Showing posts with label Chaource. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chaource. Show all posts

October 15, 2009

La Fête du Fromage - October Round Up

Les fromages français!
Every single entry for October's La Fête du Fromage International Cheese Tasting Event was from la belle France. Can you imagine how happy this made me?


Barbra from Serve it Forth shared her newest addiction with us - Pérail - a luscious, silky textured ewe's milk cheese. She describes it as ..."not overly sheepy but neither is it sheepish; slightly floral and and a little grassy..." Glad to know I'm not the only Pérail addict out there!


She also tasted Le 1909, a more aggressive "Pérail like" cheese produced for the Maître Fromager Affineur in Paris, Androuet. Yet another cheese to add to my "Must Try" list.


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Nathalie of Spaced Out Ramblings carried this scrumptious little drum of Chaource with her from Paris to her home in Rome. With a fat content of almost 50%, Chaource is very rich and creamy! It comes from the Champagne region, so many say that is should be enjoyed with a glass of Champagne, but Nathalie gives plenty of other delicious accompanying food and drink options. As she says, "The sky has no limit."


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Good things come in small packages. Like this enticing walnut and cranberry studded Brie en Croûte that Cool Lassi(e) of Pan Gravy Kadai Curry made for La Fête. That Brie oozing out from the puff pastry shell is absolutely mouthwatering!


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Camille missed the chance to taste the local cheeses while visiting Burgundy, but made up for it with some Délice de Bourgogne that she found in Paris. Although she found this particular piece a bit young, she describes it as buttery and very smooth. I can't wait to try this one!


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Deep in the Ariège, on farms surrounded by green pastures, rugged mountains and crystal clear lakes, the age old tradition of cheese making thrives.
Le Bamalou
is an unpasteurized cow's milk cheese that is matured for several months on wood planks, enriching the cheese with earthy flavors. It is mild, buttery and has nice hints of fruit. Very likable!
A rich red wine such as Cahors or Châteauneuf-du-Pape would be a good match.

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Thanks for sharing such delicious cheese everyone!


November marks the 11th Fête du Fromage International Cheese Tasting Event.
If you would like to join in, and I hope you do, please have your entries to me by November 13. The entire round-up will be posted on November 15.

Tell us why you chose this particular cheese. Tell us how it tasted. Tell us about its texture and aroma. Did you eat it on its own? Or with something? Did you drink anything special with your cheese? Would you recommend it or not? Is there something unusual or interesting about it?
  • Photos are wonderful, but not necessary
  • Entries must contain the words La Fête du Fromage and contain a link to Chez Loulou
  • Posts should be written specifically for La Fête du Fromage and not entered in any other food blog event
  • Please send the link to your post to louloufrance (at) gmail (dot) com with the words Fête du Fromage in the subject line
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December 28, 2007

Photo du Jour - Fromage


A beautiful, perfectly ripe Chaource that we enjoyed on Christmas. Pin It

July 10, 2007

La Fête du Fromage - Rocamadour and Chaource

Rocamadour and Chaource

Well, I finally made a list of all the cheeses we've tasted and this week's are numbers 29 and 30.
Only 30! Seems like we've tried a lot more than that.

A mere 335 more to taste.

Presenting Rocamadour and Chaource.

The minute you unwrap the little discs of Rocamadour, their lovely, hazelnutty aroma fills the room.

Made from unpasteurized goat's milk and recognized as one of France's AOC cheeses since 1996, these little babies are tasty and fabulous! Rocamadour cheese comes from the stunning, vertical, cliff-hugging town of Rocamadour in the Quercy region of the Lot Département.
It is the oldest cheese from this area - there is even documentation from the 15th Century of it's use as legal tender!
It has a very soft, slightly crumbly interior that melts on your tongue and its taste is mild and nutty. A perfect cheese to toast on bread and add to a salad or to spread on rye bread and drink with a hearty red wine, such as a Cahors.

Rocamadour and Chaource

Produced since the Middle Ages, Chaource takes it's name from a village in the famous Champagne region. Made from unpasteurized cow's milk and a recognized AOC cheese since 1970, Chaource can be enjoyed young, when it's flavor is light and the texture is firm and smooth, or aged, when the interior becomes runny around the edges and the flavor intensifies. 
The one we tasted was aged a bit. Its flavor was buttery, tangy and nutty with light mushroom and cream aromas. It reminded us of Camembert or a triple cream cheese from northern France.
I recommend this one highly.
Enjoy with fruit and some Champagne, of course!

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