The Cheesemonger's Kitchen: Celebrating Cheese in 90 Recipes
By Chester Hastings and Joseph De Leo
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About this ebook
Today’s specialty cheese market is booming, and many once obscure cheese varieties are now widely available. The Cheesemonger’s Kitchen collects ninety delightful recipes that move cheese into a meal’s starring role. Culled from chef and cheesemonger Chester Hastings’s twenty-five years of experience, these recipes take full advantage of the varied flavors of cheese in ways both traditional and innovative. A cheese book that focuses on recipes rather than acting as a buyers guide or primer, this substantive and personal exploration accompanied by fifty color photographs plus wine pairing tips from acclaimed sommelier Brian Kalliel is a comprehensive guide to the vast world of specialty cheeses.
Chester Hastings
Chester Hastings has been the chef and cheesemonger for over 12 years at family-owned and -operated Joan's on Third in Los Angeles.
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The Cheesemonger's Kitchen - Chester Hastings
INTRODUCTION
THERE IS NO RIGHT OR WRONG
Really. It’s the first thing I tell people who approach the cheese counter and, in an embarrassed tone, quickly admit that they don’t know anything about cheese. Someone somewhere along the way made them feel that cheese, wine, food, or art, for that matter, is something about which one must know everything or might as well know nothing.
After assuring them that there truly is no right or wrong, I tell these people that what really matters is what they like. I don’t like blue cheese,
some might offer. Okay. That’s probably true, based on the few blue cheeses that they may have tasted. But what about the ones they haven’t tried? In the end, they still may not love, or even like, blue cheese, but I encourage everyone to explore new foods at least once, especially cheeses, and to re-examine from time to time foods that they have sworn off since childhood.
When I was eleven years old, my mother and I were staying with her friend in Boston. On a drive from there up to Vermont, we stopped off at a roadside deli to pick up sandwiches. When my mother asked what I wanted, I replied, Whatever you’re having.
What she was having was a massive hero sandwich, and it looked pretty good to me, crammed with cheese, bursting with salami, and dripping with oil and vinegar. But when I bit into the sandwich, I immediately spit it out. What was that foul, bitter taste? So went my first encounter with an anchovy.
I spent the better part of the next eight years avoiding anchovies like the plague until I was forced to eat them under the tutelage of my mentor, Carlo Middione. He had just returned from Sicily and had smuggled back a tin of anchovies packed in sea salt. Letting out a slight gasp of reverence at the sight of the treasures
that had been carefully hand-layered into a vibrant baroque-style tin, he carefully rinsed a few of the creatures in cold water and, using his thumb, peeled open the bellies like an ancient book of illuminated manuscripts. With his fingertips, he gently removed the skeleton in one piece and laid out the anchovies on a plate. He then reached into his closely guarded knife box, took out a small vial of white truffle oil, and, with a single drop, gave each fillet an anointing. Try one,
he offered. And I did, forgoing the oath that I had made to my taste buds never to eat anchovies again. But what I tasted that day forever changed my feelings about anchovies. The flesh was meaty, almost sweet, and tasted clean, like the sea itself. There was no bitter aftertaste. The truffle oil added a perfume that did not mask or overpower the flavor but, rather, enhanced its earthy nuances in a perfect marriage.
Today I love anchovies. I owe countless moments of delight to that day when I gave them just one more shot. Clearly the quality of the salt-cured anchovies from Sicily was far superior to those squeezed out of a tube at that Vermont deli years ago, but I suspect it was also the context and gentle approach to a new flavor that allowed my mind and palate to stay open long enough for the newness of something to be explored.
I am constantly reminding people that it is okay that they do not know more about cheese. Most of us did not grow up with the variety of cheeses that are currently at our fingertips. We have a lot of catching up to do as we begin to incorporate them into our everyday diet. That bizarre cardboard-like powder atop overcooked spaghetti swimming in saccharin-sweet tomato sauce was the closest I came to Parmigiano-Reggiano until I was eighteen. Reading about cheese is great (and I am grateful that you’re doing it now!), but nothing beats tasting cheese for yourself, especially when the cheese comes from a source that cares about where it comes from, how it is stored, and when it should be sold. I encourage you to find a cheesemonger in your neighborhood and create a relationship with him or her. Ask for samples, taste the cheese, think about it for a moment, and then ask questions about where it comes from, with what kind of milk it is made, and even how to serve and enjoy it. These are the basic questions that will begin your journey of discovery in the pantheon of great cheeses.
The proliferation of cheese shops and the expansive selection of cheese in larger chain markets is a growing opportunity for people who want to experience cheese on a daily basis as the Europeans have done for centuries. Unfortunately, many fine cheeses are sold in ways that intimidate the consumer or in pre-packed forms that are not only bad for the cheese but also hard on the wallet, forcing people to buy much more than they need. This often leads to spoilage, waste, and a wariness about buying cheese in the future. Buying cheese, or food in general, in smaller quantities when they are at their peak is the secret to the healthful, diverse, and delicious diets of places such as France and Italy.
ABOUT THE RECIPES
This book is a collection of some of my favorite ways to eat, serve, and enjoy cheese. It is by no means a comprehensive guide to the colossal world of cheese, but, rather, it is a sharing of my own experiences with what Clifton Fadiman called milk’s leap toward immortality.
Located in the list of ingredients of many Italian recipes is one of my favorite tools to cooking—the letters Q.B. This signifies a unit of measure that I encourage you to embrace in all of your cooking. The letters stand for quanto basta, literally meaning however much you think is needed is the correct amount. This is oh so true with cheese; many of the recipes presented here are merely my thoughts on amounts and types of cheese that have worked for me. Quanto basta
does not apply to every ingredient, and certainly it applies less so in baking—including pastries—where the chemistry involved is more precise. The quanto basta
idea is meant more as a reminder to experiment with what is available and what you enjoy eating and to follow your own tastes, as well as those of your friends and family. After all, it’s unarguable that when it comes to following other people’s recipes, all that really matters is that the dish becomes something you’ll want to cook again.
A WORD ABOUT PARMIGIANO-REGGIANO
Parmigiano-Reggiano has become an indispensable cornerstone of the modern international diet, and as such, deserves special mention.
Benedictine and Cistercian monks first created Parmigiano-Reggiano in the thirteenth century. Thanks to very strict laws governing the production of The King of Cheese,
little has changed in the methods and ingredients used since its invention, and, therefore, the flavor of the cheese we are eating today is much like it must have been back then.
It is probably most thought of as a grating cheese, and it is indeed considered the grana, or grain
cheese, because of its granular texture. But Parmigiano-Reggiano is very much a table cheese, and in Italy it is often served at the beginning of a meal with fresh figs, sweet melons, and cured salami. Parmigiano-Reggiano’s relationship to the other crowned monarch of the region, Parma ham, goes beyond their delicious compatibility. Excess whey from the production of Parmigiano-Reggiano is fed to the sacred pigs whose hindquarters will become authentic prosciutto di Parma.
I always have a piece of Parmigiano-Reggiano on hand, though I generally keep small chunks that I am sure to use up before they lose their magic. When purchasing Parmigiano-Reggiano, try to find large pieces of the whole wheel and ask the cheesemonger to cut from that piece. Avoid if you can Parmigiano-Reggiano that is pre-cut into smaller pieces and wrapped in plastic wrap/cling film, as the cheese starts to dry from the moment the wheel is opened and dies a little every day from that moment. I recommend not buying pre-grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, no matter how convenient it may seem. The flavors just aren’t the same, and how much time and effort are we saving at the cost of such a loss of flavor?
chapter oneCHEESE BOARDS
One great way to familiarize yourself with cheese and how to serve it is to make a cheese board. Here the cheeses can be savored, studied, and discussed in the privacy of your own home. At the end of the day, most great cheeses really should be eaten as they are in their purest forms. The recipes for cooking with the world’s finest cheeses should be made with an appreciation for the cheeses as they come to us from the farm or affineur first.
TO START
Taste as much cheese as you can from where you purchase it and ask as much information as you can when doing so. Start a regular dialog with your local cheesemonger. Cheese-mongers know a lot that you no doubt want to know as well. It is also a great idea to keep track of the basic facts about the cheeses you purchase. I go out of my way, no matter how busy I may be, to write down the name, type of milk, and country of origin of each cheese. This is the most basic information a cheesemonger can provide, and the most useful, for much like wine, what he or she thinks it tastes like doesn’t really matter as much as what you think it tastes like. Having said that, knowing that the sheep’s milk cheese is made by Benedictine monks who still receive a portion of the milk as a votive from local shepherds in the Pyrenees, or that the recipe for certain Pecorino from Romagna, Italy, was discovered when farmers hid their treasures in caves during the Saracen pirate raids, does add to the overall experience of fine cheese.
QUANTITY
When preparing a cheese board for a party, start with three to five cheeses. But, if cheese is being set out as an appetizer before a meal, you may want two—or even just one—very special selection. Too many cheeses on a board can start to overpower the palate and negate the unique and sometimes subtle qualities of each cheese. A general amount per person for a cheese board is roughly 1 to 2 oz/30 to 55 g per person of each cheese, though this depends greatly on what else is being served and where in the meal the cheese board is featured.
There is such a thing as too much cheese, and it is vital that you buy small amounts of what you will consume over the next few days, or even that evening, and then come back for more. I often cut people off, like a good bartender. I tell them they have enough cheese and ask them to come back when what they have is gone. It does no one any good to have beautiful cheese wasting away in the refrigerator. Being a cheesemonger means that I come in contact with, and therefore consume, far more cheese on a daily basis than most. It is not a license to overindulge, however. In fact, my love of good cheese prohibits overconsumption of it.
DESIGN
While entire cheese boards could be dedicated to a specific type of cheese, variety is certainly something to consider. Since everyone’s palate is as different as his or her tastes, diversity is key for a cheeseboard. Cheeses from the sheep’s milk, cow’s milk, and goat’s milk categories are always nice to have represented, as well as a soft, semihard, and hard-textured cheese. Bring cheeses to room temperature before serving. I prefer to leave pieces of cheese whole and allow guests to take as little or as much as they like. Pre-slicing not only dries the cheese faster, but it also takes away from the simple and often rustic beauty of the cheese. In the case of aged cheeses like Parmigiano-Reggiano, some Pecorinos, and Goudas or Cheddars, walnut-size shards can be made with the tip of a cheese knife and piled high around the other cheeses.
Although I personally love to hover over a cheese board and talk about the various cheeses and where they come from, some simple handwritten signs with information about the cheese is a nice added touch. I am not one for heavily garnished food in general, opting more for the monochromatic feel of unadorned cheeses on a simple piece of wood or a white plate. It is a kind of statement: here is the cheese in all of its glory. When a bit of contrast is needed, a strategically placed lemon leaf or sprig of fresh herb is often