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Do You Like Cheese

Do you like cheese 84 members have voted

  1. 1. Do you like cheese

    • Yes
      100%
      77

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I'm sure most of us can grate cheese quite comfortably...but how many can chop up a pineapple with panache?

No I can't do a poll....JT has warned me I just get the one a year.....

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I'm sure most of us can grate cheese quite comfortably...but how many can chop up a pineapple with panache?

No I can't do a poll....JT has warned me I just get the one a year.....

What's a panache? Some sort of fancy Swiss/French cake.

I'm sure most of us can grate cheese quite comfortably...but how many can chop up a pineapple with panache?

No I can't do a poll....JT has warned me I just get the one a year.....

What's a panache? Some sort of fancy Swiss/French cake.

That's a ganache I think.....the kind that give you a paunch so easy to get confused.

Let's try another....what's the best cheese to pair with some good caviar?

Parmesan and Caviar.

So, not only does it taste like crap, it also smells of vomit.

Good combo.

Or truffles....which cheese should I pair with those?

I'm going to srtick to bubbles with my caviar tho....cream cheese aint my thing.

Did you know if you put a truffle (the dog/pig snuffled out one, not the chocolate) inside your box of eggs for a few days you will be able to make truffle tasting omelets? The odour of the truffle impregnates the shell of the egg.

Back to cheese. As you know, i live in Switzerland - land of all things cheese and chocolate and letting Rom gypsies in willy nilly. 70 arrived yesterday wanting asylum.

I went to my local supermarket and was standing and pondering over the cheese selection. Which is vast and all are yummsky.

I bought some Cheddar. Because it is a wee bit of home from home and making a Gruyere and marmite sandwich is not really good!! And it's cheaper than their fancy pants Swiss cheese.

I find gruyere a bit rubbery me self.

That's what Chinese waiters say too.

Gruyere is good, it's Emmantal that is the rubbery one (the one with holes in).

hey, look out...I'm in Firenze now inna flat on Via Fra Bartolommeo and there's a supermarket around the corner...what kinda cheese should I get do ye reckon? they ain't got no Mainland Epicure sharp cheddar (or any other kinda cheddar for that matter)...all the cheeses are white...

I picked up a carton of red Marlboros from the desert petrol station in saudi where they got the ice cream sandwiches and now I'm hunkerin' down with a selection of cheap reds from the supermarket wine section; who needs vodka now that I'm in chianti centrale...couldn't find no pate either...pretty soon I'm gonna fix a roll wid prosciutto and some kinda white cheese...and it's only 10 am...

my boy is flyin' in from Gatwick tonight and I gots to let him know that his dad is on top of all things culinary: 'hey Louie, try summa dis cheese...' 'aw hell dad, let's go getta pizza...'

later...'hey Louie...lets go look at them famous paintings down town...' 'I wanna go buy sum new trainers first...'

I don't know much about Italian cheese. But you could get a really good buffalo mozzarella, some tomatoes, basil, good olive oil and make a nice salad. Or ask the guy in the shop for a wee taste of different cheeses and then get the ones you like. They usually do that in Europe - let you try before you buy especially in the markets.

Today, perusing the cheese selection in my local supermarket, i bought a camembert. It is sitting on the kitchen table, ripening. Hopefully tomorrow it will be nice and runny. To be eaten with fresh crusty bread... and a few glasses of red wine.

  • 2 weeks later...

I don't know much about Italian cheese. But you could get a really good buffalo mozzarella, some tomatoes, basil, good olive oil and make a nice salad. Or ask the guy in the shop for a wee taste of different cheeses and then get the ones you like. They usually do that in Europe - let you try before you buy especially in the markets.

Today, perusing the cheese selection in my local supermarket, i bought a camembert. It is sitting on the kitchen table, ripening. Hopefully tomorrow it will be nice and runny. To be eaten with fresh crusty bread... and a few glasses of red wine.

You can get a good feed at Borough market doing this...and then round it off with a slurp or two of free cider!

Trouble for me is I always seem to leave with two bags full of stuff and a hot sausage roll hanging out of my mouth.....;)

What i would do for a proper sausage roll...

Here, they call them croissant au jambon - croissants filled with some sort of yucky meat.

Anyway back on topic. I just grated up the end bit of my cheddar and made a rather nice omelette.

Mmmmm Cheese omelette. A few fine slices of chillie goes well inside it too.

And ham and peppers and tomatoes - whatever is actually lying around in the fridge. Throw it in an omelette.

Totally agree...omelette goes well with booze too....in fact anything with cheese in does I think....

I find gruyere a bit rubbery me self.

That's what Chinese waiters say too.

As in lubbly jubbly?

  • 2 weeks later...

I'm on a small island between Britain and France....and would you believe I can't find a good Camembert?

Well that's not strictly true....there is a deli selling CRAZY priced cheeses but I can't bring myself to pay £10 for a small Jerry sized lunchtime snack.

What to do????

I find gruyere a bit rubbery me self.

That's what Chinese waiters say too.

I was in a Chinese restaurant once and asked for a tossed salad. The waiter said " Aah, you mean Wo Kun Flew Dat"

I'm on a small island between Britain and France....and would you believe I can't find a good Camembert?

Well that's not strictly true....there is a deli selling CRAZY priced cheeses but I can't bring myself to pay £10 for a small Jerry sized lunchtime snack.

What to do????

Pop on a boat to France? Back and forth in an hour. I do that to go to Lidl here in landlocked Europe. On the bus, but i could take a boat accross the lake and then a bus. Or swim, can't be that far. I bought a camembert the other day, it is ripening, it cost me the equivelant of 2 pounds and it's a biggun!!

Or if you are on Mont St Michel you can walk at low tide.

I'm on a small island between Britain and France....and would you believe I can't find a good Camembert?

Well that's not strictly true....there is a deli selling CRAZY priced cheeses but I can't bring myself to pay £10 for a small Jerry sized lunchtime snack.

What to do????

Pop on a boat to France? Back and forth in an hour. I do that to go to Lidl here in landlocked Europe. On the bus, but i could take a boat accross the lake and then a bus. Or swim, can't be that far. I bought a camembert the other day, it is ripening, it cost me the equivelant of 2 pounds and it's a biggun!!

Or if you are on Mont St Michel you can walk at low tide.

My gf has demanded a pile of cheese be in our fridge in Bangkok next month.

Now I have no problem with that....but how do I get her to stick to the crappy co-op stuff and leave my fine deli stuff alone?

I know my Stilton is safe....but what about the fine brie and camembert?

She only requested feta and gouda btw.....all help gratefully received.......

For the last seven or eight years half a dozen of we westerners gather at one man's house on Christmas day, he has a turkey sized gas oven.

Last year his son (who is 6 months on 6 off) brought a nice bottle of port, but made the mistake of giving it to his dad a week before the day, of course his dad drank it.

This year he has brought another bottle, but is keeping it safe until the day this time.

A Thai friend recently returned from the UK and she brought me a nice wedge of Stilton, it is staying in my fridge for the next four weeks, and no one is touching it, not even me, honest.

I brought over a massive chunk of Colston Bassett from Neal's Yard and a 40 year old bottle of Taylor's port which we enjoyed in the pub on Xmas evening......twas a merry day that one!

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