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Quercyfeuille au Romarin
Plump and hearty. Salty and 'yeasty'. Made on a family farm with only 200 lively goats, this speciality of the South is aromatised with rosemary oil, then dried and ripened in Rodolphe le Meunierâs caves.
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Baron Bigod
Earthy and full-flavoured, with protracted finish. A cheese in the style of Brie de Meaux, made by Jonny Crickmore at Fen Farm. From the cutting of the curds to using the traditional pelle-Ă -brie ladle, everything is done by hand. Available in 250g Cut, 500g Cut or 3kg Whole. 1kg whole cheese is also available, please click here
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Ogleshield
Supple and savoury, and melts brilliantly. A cheese was named âshieldâ after an ancient bronze shield was unearthed near the farm. It was renamed âOgleshieldâ after Bill Oglethorpe suggested washing the rind, so creating a British take on Raclette.
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Cathare
Delicate and smooth. Subtle âgoatinessâ with a nut-shell finish. Named after a rebellious Christian sect from the Middle Ages and decorated with the regionâs Occitan cross. Made by the Fricker family in Saint-FĂ©lix-Lauragais, and ripened by affineur François Bourgon for the thinnest of wrinkled rinds and the complexity of gentle, sweet milk.
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L'Antoine Raclette
Full-flavoured, with honeyed undertones. A unique Raclette made in the Jura mountains and matured by Affineur Walo, it is utterly divine melted over pork, potatoes and pickles.
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Cravanzina
Clean and buttery, with a decadent texture. Enriched with a touch of cream, this mixed milk robiola is utterly luscious. Accompanied by a chilled glass of Moscato dâAsti, itâs Piemontese summer on a plate.
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Morbier
Supple and fruity. Historically, cheesemakers would make curd from evening milk, then sprinkle a protective layer of ash on top. The next morning they would make another curd to add to the previous eveningâs cheese.Unfortunately, Morbier is currently out of stock. This is due to a temporary ban on the import of French and Italian raw milk soft and semi-soft cheeses due to an outbreak of a disease in cattle. There have been minimal cases, but DEFRA are maintaining a very cautious approach to protect our British herds. Suggested Alternative: Ashcombe.Made in Gloucestershire by celebrated cheesemaker, David Jowett, this cheese shares the distinctive ash line running through the core of the cheese and a similar milky paste and savoury rind. It is also a former Supreme Champion of both the British and Artisan Cheese Awards., A supple-textured, unpasteurised French cheese, with a characteristic line of ash running through it.
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Hidcote
A rich and luscious, soft sheepâs milk cheese from King Stone Dairy. Aromas of hay and clean farmyard air and flavours of cultured cream and uncooked mushrooms.
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Truffle Baron Bigod
Rich and heady. Jonny Crickmore combines his cultured double cream with Tartuflanghe summer truffle cream from The Fine Cheese Co. and places them in the centre of a Baron Bigod
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Reblochon Fermier
Smooth and supple. Notes of âwalnutsâ and âmeadow flowersâ. The flagship cheese of Haute-Savoie. The green label indicates that this is the rare farmstead variety, and it has been washed twice by Fromagerie Joseph Paccard, leading to an intoxicating aroma of leather and spruce. Unfortunately, Reblochon is currently out of stock. This is due to a temporary ban on the import of French and Italian raw milk soft and semi-soft cheeses due to an outbreak of a disease in cattle. There have been minimal cases, but DEFRA are maintaining a very cautious approach to protect our British herds.Suggested Alternative: YarlingtonLovers of Reblochon will surely enjoy this British washed rind cheese with a blush coat and a plump and glossy interior.
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Drunk Monk
VegetarianPasteurised
Famous since the time of Charlemagne, Brie de Meaux is the classic and original Brie cheese, made just outside Paris in the Ăle-de-France. It was famously crowned the âking of cheesesâ by Talleyrand in the 1814 Congress of Vienna.
Some struggle to tell the difference between Brie and Camembert. Despite both being made from cowsâ milk and both being soft cheeses, they are, however, quite different.