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Featuring Simple Cheese Ball Recipes

Cheese Articles

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simple cheese ball recipes


moldy cheese
Buffalo's milk has been used to make a certain kind of mozzarella. The Spanish wine goes well with Zamarono. In French Brie, it grows naturally on the cheese in the cellar. In 1851 a dairy farmer named Jesse Williams created an assembly line for making cheese on his farm in Rome, New York.
One farmer says to me, "You cannot live on vegetable food solely, for it furnishes nothing to make the bones with;" and so he religiously devotes a part of his day to supplying himself with the raw material of bones; walking all the while he talks behind his oxen, which, with vegetable-made bones, jerk him and his lumbering plow along in spite of every obstacle. Henry David Thoreau

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You know it's time to diet when you push away from the table and the table moves. Quoted in The Cockle Bur

Cheese History


No one really knows how or when cheese was first created. It is widely believed that over 5,000 years ago an ancient Mesopotamia person either created or got very lucky and discovered cheese. In the beginning it probably was an accident of milk and curd separating. The curds were then preserved with salt or eaten.

But the process really began in earnest with the arrival of the Romans. As their empire spread, they borrowed the local knowledge - as they had in so many places - and added to it. Larger Roman homes had entire rooms set aside for cheesemaking, developing it to a high art.

As the empire spread throughout Europe and the British Isles, so too did cheesemaking. Homer (circa 1184 BC) makes reference to cheeses made in the caves of Greece from sheep and goat's milk. Aristotle (384-322 BC) comments on the cheese made from the milk of mares and jackasses.

France, late to the game, but unparalleled in artistic invention, now produce over 300 types of cheese. In the Middle Ages, their output was much simpler, but even then the monks were becoming a center of creation. Gorgonzola saw its first appearance around 879 AD, Roquefort in 1070 AD.

The Italians weren't far behind, producing Parmesan (a kind of hard cheese) just prior to the end of the 16th century. Not for nothing is that city of the same name known as a center of wine and cheese.

The Swiss, when they were still known as the Helvetica tribes, developed their distinctive style using propionibacter shermani bacteria. It produces carbon dioxide bubbles, which causes the holes in Swiss cheese. The Netherlands developed Gouda around the end of the 17th century as cow's milk became the preferred source of cheese.

Even by this late date cheese was still very much a small craftsman's art. But with the coming of the Industrial Revolution it wasn't just steel and rails that began to be mass produced. The first plant for producing cheese on a large scale was founded in Switzerland in 1815. The U.S. got into the act in a big way not long after.

In 1851 a dairy farmer named Jesse Williams created an assembly line for making cheese on his farm in Rome, New York. Williams brought cheesemaking firmly into the modern age. Taking milk from hundreds of nearby farms, he produced cheese in abundance.

By the 1860s rennet came into widespread use. An enzyme from calves stomaches that helps speed the transformation of the milk into curds, it wasn't long before chemists manage to synthesize it. Today, especially since the ramp up from WWII, it is used the world over to produce huge quantities that are exported everywhere.

Cheese has enjoyed a colorful history that has lasted for over 5,000 years. While it has undergone some radical changes in the cheesemaking process, many of the early techniques are still in place today. The choices and varieties are more plentiful today and they just keep getting better and better.

The grate cheese robbery (The Scotsman)
A BUSINESSMAN defrauded a supplier of 24 tonnes of cheese worth more than 42,000, a court heard yesterday.