Cheddar cheese

Cheddar
Somerset-Cheddar.jpg
Country of origin England
Region Somerset
Town Cheddar
Source of milk Cows
Pasteurised Frequently
Texture hard/semi-hard
Aging time 3–60 months depending on variety
Certification West Country farmhouse Cheddar

Cheddar cheese is a relatively hard, pale yellow to off-white, and sometimes sharp-tasting cheese originating in the English village of Cheddar, in Somerset. [1] Cheddar cheese is the most popular cheese in the United Kingdom, accounting for 51% of the country's £1.9 billion annual cheese market.[2]

Cheddar cheese has been copied widely, both in the United Kingdom and in other countries, including Ireland, the USA, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Canada. In all of these 'Cheddar' cheese, in many forms, is readily available, ranging from mild lower-fat cheeses to the more mature higher-fat and sharper cheeses.

Contents

History

Cheddar cheese has been made since at least 1170. A pipe roll of King Henry II from that year records the purchase of 10,420 lb at a farthing per pound (£3 per tonne).[3]

Central to the modernisation and standardisation of Cheddar cheese was Joseph Harding in the nineteenth century.[4] For his development and propagation of modern cheese-making techniques he has been described as the father of Cheddar cheese.[5] Harding is credited by some websites as the inventor of the Cheese Mill[4]: whether or not this is true, Joseph Harding was responsible for the introduction of modernising cheddar production along a scientific approach. He was responsible for the introduction of this very English cheese into Scotland and North America. Joseph Harding's son, Henry Harding, was responsible for introducing Cheddar cheese production to Australia.[6]

Production

Process

Main article: Manufacturing of Cheddar Cheese

Cheddaring refers to an additional step in the production of Cheddar-style cheese where, after heating, the curd is kneaded with salt, then is cut into cubes to drain the whey, then stacked and turned.[7] Strong, extra-mature Cheddar, sometimes called vintage, needs to be matured for up to 15 months. The cheese is kept at a constant temperature often requiring special facilities. As with cheese production in other European countries, caves provide an ideal environment for maturing cheese; still, today, some Cheddar cheese produced in the UK is matured in the caves at Wookey Hole and the caves in Cheddar Gorge.[8]

The curds and whey are separated using rennet, an enzyme complex normally produced from the stomachs of new-born calves. In vegetarian Cheddar, equivalent enzymes are derived from non-animal sources.[9][7]

International production and taste

Cheddar cheese is produced in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, United States, South Africa, New Zealand, Australia (where it is usually called tasty cheese), Sweden, Belgium, and the Netherlands. Much of this cheese is mass-produced and quality varies enormously. The strong flavour develops over time, with a taste diverse enough that food packaging will usually indicate a strength using adjectives such as mild, medium, strong, tasty, sharp, mature, old, or vintage, and may also indicate the maturation period.

Status

Various cheeses

The name 'Cheddar cheese' has become widely used internationally, and does not currently have a protected designation of origin (PDO). However, the European Union recognises West Country Farmhouse Cheddar as a PDO.[10] To meet this standard the cheese must be made in the traditional manner using local ingredients in one of the four designated counties of South West England: Somerset, Devon, Dorset, or Cornwall.

The Slow Food Movement, encouraged and advised by Neal's Yard Dairy, has recently created a Cheddar Presidia, claiming that only three cheeses should be called 'Cheddar'. Their specifications, which go well beyond the West Country Farmhouse Cheddar PDO, require that Cheddar cheese be made in Somerset, and with traditional methods, such as using raw milk, traditional animal rennet, and a cloth wrapping.[11]

Character

Cheddar, such as the PDO West Country Farmhouse Cheddar, made in the classical way, tends to have a sharp, pungent flavour, often slightly earthy. Its texture is firm, with farmhouse traditional cheddar being slightly crumbly. Real Cheddar is never 'soapy', in texture or mouth-feel.

Cheddar is usually a pale yellow (off-white) natural colour, but food colourings are sometimes used. In parts of the United States and Canada, annatto, extracted from the tropical achiote tree, is used to give some Cheddar cheeses a deep orange colour. The largest producer of these cheeses in the United States, Kraft, uses a combination of annatto and oleoresin paprika, an oil made from paprika.[12]

According to David Feldman, an author of trivia books, "The only reason why cheesemakers color their product is because consumers seem to prefer it." Some parts of the eastern United States are said to prefer white cheddar, while other areas in the United States are offered coloured cheeses.[12]

Cheddar cheese was sometimes packaged in black wax, but was more commonly packaged in larded cloth, impermeable to contaminants but still allowing the cheese to breathe, although this practice is now limited to Europe and to artisan cheese makers. In the United States, Cheddar cheese comes in several varieties, including mild, medium, sharp, extra sharp, New York Style, Colby/Longhorn, white, and Vermont. New York style Cheddar cheese is a particularly sharp Cheddar cheese, sometimes with a hint of smoke. It is usually slightly softer than milder Cheddar cheese. Colby/Longhorn Cheddar cheese has a mild to medium flavour. The curds are still distinct, often marbled in colour, varying from cream to yellow. Cheddar that has not been coloured is frequently labelled as "white Cheddar" or "Vermont Cheddar", regardless of whether it was produced in the state of Vermont. Vermont Cheddar is the nearest of any North American cheese to authentic English Cheddar.

A bowl of cheese curds

Cheddar cheese is one of several products used by the United States Department of Agriculture to track the dairy industry; reports are issued weekly detailing prices and production quantities. The state of Wisconsin produces the most Cheddar cheese in the United States; other centres of production include upstate New York, Vermont, and Tillamook, Oregon.

Cheddar cheese is a good source of vitamin B12. A slice of vegetarian Cheddar cheese (40 g) contains about 0.5 µg of vitamin B12 (required daily intake for an adult is 2.4 µg).

Famous Cheddar cheeses from Somerset include Keen's, with a strong tang, and Montgomery's, with an apple after taste and the unpasteurised Cheddar made by the Gorge Cheese Company in Cheddar itself.

Record sized Cheddar cheeses

White House historians assert that U.S. president Andrew Jackson held an open house party where a 1,400 lb (635 kg) block of Cheddar cheese was served as refreshment;[13] this block of cheese would later serve as direct inspiration for two episodes of the Emmy-award winning television series The West Wing.

A cheese of 7,000 lb (3,175 kg) was produced in Ingersoll, Ontario, in 1866 and exhibited in New York and Britain; it was immortalised in the poem "Ode on the Mammoth Cheese Weighing over 7,000 Pounds" by James McIntyre, a Canadian poet.

In 1893 farmers from the town of Perth, Ontario produced The Mammoth Cheese, at a weight of 22,000 lb (10,000 kg) for that year's Chicago World's Fair. When placed on exhibit with the Canadian display, The Mammoth Cheese promptly crashed through the floor and had to be placed on reinforced concrete in the Agricultural Building. It was more written about than any other single exhibit at the fair, and received the bronze medal.

A still larger Wisconsin Cheddar cheese of 34,951 lb (15,853 kg) was produced for the 1964 New York World's Fair. It required the equivalent of the daily milk production of 16,000 cows.

See also

References

  1. "Separating the curds from the whey". BBC Radio 4 Open Country (21 August 2006). Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
  2. "The Interview - Lactalis McLelland's 'Seriously': driving the Cheddar market". The Grocery Trader. Retrieved on 2007-05-09.
  3. "History". Cheddar Gorge Cheese Company. Retrieved on 2007-05-09.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "History of Cheddar Cheese". Icons of England. Retrieved on 2007-05-09.
  5. Heeley, Anne; Mary Vidal (1996). Joseph Harding, Cheddar Cheese-Maker. Glastonbury: Friends of the Abbey Barn. 
  6. From Artisans to “Factories”: The Interpenetration of Craft and Industry in English Cheese-Making 1650–1950, by Richard Blundel and Angela Tregear, Enterprise and Society, October 17th 2006
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Savvy shopper: Cheddar". The Daily Telegraph (18 June 2005). Retrieved on 2008-03-10.
  8. "Maturing deep underground". Cheddar Valley Gazette (31 May 2007). Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
  9. "Information Sheet - Cheese & Rennet". Vegetarian Society. Retrieved on 2008-03-10.
  10. "EU Protected Food Names Scheme - UK registered names". defra. Retrieved on 2008-08-22.
  11. "Presidia Artisan Somerset Cheddar". The Slow Food Foundation. Retrieved on 2007-05-09.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Feldman, David (1989). When Do Fish Sleep? And Other Imponderables of Everyday Life. Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc.. pp. 15. ISBN 0-06-016161-2. 
  13. "Andrew Jackson". The Presidents of the United States of America. The White House. Retrieved on 2008-10-24.

External links