rarebit cheese
2018-11-24 21:08When I was a lad, one meal my parents made occasionally was Welsh rarebit, or 'rabbit', which I loved. Cheddar cheese melted with beer and mustard, poured over bread. I felt there was never enough cheese, nor had often enough.
As an adult, I haven't chased it too hard, and I never have beer in the house, though I have tried melted cheddar + mustard a few times. Still, I do like the flavor. Some years ago Trader Joe's had a month's special cheese that was "English ale cheddar with mustard", or so I have recorded in my diary. It tasted like rarebit. Alas it never re-appeared.
But I was shopping at Roche Bros last week, and found a cheese like it... or possibly the actual cheese, given how TJ rebrands things. Kilchurn Estate mustard & ale cheddar cheese. Tastes like I remember. No surviving price tag, so I can't tell you what it cost, but I'm charmed to know that I can have it again and again.
As an adult, I haven't chased it too hard, and I never have beer in the house, though I have tried melted cheddar + mustard a few times. Still, I do like the flavor. Some years ago Trader Joe's had a month's special cheese that was "English ale cheddar with mustard", or so I have recorded in my diary. It tasted like rarebit. Alas it never re-appeared.
But I was shopping at Roche Bros last week, and found a cheese like it... or possibly the actual cheese, given how TJ rebrands things. Kilchurn Estate mustard & ale cheddar cheese. Tastes like I remember. No surviving price tag, so I can't tell you what it cost, but I'm charmed to know that I can have it again and again.
So, when whole wheat bread goes moldy faster than other bread, I assume it's because such bread is more nutritious, having the germ and not being all starch.
TJ's NZ grass-fed cheddar cheese seems to go moldy faster than other cheddar cheese, and I'm not sure what to make of that. It should be healthier for *me*, because of the fat profile, but I don't expect yeast to care. Maybe it's moister? But I don't know why it would be.
To be fair, I don't know for sure that it does, it just seems that way. I guess I could buy two different cheddars at the same time and check.
TJ's NZ grass-fed cheddar cheese seems to go moldy faster than other cheddar cheese, and I'm not sure what to make of that. It should be healthier for *me*, because of the fat profile, but I don't expect yeast to care. Maybe it's moister? But I don't know why it would be.
To be fair, I don't know for sure that it does, it just seems that way. I guess I could buy two different cheddars at the same time and check.
So, at Friday Gamer's Guild, in the bathroom I was looking at an IDS (student paper) lying around, and for once actually looked at the Kroger ad insert. Not much there for me... but the Silverbrite wild-caught salmon fillets for $3.99 caught my eye. Absurd price for wild Alaskan salmon... and in fact, it actually only says "wild caught in USA", so who knows. But I didn't notice that, I just thought "cheap good salmon!" I've also been looking for more cambozola, and had been told Eastside Kroger might have it, and my downtown Kroger sure didn't and while i haven't checked its fish selection it's kind of meager in the meat department, so Monday I tried biking to Eastside. (Was also looking at flashlights and cell phones in the mall.) Kroger had the salmon, of which I bought the last two packets, and the cambozola, and also blue brie.
Then, as I was arranging my shopping bags so they'd fit in my anorexic bike baskets, lyceum and her bf M walked in, so I hailed them. Told them about my haul, including the salmon, which they expressed interest in, but alas I'd taken it all. "Maybe I could have you over," I said, inspired partly by the discovery at checkout that the last two packets had actually been the last *three* packets, so I had like 6 on-sale not-frozen fillets to eat.
After eating a package myself, I did have them over tonight. With three fillets (one package just had a single large fillet) I decided to try three different cooking methods: pan-fried, like my first two, broiled if they'd bring over-safe equipment over, and microwave because I know that sometimes works, and we could sample them all. Also rice with garlic and shallots as a starch.
End result: eh. Pan-fried was definitely the best, probably helped by pan seasoning of rosemary powder, black pepper, and the accumulated contents of a cast iron pan that's been cooking Kobe beef and burning salmon recently. I'm not sure about the broiled salmon; I gave them the good cuts, and the last thick third looked undercooked so I put it back in, and it jumped to being overcooked. The microwave fillet had a common problem of the edges cooking very quickly, while the center remains raw; eggs have had this problem too. I think the rotary table in the microwave needs epicycles, to get the center out of being the center. Final results were decent pan-fried, ok others, helped with lemon and salt.
Plus, you known, on-sale non-frozen salmon of unknown provenance a couple days after purchase. It was smelling a bit fishy to start with... not going bad fishy, just fishier than salmon usually does IME, if that makes any sense. Broiling was improvised: in a deep pyrex dish they brought, with tin foil. And a lot of the microwave recipes out there call for marinating first, which I didn't have time for.
As for the rice, it's nice if you get some of the garlic with it, but I didn't really plan ahead and really should have sauced it. Olive oil and balsamic vinegar -- yes, basic salad dressing -- works well IMO. (I discovered this long ago by using rice as a bed for salad, or pouring post-salad dressing on rice.)
If done again I'd probably just pan-fry everything, and put sauce on the rice.
Live and learn. Highlight turned out to be getting M to try the cheeses, and while I've been thinking the cambozola wasn't quite up to its predecessor and liking the blue brie, he actually liked the cambozola more (and at all), despite initial misgiving, finding it a better blend of the cheese species. The blue brie is visually very much brie with thick blue veins; the cambozola... also has deep veins, but also a lighter blue tinge in the rest of the cheese. Plus, it's camembert, hence has a stronger base.
Other highlights were showing off my new LED flashlight, which puts my old incandescent to shame. I wondered if it was new batteries vs. dying rechargables (freshy charged, but old batteries) -- nope, swapped the batteries, still an amazing difference. I'd just bought it, so had to show that off. And in trying to convince lyceum to build up her biking stamina I went to weigh my bike again... 37 pounds. 39 last time I tried, well, it's a crappy scale. Also I weigh 18 pounds more than last time, a year ago. :(
I'd been wondering where I first got cambozola, finally thought to check my log. Nothing there... despite telling both gale and LJ about it, I didn't journal it! Weird. Fortunately I did LJ it so I can say: Bloomingfood's. Just don't stock it often, I guess.
Then, as I was arranging my shopping bags so they'd fit in my anorexic bike baskets, lyceum and her bf M walked in, so I hailed them. Told them about my haul, including the salmon, which they expressed interest in, but alas I'd taken it all. "Maybe I could have you over," I said, inspired partly by the discovery at checkout that the last two packets had actually been the last *three* packets, so I had like 6 on-sale not-frozen fillets to eat.
After eating a package myself, I did have them over tonight. With three fillets (one package just had a single large fillet) I decided to try three different cooking methods: pan-fried, like my first two, broiled if they'd bring over-safe equipment over, and microwave because I know that sometimes works, and we could sample them all. Also rice with garlic and shallots as a starch.
End result: eh. Pan-fried was definitely the best, probably helped by pan seasoning of rosemary powder, black pepper, and the accumulated contents of a cast iron pan that's been cooking Kobe beef and burning salmon recently. I'm not sure about the broiled salmon; I gave them the good cuts, and the last thick third looked undercooked so I put it back in, and it jumped to being overcooked. The microwave fillet had a common problem of the edges cooking very quickly, while the center remains raw; eggs have had this problem too. I think the rotary table in the microwave needs epicycles, to get the center out of being the center. Final results were decent pan-fried, ok others, helped with lemon and salt.
Plus, you known, on-sale non-frozen salmon of unknown provenance a couple days after purchase. It was smelling a bit fishy to start with... not going bad fishy, just fishier than salmon usually does IME, if that makes any sense. Broiling was improvised: in a deep pyrex dish they brought, with tin foil. And a lot of the microwave recipes out there call for marinating first, which I didn't have time for.
As for the rice, it's nice if you get some of the garlic with it, but I didn't really plan ahead and really should have sauced it. Olive oil and balsamic vinegar -- yes, basic salad dressing -- works well IMO. (I discovered this long ago by using rice as a bed for salad, or pouring post-salad dressing on rice.)
If done again I'd probably just pan-fry everything, and put sauce on the rice.
Live and learn. Highlight turned out to be getting M to try the cheeses, and while I've been thinking the cambozola wasn't quite up to its predecessor and liking the blue brie, he actually liked the cambozola more (and at all), despite initial misgiving, finding it a better blend of the cheese species. The blue brie is visually very much brie with thick blue veins; the cambozola... also has deep veins, but also a lighter blue tinge in the rest of the cheese. Plus, it's camembert, hence has a stronger base.
Other highlights were showing off my new LED flashlight, which puts my old incandescent to shame. I wondered if it was new batteries vs. dying rechargables (freshy charged, but old batteries) -- nope, swapped the batteries, still an amazing difference. I'd just bought it, so had to show that off. And in trying to convince lyceum to build up her biking stamina I went to weigh my bike again... 37 pounds. 39 last time I tried, well, it's a crappy scale. Also I weigh 18 pounds more than last time, a year ago. :(
I'd been wondering where I first got cambozola, finally thought to check my log. Nothing there... despite telling both gale and LJ about it, I didn't journal it! Weird. Fortunately I did LJ it so I can say: Bloomingfood's. Just don't stock it often, I guess.
Cheese flavor notes
2010-01-07 02:28Followup of my last post
Camembert: very smooth and creamy, almost buttery, with just a hint of tang
Cambozola: much stronger, with the distinct blue flavor on top of the Brie/Camembert creaminess
Petit Munster: *smells* strong, with its washed rind, but the inner cheese isn't much stronger than the Camembert, maybe a bit more sour. The rind itself is stronger, but not as strong as its smell, or as strong as the Cambozola I think.
Red Hawk: rind smells rather horrible, really, but flavors seems similar to the Munster.
FWIW, the Camembert is fairly cheap cheese from Kroger (low-end supermarket), the others are varyingly expensive cheeses from the co-op. Are they worth the price? Cambozola probably his, Red Hawk sure as hell isn't.
There are web pages about the difference between Brie and Camembert. Apparently they're made almost exactly the same way. In France, they come from different regions, so there's difference in the grass and milk. The other main difference is that Camembert wheels are smaller, so they ripen faster. Camembert thus tends to be stronger, which I think is part of why I preferred it back in Trader Joe's days -- more flavorful and softer, both signs of the ripeness.
Camembert: very smooth and creamy, almost buttery, with just a hint of tang
Cambozola: much stronger, with the distinct blue flavor on top of the Brie/Camembert creaminess
Petit Munster: *smells* strong, with its washed rind, but the inner cheese isn't much stronger than the Camembert, maybe a bit more sour. The rind itself is stronger, but not as strong as its smell, or as strong as the Cambozola I think.
Red Hawk: rind smells rather horrible, really, but flavors seems similar to the Munster.
FWIW, the Camembert is fairly cheap cheese from Kroger (low-end supermarket), the others are varyingly expensive cheeses from the co-op. Are they worth the price? Cambozola probably his, Red Hawk sure as hell isn't.
There are web pages about the difference between Brie and Camembert. Apparently they're made almost exactly the same way. In France, they come from different regions, so there's difference in the grass and milk. The other main difference is that Camembert wheels are smaller, so they ripen faster. Camembert thus tends to be stronger, which I think is part of why I preferred it back in Trader Joe's days -- more flavorful and softer, both signs of the ripeness.
Just went on a shopping spree at Bloomingfood's.
What's better than a soft cheese like Brie or Camember, or a blue cheese? One that combines them: Cambozola, a soft-ripened cheese with blue veins.
Actually whether it's better could be debated; the blueness is a lot milder than full blue cheeses. OTOH, it's spreadable, not crumbly.
Also picked up was a petit munster, which seems decent, and a very expensive Red Hawk brine-washed-rind cheese, which stinks quite a lot (at least up close) but seems mild in flavor. Though all the cheeses are still cool.
Links:
* Comparison of the House and Senate health bills (PDF, despite the URL)
* CIA helping with climate monitoring
* Average faces beautiful
* Full-body scanners run afoul of child porn laws
* (from shiver) American Law Institute abandons support for the death penalty; they'd been the main legal arguer in the US.
* More on the Big Zero decade in the US
* Pakistanis may like our drones? I don't know if I should jokingly compare to Culture drones or Berserker goodlife.
* Is Indonesia's democracy shallow?
* Nate Silver's harrowing flight home, and more terror statistics.
What's better than a soft cheese like Brie or Camember, or a blue cheese? One that combines them: Cambozola, a soft-ripened cheese with blue veins.
Actually whether it's better could be debated; the blueness is a lot milder than full blue cheeses. OTOH, it's spreadable, not crumbly.
Also picked up was a petit munster, which seems decent, and a very expensive Red Hawk brine-washed-rind cheese, which stinks quite a lot (at least up close) but seems mild in flavor. Though all the cheeses are still cool.
Links:
* Comparison of the House and Senate health bills (PDF, despite the URL)
* CIA helping with climate monitoring
* Average faces beautiful
* Full-body scanners run afoul of child porn laws
* (from shiver) American Law Institute abandons support for the death penalty; they'd been the main legal arguer in the US.
* More on the Big Zero decade in the US
* Pakistanis may like our drones? I don't know if I should jokingly compare to Culture drones or Berserker goodlife.
* Is Indonesia's democracy shallow?
* Nate Silver's harrowing flight home, and more terror statistics.