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Showing posts with label truffles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label truffles. Show all posts

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Sottocenere

Scttocenere is made in the Veneto region of Italy. This is a beautiful area consisting of contrasting geography with mountains, valleys, coast lines, pastures and vineyards. Venice is the largest city in the region, and there are close to five million people living in the approximately five-square-mile expanse. This northeastern part of Italy is home to many cheeses, the most famous being Asiago.


The Veneto region in Italy.

Move over Asiago, because this region is also home to the notable Sottocenere. Made with traditional rennet, Sottocenere is one of the few raw milk cheeses from Italy that's not associated primarily with cooking. In other words, it's a cheese that can be and often is eaten as a snacking cheese or as is, not grated on pasta dishes, though the truffle flavor lends itself well to cooking too. Some Sottoceneres are made with pasteurized milk, but if you can find the raw milk versions, grab one, because they tend to have a more pronounced flavor.

This cheese is wonderfully pungent. It even smells pungent, but it's not like traditional stinky cheeses. The aroma is more subtle. It's slightly musky, but pleasant, like the very light sweat of a significant other. This might seem like a strange comparison, but keep in mind that truffles are found by pigs (or dogs that don't get quite as excited) sensing the musk-like odor of the fungi, which contain the same chemical found in the testes of male pigs courting sows. It's a sex thing. It turns out that this chemical is also found in humans and secreted by their sweat glands. What's apparent when you first expose the cheese to air is that the truffle odor escapes before the bouquet of the cheese can be detected, and it's a breathtaking moment. The aroma of the cheese itself is extremely faint in comparison.


Truffle hog.

With a goat cheese and truffle combination such as Truffle Tremor by Cypress Grove, the flavor of both the cheese and the truffles are potent, and that makes for a memorable, bold cheese. The two flavors play off of and, at times, compete with each other, but overall they are still well matched and balanced. With Sottocenere, on the other hand, the flavor of the cow's milk cheese is mild, so it easily and simply allows the slices of truffles throughout to be showcased. It is all about the truffles here. The flavor of the cheese is nearly lost. It's hard to describe, but the cheese becomes intriguing, almost addictive in its subtlety.

Slices of truffles are visible in Sottocenere.

It's interesting how the flavor of the cheese develops and changes as you chew it. Just a hint of sweetness can be detected, most likely from the coat of nutmeg, coriander, cinnamon, licorice, cloves and fennel on the ash rind. Though the interior is only very slightly spicy, the spices on the rind do enhance the flavor of the cheese. By the way, I wouldn't suggest eating the rind unless you are on the adventurous side. I happen to be, but this was a little on the bitter side to my taste. Plus, the texture is somewhat sandy, flaky and chewy which is in sharp contrast to the velvety smooth, somewhat sticky but firm interior. The texture of the rind isn't so much the issue; it's more that the intense flavor that's a lot like dirt detracts from the cheese.

By far the most prominent flavor of the fromaggio is the wonderful earthiness that emerges from the first bite and lingers long after the last swallow. It's tangy but not overly so. With goat cheeses, the sharp tang is prominent, but here there's just a hint of it. This little gem will go well with anything you can imagine from egg dishes and cooked pasta dishes to salads and gourmet sandwiches. As with most intriguing cheeses, I like it plain on a toasted baguette, so the subtle flavors can emerge. However, I could see that this cheese in a traditional Italian pasta dish or even in an upgraded mac and cheese would be phenomenal.

Sottocenere isn't dry like cheddar or aged goat cheeses or exceptionally strong, so medium-bodied wines or other wines from the Veneto area that won't overpower it make for good pairings.



Giuseppe Rinaldi Langhe Nebbiolo 2008
Nobbiolo wines pair well with this cheese

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Truffle Tremor® Review

In the rural county of Humboldt that sits just above San Francisco, California, cheese maker Mary Keehn runs Cypress Grove Chevere, an award-winning goat cheese company. Known primarily for its famous Humboldt Fog goat cheese, the company produces many other outstanding fresh and aged artisanal cheeses.
Humboldt County, California

From the Cypress Grove website:
Cypress Grove goat

The seeds of Cypress Grove Chevre were sown in the 1970s when Mary Keehn, a single mother of four daughters living in Humboldt County, began looking for a healthy source of milk for her family. As luck would have it, a neighbor had goats. When asked by Mary if she was interested in selling them, she told her, "Honey, if you can catch them, you can have them." Armed only with her resolve and a coffee can full of oats, Mary captured two does, and in doing so launched a unique place in American food history. Possessing a background in biology, Mary's interest turned to breeding her goats. Within a few years, the size of the herd had increased significantly and she found herself with excess goat milk. She started experimenting with cheese making in her kitchen and with a small customer-base already growing, she officially launched Cypress Grove Chevre in 1983. 
Truffle Tremor
Truffle Tremor is a ripened goat cheese loaded with black truffles flaked throughout the pristine white interior that's covered by a beautiful bloomy rind. Welcome to the Cadillac of goat cheeses. 

When you buy this cheese, it makes you feel like you are pampering yourself. It's a grand extravagance, and this cheese takes gourmet to a whole new level. Flaky goat cheese with black Italian truffles... what more could anyone ask for in a little gastronomic splurge?

This is one of the most addicting and intriguing cheeses on the planet. One bite will rock your world. Take the best goat cheese you can imagine, elevate ten fold, and you have Truffle Tremor.

Just under the white, fuzzy rind is a lovely gooey creamline that gets stronger in flavor as the cheese ages. Truffle Tremor has Brie-like qualities, but it's recognizable as a goat cheese. Biting into the soft, fluffy, cakey core, you will experience all the distinctive tang, sharp and slightly sour notes of most goat cheeses, but you will find that the truffles intensify and deepen the overall mushroomy flavor of the chewy, earthy rind. The texture ranges from dry to creamy, and the flavor evolves on your palate and leaves you with a lingering tangy aftertaste.


Pinot Noir


Truffle Tremor goat cheese is aged one month and made of pasteurized goat milk. It pairs well with a Pinot Noir or, when aged longer, a port wine. 



I was so excited about sampling this cheese that I forgot to take a picture and only remembered when there was one little bite left.

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What's the most intriguing goat cheese you have tried?