shops to see if getting this is possible. Right up my alley.Boursault! Use to buy it every week when I lived in NYC. Can't find it locally.
Any one else try it?- (like it or not)
Australia has very tight border security laws especially regarding food importsStichelton has only been made since 2004. What I had was, at the time, illegally produced Stilton. I've not tried Stichelton yet, though I expect it's very much the same as what I had.
So a bit like White Lightning cider then, as that stuff has never even seen an apple let alone contain any.You do realize that it is self described as a "cheese product".
Yes, that was clever marketing on their part. I've never actually seen it let alone sample it but I just know I'd love the stuff.Stichelton.
Unfortunately due to an idiotic bureaucracy it is not allowed to be called Stilton as it is made form unpasteurised milk
I am crazy for Norwegian Gjetost, I used to find it in a specialty shop in Cambridge, UK (the aptly named Cambridge Cheese Company!) when I lived there. Couldn't find it in Greece when I lived there (although could find Durian, @OzPiper, a Chinese friend said "you're the only white person I know who like Durian". I don't just like it, I LOVE it), and can't find it in typical Swiss Supermarkets. The French wouldn't carry such a product, it'd be sacré bleu to them, an abomination - and it's not cheese, technically - but the German supermarkets do!Being Norwegian, i just had a slice of Jarlsberg with dinner. But too many to list - really love the soft French triple creams, tho. So much cheese, so little time!
Be careful saying this around Greeks, that's casus belli for us There's "Balkan White Cheese" of various varieties in Swiss and/or Turkish supermarkets in Switzerland, it's pretty good in fact as a cheaper substitute for Feta. My wife even prefers it to Feta...but what does she know. She's from an ex-commie country so she can't tolerate tasty cheese. What happened in many countries with similar regimes was that millennia-old cheesemaking traditions were killed overnight when production got standardized. Whereas before there were tens/hundreds of cheese varieties they all became "yellow" and "white" in soviet/socialist times. I stumbled upon that idea after a chat with an Albanian greengrocer in Greece - he suggested me some amazing spicy Cretan gruyere but I said "better not, my wife is from Serbia and they don't know cheese there, she'll find it too strong". Guy let out a sigh and said "Serbia is like Albania, we had good cheeses but the commies killed all of that". Then by chance came across this article which gives some evidence to the idea: The Woman Saving Georgia’s Lost Cheeses - https://forbes.ge/the-woman-saving-georgias-lost-cheeses/I do like good (Bulgarian) feta too.
Horrock's?Damn I love cheese but haven't had a chance to taste many fancy ones. Of ones I can get at the local grocery store my favorite is Sartori MontAmoré. Those little crystals are so tasty.
Let me know if you have a recommendation for something similar.
I'm quite partial to brie in a pitta bread.And a cheese sandwich is classic
Technically, that’s not even cheese!Good old American cheese slices, blasfamy I know!
You can get it at Meijer but I’m sure Horrock’s carries it too.Horrock's?