The Ultimate Cheese Course
- Soft goat cheese
- Aged goat cheese
- Teleme
- Camembert
- Gorgonzola
- Parmigiano-Reggiano
- 1 loaf walnut bread or other dark, dense bread
- Lavender Honey drizzled over pungent Stilton or creamy Point Reyes Blue Cheese is surprisingly well-matched.
- The crumbly sweetness of biscotti with big cheeses and red wine is a wonderful flavor combination.
- Serve candied almonds or other candied nuts for an accompaniment with a sweet, salty crunch.
- The most elegant thing you can serve with a cheese course is a bowl full of warm pistachios...to occupy hand and mouth while you're sitting around the table talking with friends and finishing that great bottle of red wine.
- If serving Parmigiano-Reggiano, drizzle with a couple of drops of aged balsamic vinegar to enhance the flavor.
- Set out and arrange cheeses 1 hour before serving, cheeses are best consumed at room temperature.
- Serve cheeses on a round tray or wheel, arranging clockwise from 6:00 from the sweetest to the strongest cheeses.
- Serve sweeter accompaniments, such as figs with the stronger cheeses to get some agre dolce flavor.
- Serve stronger cheeses with lemon and orange wedges to enhance the flavors.
- As a general rule, the cheeses you choose should follow the flavors and intensity of the wine.
- If you are drinking a big, intense wine, choose a big, intense cheese.
- For example, if you've chosen Petit Sirah (usually big, deep--colored and full bodied), choose a Gorgonzola, the creamy, classic Italian cow's milk blue cheese that comes in Mountain (aged) and Dolce (sweet) varieties.
- If you are serving a Sauvignon Blanc (which tends to be crisp and light - medium bodied), pair it with goat cheese, light and delightfully tart--even tangy.
- Also, the more acidic your wine is, the higher the fat content of the cheese needs to be (generally).
- A young, fresh goat cheese, goes well with Robert Mondavi Winery Fume Blanc Reserve or the Luna Pinot Grigio.
- Or try, St. Paulin (also known as Port Salut), good company for fruit and light wine.
- Buy a well-aged Brie, Camembert or Cambozola for Chardonnay.
- This wine has the acid to take the creamier, "fatty" cheeses.
- For Reggiano and Blue cheeses try my Old Vine Petit Sirah Zinfandel.
- Of course, contrasting flavors can also guide you toward great cheese course combinations, so from time to time I like to serve a crisp, fruity sparkling wine with Reggiano!
- What contrast for the mouth!
- With numerous varieties to choose from, cheese's companionship with both sweet and savory ingredients can make serving the ultimate cheese course a creative and colorful celebration every time.
- Have fun and experiment with your favorite flavors!
- Next to buying good cheese, the single most important element of serving a great cheese course is the temperature of the cheese when you serve it--room temperature!
- Set the cheese out at least 3 hours before serving time.
- It really is true that $5 cheese will taste like $20 cheese at the right temperature and $20 cheese will taste like $5 cheese at the wrong temperature.
- When you offer it to your guests, your Brie should be weeping, your Blue stinking and your Reggiano glistening with a whisper of its oil.
- With cheese and wine, I like to add sweetness and texture and present them together on a memorable serving platter.
goat cheese, goat cheese, camembert, gorgonzola, bread
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/michael-chiarello/the-ultimate-cheese-course-recipe.html (may not work)