I'm not a great cheese eater, I can manage soft fresh "farmhouse" cheeses [cottage, Philly, boursin etc] but not the harder matured stuff like Cheddar or Red Leicester. It makes me feel very queasy, or worse, actually sick. Bob on the other hand will try any cheese at least once. In Brussels once, he bought some ettekeis which absolutely stinks - the cheesemonger actually queried whether he was sure about this purchase!
But what makes a good cheese? Sue mentioned Thomas Tusser in her recent Midsummer post, and he actually wrote down ten qualities to be desired in the ideal cheese.
Not like Gehazi, dead white, like a leper
Not like Lot's wife, all salt
Not like Argus, full of eyes
Not like Tom Piper, “hoven and puffed”
Not like Crispin, leathery
Not like Lazarus, poor
Not like Esau, hairy
Not like Mary Magdalene, full of whey or maudlin
Not like the Gentiles, full of maggots
Not like a Bishop, made of burnt milk
Tusser clearly expected his readers to be well versed in Scripture, as some of these refer to Bible characters, or church teachings
3. Argus Panoptes is a character in Greek mythology who had many eyes. Presumably a warning to avoid cheese full of holes?
5. St Crispin was the patron saint of tanners and leather workers. Shun cheese with a leathery texture
6.Lazarus was the poor beggar in Luke 16 [not the guy brought back from the dead [John 11] no poor quality cheese
7. Esau was a hairy man [Genesis 25] avoid hairy cheese at all costs!
What qualities do you look for in a piece of cheese?
Love Manchego, Applewood Smoked, Orkney Cheddar. My local Waitrose franchise used to sell a lovely non-coloured cheddar at a great price but last week took it off to be replaced with their organic cheddar at nearly £2 dearer. Won't be buying it I'm afraid. I'll stick to the Co-op own brand Scottish cheddar!
ReplyDeleteπ§ Good to see you are supporting the Scottish dairy industry
DeleteYou are funny Ang! I can imagine a grumpy bloody minded cheese, stalking around the board! I would always have Brie, Camambert and a good Cornish cheddar,
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DeleteCornish and French - two places close to your ❤️
DeleteA good mature cheddar, a ripe but not stinky brie, and a Cornish yarg or, if in season, sage Derby. Also various crackers (Peter's yard are good), grapes, celery and apples.
ReplyDeleteI love that Yarg was developed by the Gray family. Edam is Made backwards
DeleteWe love cheese here, too much wish weren't so addicted. For my perfect cheese board I would have Stilton, a very strong cheddar, camembert or ripe brie and a good red Leicester (Red Fox is delicious, thanks Sue). One cheese we bought once was so smelly we had to keep it in the shed Stinking Bishop it wasn't very nice but my husband did finish it in the end! Regards Sue H
ReplyDeleteπ§I cannot cope with stinky cheeses in the house, the very smell turns my stomach
DeleteI just love cheese, happy to try any variety of cheese. Very difficult to choose just 3 but probably a cave aged cheddar, a firm goats cheese and a quality Wensleydale. I have been known to finish off a block of cathedral city in a couple of days! Small wonder I have a cholesterol problem.
ReplyDeleteπ§good choices. I can eat goat's cheese!
Delete'Hairy cheese' ... the very thought!!
ReplyDeleteAlan likes all cheeses, including all the smelly ones and ones containing fruit. What do I look for in a cheese ... for it not to contain any dairy, as like you it makes me very ill. All milk containing products do for me and I have avoided them for years now. If I have a slip up ... and it can be a regular thing if I don't remember to read labels, as food manufacturers are prone to adding whey to products that didn't used to contain it, in a bid to lower their production costs ... I am usually quite poorly within minutes.
I quite like the idea of a 'bloody minded' cheese. :-)
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DeleteLifted from AI etymology:
ReplyDeleteThe word "hoven" has two main etymological roots. Firstly, it can be an archaic past participle of the verb "heave," meaning "affected with bloat," particularly in reference to cattle.
I wonder if swollen and puffed refers to a cheese that has gone off, or the result consumption has on the belly!
JC
π§thank you for researching this word! Great information, will try and work it into a conversation sometime π€£
DeleteWe have our own smelly cheese in Canada, called Limburger. It hasn't found its way into our house yet! I'm very fond of Brie, but I can't tolerate blue cheeses any more and I used to love them.
ReplyDeleteLimburger is a Belgian cheese. Years ago our daughter was in a musical, and had to say "I'm Limburger, one of the cheeses for Jesus" (I cannot recall why, or anything else about the production!!)
DeleteI love aged cheese. The older and sharper the better. Plus the aging removes lactose , so I can eat more of it! I miss red Leicester, it's not available here.
ReplyDeleteThat's a shame about the Red Leicester π§π
DeleteWe loved cheese and still do, but OH can't tolerate it anymore (or milk), gives him terrible stomach ache. So I now buy the smallest blocks I can find, otherwise it grows blue fur before it gets used. I did have a cheese sandwich for lunch today, he had tomato soup. Xx
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