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  2. List of cheeses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cheeses

    A mix of blue cheese and brie, creamy, blue-veined cheese with a white-mould rind. Saga is a very mild blue-veined cheese. It comes with a delicate blue mold, that may not appear in other varieties of blue cheeses. It is aged for more than 60 days. Samsø cheese: Samsø: A cow's milk cheese named after the island of Samsø. It is similar to ...

  3. Neufchâtel cheese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neufchâtel_cheese

    Neufchâtel (French: [nøʃɑtɛl] ⓘ, [nœfʃɑtɛl]; Norman: Neu(f)câtel) is a soft, slightly crumbly, mold-ripened, bloomy-rind cheese made in the Neufchâtel-en-Bray region of Normandy. One of the oldest kinds of cheese in France, its production is believed to date back as far as the 6th century AD, in the Kingdom of the Franks.

  4. Manchego - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manchego

    Traditionally, manchego cheese was made by pressing the curd in plaited esparto grass baskets, which left a distinctive zig-zag pattern (known as pleita) on the rind. [1] Today, the same effect is achieved by the mould, the inside of which has a design in relief that imparts to the finished cheese an embossed pattern similar to that of woven ...

  5. How to Eat Brie Cheese, According to Experts (Including if ...

    www.aol.com/eat-brie-cheese-according-experts...

    The cheese is aged and flipped every day for 2 to 4 weeks to allow it to develop a rind. As this process takes place, the Brie drains slowly and shrinks in height.

  6. Edam cheese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edam_cheese

    Edam (Dutch: Edammer [eːˈdɑmər] ⓘ) is a semi-hard cheese that originated in the Netherlands, and is named after the town of Edam in the province of North Holland. [2] Edam is traditionally sold in flat-ended spheres with a pale yellow interior and a coat, or rind, of red paraffin wax. Edam ages and travels well and hardens, instead of ...

  7. Saint-Paulin cheese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint-Paulin_cheese

    Saint Paulin is a creamy, mild, semi-soft French cheese made from pasteurized cow's milk, originally made by Trappist monks at Saint Paulin. [1] [2] It is a buttery cheese, but firm enough for slicing. Saint Paulin is similar to Havarti and Esrom, and is suited to serving as a table or dessert cheese; it is often served with fruit and light ...

  8. List of British cheeses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British_cheeses

    The cheese is often eaten with oatcakes, and recommended before a ceilidh as it is said to alleviate the effects of whisky-drinking. The texture is soft and crumbly, the taste slightly sour. Fine Fettle Yorkshire – formerly named Yorkshire Feta; a sheep's milk cheese. Oxford Isis – full fat soft cheese with honey-mead washed rind. [29]

  9. Bloomy rind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloomy_rind

    A bloomy rind is a cheese rind that is soft and fluffy and white in color. Cheese that uses Penicillium camemberti is prone to developing bloomy rind. Bloomy rind cheese can be described as having "mild and lactic" flavors that may resemble onion or mushroom. [1] They are described as being "ripened from the outside", and usually have creamy ...