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Milbenkäse – a specialty cheese made from quark and produced using the action of cheese mites. Historically, the cheese was produced in the Saxony-Anhalt/Thuringia border region of Zeitz and Altenburg districts; today it is produced exclusively in the village of Würchwitz, in the state of Saxony-Anhalt. Mites clinging to the cheese rind are ...
Milbenkäse ("mite cheese"), called Mellnkase in the local dialect and often known as Spinnenkäse ("spider cheese"), is a German speciality cheese.It is made by flavouring balls of quark (a type of soft cheese) with caraway and salt, allowing them to dry, and then leaving them in a wooden box containing rye flour and cheese mites for about three months.
Raclette du Valais (French pronunciation: [ʁaklɛt dy valɛ]) or Walliser Raclette (German) is a semi-hard cheese that is usually fashioned into a wheel of about 6 kg (13 lb). [1] The Alpine cow milk based dairy product is most commonly used for melting for the dish called raclette , but is also consumed as is.
The best cheeses for melting are those with "more moisture and lower melting points," according to the folks at Cabot Creamery, a Vermont-based cheese company. And though most cheese will get ...
The cheese, produced by the tiny 10-employee Quinta do Pomar in Soalheira, Portugal, scored highest out of 14 finalists that included no fewer than five Swiss cheeses, plus entries from Brazil ...
The annual awards — hosted in a different country each year — named the Tillamook County Creamery Association the maker of the “Best Cheddar in the World” for the 115-year-old farmer-owned ...
The cheese has been sold since 1983 [1] and is still produced by Champignon. In English-speaking countries, Cambozola is often marketed as blue brie . It is made from a combination of Penicillium camemberti and the same blue Penicillium roqueforti mould used to make Gorgonzola , Roquefort , and Stilton .
Once one of Banbury's most prestigious exports, and nationally famous, its production went into decline by the 18th-century, and eventually ceased. The cheese is best known today through an insult in Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor (1597). [97] Pictured is a 15th/16th-century recipe for Banbury cheese. Cheddar cheese: Cheddar, Somerset