When it comes to cheese, the French get all the glory. Andâwhile they certainly have a rightful claim to fromage prowessâwe think that British cheese is equally intriguing. Cheesemaking (and more importantly, cheese eating), after all, isnât a zero-sum game: for our plates, the more cheese the better.
To learn a little bit more about the history of British cheese, we need look no further than Ned Palmer, a London cheesemonger worth his weight in Gouda and a member of the Cheese Graderâs Guild. Ned also happens to lead our Context London Cheese Tasting tour and is a published author (check out his recent book, A Cheesemonger's History of the British Isles). We recently had a chat with Ned to understand how it is that British cheese became what it is today: here are his musings on the twists and turns of British cheese history:
It seems odd to suggest that cheese might be an important part of any special event, and more so to suggest that âcheese of honorâ be British. However, thereâs a history of British cheese as a royal wedding gift. This tradition dates to the wedding of Queen Victoria in 1840, when a group of farmers from Somerset combined the milk of 750 cows to make a giant Cheddar wheel weighing a barely believable 11 hundredweight. (For those of us less versed in Victorian weights and measures, that translates as 1,232 pounds, or 589 kilograms.) A normal artisanal Cheddar weighs about 48 pounds (or 24 kilos), and thatâs plenty heavy enoughâtrust me. Even Queen Victoria, famed for her hearty appetite, was reputedly unable to finish this enormous offering. In a dramatic twist, the cheese then became the subject of a protracted legal battle as to its ownership, and ultimately disappeared. For once, the phrase âeaten up in legal feesâ was literally true.
For centuries, the British have been making cheeses that are smelt around the world. Although there was a bit of a blip in UK artisanal cheese production during the Industrial Revolution and the first half of the 20th century, the 1970s marked the beginning of a British Cheese Renaissance. At the forefront of this movement was Nealâs Yard Dairy, a great British cheese shop owned by the redoubtable Randolph Hodgson. Frustrated with the bland cheeses available in supermarkets, Hodgson sought out remaining British artisan cheesemakers and reinvigorated British cheese production, often taking inspiration from continental Europe.
Thanks in large part to Hodgsonâs efforts, the global reputation of British cheese has been on a meteoric riseâso much so that some British cheeses are becoming household names. Two of the most sought after are Montgomeryâs Cheddar and Colston Basset Stilton.
The most famous of British cheese varieties is Cheddar, whose reputation took a knock with the invention of factory Cheddar in the 19th century, when it became the most widely produced cheese in the world. While the market may be dominated by the mass-produced variety, artisanal Cheddars still persist. One of my personal favorites is Keenâs, a sharp, creamy cheese made in Somerset, the home of British Cheddar; and the aforementioned Montgomeryâs, a balanced, savoury, and earthy cheese made down the road from Keenâs on Manor Farm. Both the Keen and Montgomery families have been making Cheddar for generations.
And then, of course, thereâs Stilton. If Cheddar is the king of British Cheese, then Stilton is his Queen. A creamy blue cheese, Stilton is known for its dizzying complex of flavors that can range from maltiness and savory-umami notes to a trace of good old 1970âs Hubba-Bubba bubblegum.
Less known outside Britain are a family of cheeses called âTerritorials,â which includes Lancashire, Cheshire, Red Leicester, and Caerphilly. These are a style unique to Britain: crumbly textured hard cheeses with a delicate flavor. One of my particular palate pleasers is Gorwydd Caerphilly, made by the Trethowan family in the West Country.
Other artisanal cheeses that have come into being since the British Cheese Renaissance are often referred to as âModern Britishâ. Theyâre also known among the cheese fraternity as âNew Wave Cheeses,â and thereâs no shortage of cheesemakers popping up to surf this milky wave. One of the originals is Mary Holbrook, who started making cheese on her small farm in Somerset in the 1970s. Look for Maryâs Tymsboro, an ash-covered pyramidical goat cheese with an intense peppery flavor that was originally based on Valençay from Franceâs Loire Valleyâbut has long since grown into quite its own thing.
Further east in Lincolnshire, Simon and Tim Jones make Lincolnshire Poacher, a cheese that has been described as the love-child of Cheddar and Gruyere. The Jones brothers were taught by one of the legends of British cheese history, the late Douglas Campbell, who learned his craft in Switzerland.
Among the most contentious in the history of British cheese is Joe Schneiderâs Stichelton. Hereâs the controversy: itâs currently illegal to make raw milk cheese and call it Stilton, as the official product definition (or PDO) specifies that the milk must be pasteurized. Consequently, when Joe wanted to make a (deep breath!) raw milk Stilton-style blue cheese, he had to come up with another name. And Sticheltonâa 12th-century spelling of Stilton, a village in the Midlandsâcame to mind. Not to reopen our ancestral wounds but Joe is, by the way, American ⊠so Iâll just leave you to imagine how much fun this particular repartee has been to observe.
If you still have roomâand who doesnât have room for more cheeseâwander on over to read about a few of my favorite British cheese and wine pairings.
Ned Palmer is a cheesemonger and member of the Cheese Graderâs Guild, jazz musician, and philosopher, in that order. Ned began his career in cheese on the Gorwydd Caerphilly stall at Borough Market before going to work for Nealâs Yard Dairy. He set up The Cheese Tasting Company in 2014, you can be sure to find him hosting cheese-related events all over London.
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