BellaVitano

A new line of cheeses created by the master cheese makers at Sartori Foods in Plymouth, Wis., are capturing some serious attention these days by cheese buyers, judges and people like us who just like cheese. 
The now award-winning line of Sartori Reserve BellaVitano artisan cheeses (a bunch of them won medals at the World Cheese Awards in Ireland this past October) combine the rich and fruity creaminess of young cheese with the appealing crunch that only comes with premium aging. 
Think of the rich, craveable taste of an aged, premium Cheddar, balanced by a full-flavored Parmesan, and you have this uniquely delicious artisan cheese.  I picked up a a half a pound for a friend who was having a dinner party and she called me the next day, practically so happy she was crying. See what I mean? This cheese moves people.
And, the news just keeps getting better – four new distinctive BellaVitano varieties are now available in both wedges and wheels.
  • Raspberry BellaVitano.  This premium cheese won Best New Cheese and Best American Cheese at the 2008 World Cheese Awards in Ireland. It is soaked in New Glarus Raspberry Tart Ale to bring out fruity notes. This is my new favorite cheese. I could literally sit and eat this cheese until I get sick. It’s that good.

  • Black Pepper BellaVitano.  Created for the most discerning cheese enthusiast, this variety is coated in cracked black peppercorns. It won a Silver Medal at the 2008 World Cheese Awards.

  • Merlot BellaVitano.  Soaked in fine Merlot for hints of berry and plum, this extraordinary cheese carries a pleasing flavor and texture.

  • BellaVitano Gold.  Inspired by a traditional Italian farmstead cheese, Bella Vitano Gold combines the fruity flavor of a premium Parmesan with the creamy smoothness of fine Cheddar. It won a Gold Medal at the 2008 World Cheese Awards.
These cheeses are becoming available at more and more stores across the country, so I would really encourage you to ask for them. The raspberry and merlot – especially for their color and table presentation – will make really excellent holiday cheeses.
Happy eating!

Breaking News: Cheese Wars

Updated update: Steve Ehlers, Sara Hill from the WMMB, and Patty Ehlers, pictured right, enjoy the spoils of victory!!


Update: the UW Badgers lost to the Marquette Golden Eagles, 61-58. Good news, Milwaukeeites — go to Larry’s Market this week to sample a brand new Wisconsin cheese — Roelli’s Dunbarton Blue. I’m sure Steve Ehlers will cherish the congratulatory note from Ken. 🙂
Despite being the non-sporting fan that I am, even I know that sports fans across Wisconsin are all a twitter about THE rival men’s basketball game of the year going down this Saturday night at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee. The No. 25 ranked Marquette University Golden Eagles are set to face the No. 22 ranked UW Madison Badgers. The match-up is the 115th time the two have met in a non-conference setting, but no matter, each year, this game is a big deal in Wisconsin. Tip-off is 8:30 p.m. and tickets are going upwards of $200 apiece on Craig’s List.
So, you can imagine my delight when I opened my inbox this morning to discover that in a rival match-up worthy of Marquette vs. UW Madison, two of the state’s finest cheese shops have decided to bet 1 pound of their favorite Wisconsin artisan cheese on the game.
In corner number one we have Steve Ehlers of Larry’s Market in Brown Deer, representing the Marquette Golden Eagles. He’s put 1 pound of Joe Widmer’s award-winning, to-die-for, 8-year aged cheddar on the line, along with one dozen of Larry’s Famous Killer Brownies (made with AA Wisconsin butter). 
In corner number two, we have Ken Monteleone of Fromagination in Madison, representing the UW Badgers. In a classic case of a friendly rival one-up-manship, he’s put 1 pound of the brand new Dunbarton Blue from Roelli Cheese in Shullsburg. This cheese isn’t even being marketed yet — I first tasted it the weekend I left before vacation and nearly fell over. It’s a cheddar blue style that I predict will be the next big Wisconsin award-winner. Ken’s also throwing in a premium bag of crazy good Tootski’s Toffee, made in Madison.
The rules put forth state the losing team’s hometown cheese shop must ship his favorite cheese to the winning team’s hometown cheese shop, along with a congratulatory note that will be prominently displayed next to the cheese for all customers to see.
Sounds like a classic match-up and I look forward the results. Let the best man, er cheese, win!!

Anne Topham at Fantome Farm

I’m heading off to Costa Rica for a couple of weeks and busy rummaging through my files trying to get everything done before I leave (I’ll be sure to report on the Costa Rica cheese situation when I return). In the meantime, I came across an article I wrote a couple of years ago about Anne Topham, but never got around to pitching it to an editor. Hope you enjoy it!

Pioneer farmstead cheesemaker perfects fresh, handcrafted goat cheese 
She started 20 years ago with a “how to” book written in French, a pig to eat her mistakes, and a vision of handcrafting the Midwest’s first farmstead goat cheese. Today, Anne Topham’s Fantome Farm fresh chèvre is a beloved mainstay at the Dane County Farmers Market in Madison.
“The pigs are long gone, but the vision is the same: to make the best cheese I can every week,” Topham said. “Nothing compares to the feeling of handing cheese to a customer that just a day or two before, came from the work of my own two hands.”
Once a week, from mid-April through December, Topham carefully handcrafts French-style fresh chèvre at her farmstead cheesrie (a licensed dairy plant) near Ridgeway. She sells it at the Dane County Farmers Market and occasionally to a limited mail-order clientele.  
With its delicately creamy texture, pleasant tartness and lustrous sheen, Topham sells the cheese both plain and flavored with herbs. Other varieties come marinated in extra virgin olive oil and herbes de Provence, or coated with what the French call “black salt,” a mixture of salt and edible ash. Occasionally, she also crafts aged rounds.
Making chèvre is a three-day process, sometimes requiring all of Topham’s attention, other times almost none. But the goats – from where it all begins – are another story: Topham’s 20-goat herd requires twice-a-day milking, specialized feeding and a little ingenuity.
“Goats are smarter than cows, I think. You have to figure how to get them to want to do what you have in mind. They are very independent creatures,” Topham said.
Topham should know. She and partner Judy Borree have been milking goats for almost 25 years. Their journey began in 1979, when Topham took a break from studying for her doctorate in education policy studies at UW-Madison and instead went home to Iowa to visit her parents, who had moved to her grandparents’ farm.
She never returned to her academic life. 
“Instead of continuing work on a dissertation, I learned about raising cattle and driving tractors,” Topham said. “Then for fun we bought a young French Alpine goat and her three-week-old kid.”
Topham became hooked. As much as she enjoyed working with cattle, goats were a better size for two women to handle. Their first goat was a terrific milker, and soon Topham and Borree were getting more milk than they knew what to do with.
“I made yogurt. I made ice cream. We cooked with it. And still there was a lot of milk,” Topham said. 
Then Topham remembered a friend, who before she left Madison, had returned from Paris, bearing a beautiful round of goat cheese on a bed of straw. That memory changed Topham’s future.
“It was the first goat cheese I had ever tasted and I never forgot that taste. So I started trying to make the cheese I had tasted,” she said.
Like any good academic, she went to the library. She read cheesemaking books written in French, took the University of Wisconsin cheese technology course and visited pioneering California cheesemaker Laura Chenel to see her set-up. 
In 1982, Topham and Borree bought land near Ridgeway, built a barn, and began remodeling an attached garage into a licensed dairy plant. A year and a half later, Topham was selling fresh chèvre at the Dane County Farmers’ Market.
“Nobody was doing what we were doing in the Midwest. I figured if we could be the first, it would be a real advantage. And it has been,” Topham said.
While Topham’s Fantome Farm gourmet fresh chèvre is now well known throughout Wisconsin, that wasn’t always the case. Twenty years ago, French-style fresh goat cheese was a new taste for many.
“We cajoled people into trying our cheese at the Market. We thought if they tried it, they would buy it, and we were right,” Topham said.
Topham began to learn as much from her customers as she had from her books and expert advice. 
“Sometimes, a customer might say last week’s batch was too salty so I would measure more carefully the next week. Others would tell us we were making a cheese that you could only find in the mountain farms in Puerto Rico, or that it was similar to the fresh cheese made by the nomadic people in Afghanistan. And here I thought I was only making a gourmet French-style goat cheese!” Topham laughed.
Although many would agree Topham has long since perfected the art of making fresh chèvre, she continues to learn new techniques. Topham recently traveled to France to study “affinage” – the art of ripening cheese. Although Topham has always specialized in fresh goat cheese, she’s ready to try something new.
During her visit to France, Topham expected to find French cheesemakers using natural caves to ripen their many varieties of regional cheeses. Instead, she found both farmsteads and large processors building and using man-made mechanical ‘caves’ – with arrays of climate-controlled rooms.
“It made me come back and want to tear up everything I have and start over,” Topham said. 
“Seeing the mechanical caves in France has definitely changed my advice to starting farmstead cheese owners. I think that building and planning for such spaces and learning ways to perfect ripened cheese will help take farmstead and artisanal cheesemaking to the next level here in Wisconsin. At least I’m hoping to do that for Fantome Farm,” she said.
With more than 20 years of cheesemaking experience, Topham is more than willing to share her past mistakes and successes with others. She is available for presentations and enjoys explaining the art of cheesemaking.

Cheese Shopping

Good news for us cheeseaholics — more and more retail stores are carrying artisan and specialty cheeses and shipping for the holidays. So even if you live in a cheese-starved part of the country, fear not, there are good cheesemongers out there that will ship to you. Here are three of my favorites:

1. Anne Saxelby, Saxelby Cheese, New York. Anne writes a weekly blog about her cheese adventures and always cracks me up. Here’s her opening for today’s entry:

What’s small and cardboard and smells like a sock? That’s absolutely right! A holiday box’ o cheese from Saxelby Cheesemongers! This holiday season, the best of America’s farmstead cheeses are just a hop, skip, and a click away! We apologize to the FedEx guys in advance for stinking up their trucks…

I mean, how can you NOT want to buy cheese from this lady? Awesome.

2. Fromagination on the Capital Square in Madison — in addition to being a full-service cheese shop carrying more than 60 Wisconsin artisan cheeses that are cut-to-order, Fromagination is also hosting holiday planning/buying parties on Dec. 4 and Dec. 11. Staff will help you design custom-made gift baskets for everyone on your list, plus you get a discount.

If you don’t live in Madison, fear not – Fromagination also ships. It’s a great shop to find artisan cheeses made in Wisconsin that you won’t find anywhere else.

3. Kroger and Murray’s Cheese: this just hit my inbox yesterday — apparently these two companies have launched a partnership and are opening the first of three Murray’s Cheese departments in the Cincinnati-area Kroger Supermarkets.

The Murray’s Cheese department at the Kenwood Towne Place Kroger in Cincinnati will look much like the Murray’s Cheese flagship store in New York City’s Greenwich Village and will carry more than 500 items, including many of the same cheeses, crackers, dried fruits, and olives as the Bleecker Street original. This Murray’s Cheese department–as well as those debuting in the coming weeks at the existing Hyde Park and Liberty Township Krogers in Cincinnati–will be staffed by Kroger employees who have received rigorous cheese service training.

The press release says Murray’s employees have created an encyclopedic 300-page cheese service guide exclusively for the partnership and spent a month in Cincinnati further educating their Kroger counterparts. Now, the Kroger employees manning these Murray’s Cheese departments will be able to provide the same level of service as Murray’s employees in New York City.

Too cool. Let’s hope Murray’s decides to open a satellite shop in a Kroger’s near you! Happy holiday cheese shopping!

Weekend Update

Lots of news this week and I can’t decide on one thing to write about, so we’re going for a weekend update today:

1. Kiss Our Dairy Air: College Click TV is promoting UW-Madison with a new poster (pictured above). I love how they describe the college in this quick blurb.

“Madison’s got a good hometown feel–wholesome and relaxing. This research driven mega school of the Midwest offers innumerable resources in its science and engineering programs. However, the arts and humanities remain neglected as a result. Seek out what you want and you shall find. Lots of clubs, intense school spirit, and more cans of beer than actual people gives students a very genuine taste of the college life. Students here love their overall experience. The routine is simple: beer, football…beer, study, class…beer, beer…more beer.”

Hey, what about the cheese? Geez, people, beer & cheese … let’s get it right.

2. Grafton Village, Faribault Dairy Collaborate On New Layered Cheese: Grafton Village Cheese in Vermont and Faribault Dairy, located just across the border in Minnesota, have partnered to create a new, limited edition cheese called Grafton Duet. It’s made of three layers of Grafton Premium Cheddar and two layers of Faribault Dairy’s St. Pete’s Blue Cheese. The limited edition cheese is available only through the Grafton Village website – –and at the company’s two Vermont retail stores in Grafton and Brattleboro.

Congrats to Faribault cheesemaker Jeff Jirik — sure wish we could get you to move to Wisconsin. Big sigh. But I’ll enjoy your cheese anyway. 🙂

3. Majority of U.S. Goat Processors to Expand Plant Capacity: a new report just released this week by the USDA reports that about two-thirds of goat milk processors responding to a recent survey plan to increase their plant capacity in the next five years, while very few goat milk plants plan on either going out of business completely or discontinuing production of goat milk products. Email me for a complete copy of the report — it has some great statistics on types of goat cheeses being made, prices paid to farmers and details on expansion plans.

4. Turns out the Sky is NOT Falling: Ed Jesse, professor and and dairy policy specialist at UW-Madison released a major report this week reversing his sobering trend projections made earlier this decade of declining Wisconsin milk production. Instead, he says the state is poised to break its previous annual milk production record of 25 billion pounds set 20 years ago.

“Wisconsin’s dairy sector is in a positive state of growth and transition,” Jesse says.

Jesse says Wisconsin cow numbers bottomed out in March, 2005, at 1.233 million head. Last year, the average number of dairy cows on state dairy farms was 1.247 million head. The Wisconsin dairy herd expansion“has been steady for 42 months,” and “this kind of stability in cow numbers has not been observed in more than 20 years.”

And you all thought I was just being optimistic about Wisconsin’s growing dairy industry by writing a blog about it. Ha! Take that, Wisconsin naysayers!

Seriously, just eat our cheese. It’s awesome. Have a great weekend everybody!

Sassy Cows Make Good Milk

California may have “happy cows,” but here in Wisconsin, we have sassy cows. And sassy cows make awesome milk.

Don’t believe me? Then you need to try the bottled milk, ice cream and heavy cream from Sassy Cow Creamery, located on the Baerwolf farm between Sun Prairie and Columbus, Wis. (The website has a great listing of where to find the products in retail stores).

The Baerwolf’s cows are so sassy, in fact, they now have their own collectible trading cards. Buy the milk and you can collect 18 cow personality cards that are real dairy cows living on the Baerwolf dairy farm. Who knew collecting cow cards could be so fun?

Sassy Cow Creamery has been bottling milk since it opened this spring, and is now making ice cream at its picturesque farmstead factory and retail store. If you live close by, stop by for this month’s ice cream flavors: Apple Pie, Brownie Caramel and Pumpkin Praline.

I’d also recommend Sassy’s chocolate milk, which just won first place at the World Dairy Expo Championship Dairy Product Contest with a perfect score of 100 points. The Expo contest is the third largest contest in the world and the only one to include all types of dairy products, so earning first place — much less with a perfect score — is a VERY big deal.

If you live close enough, I’d also recommend trekking to the farmstead store to buy an array of local Wisconsin products, including local farmstead cheeses, packaged goods and specialty foods. It’s a great place to do some holiday shopping, and the kids can watch milk being bottled through the display window right in the store.

One last heads up for an upcoming event at the Sassy Cow Creamery — on Saturday, Nov. 22 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., the farm will be making churned cream. Fresh samples will be available and kids can even make their own butter. Sounds like a sassy kind of day.

New Product Category

Two Wisconsin food companies are collaborating to launch a new retail product category of ready-to-heat gourmet meals made from locally-grown and produced Wisconsin ingredients.

RP’s Pasta Company, Madison, and Renaissance Farm, Spring Green, will unveil seven gourmet dinners on Friday at Sentry Metcalf at Hilldale in Madison. The dinners are available in the frozen section and retail for less than $8. Dinners range from Lemon Basil Pesto Ravioli, to Wisconsin Stuffed Acorn Squash, to Four Cheese Tortellini, to Wisconsin Macaroni & Cheese.

Wisconsin specialty cheeses, locally-grown vegetables and herbs, as well as locally-made fresh, gourmet pasta are featured in different dishes, with local ingredients listed right on the package.

“Our mission is to create and share flavorful, ready-to-eat gourmet dinners produced from foods grown and crafted right here in Wisconsin,” Mark Olson, President of Renaissance Farms, told me today (pictured above). “We know more families want to buy local foods to support their neighboring farms and strengthen their communities. This line of dishes is a great way for folks to savor Wisconsin’s growing season.”

The Wisconsin-based, ready-to-heat frozen dishes include a variety of local ingredients, including:

  • Aged Cheddar cheese crafted at Hook’s Cheese in Mineral Point, Wis.
  • Butter Käse cheese crafted at Cedar Grove Cheese in Plain, Wis.
  • Bottled milk and cream produced at Sassy Cow Creamery in Columbus, Wis.
  • Butter made at Grassland Dairy in Greenwood, Wis.
  • Parmesan, Asiago, Mozzarella and Ricotta cheeses made at Grande Dairy, based in Brownsville, Wis.
  • Gorgonzola crafted at Wisconsin Farmers Union in Montfort, Wis.
  • Feta cheese made at Carr Valley Cheese, LaValle, Wis.
  • Gourmet fresh pasta crafted at RP’s Pasta in Madison, Wis.
  • Herbs, olive oils and pesto from Renaissance Farm, Spring Green, Wis.
  • Butternut Squash from Sutter Farm, Mt. Horeb, Wis.
  • Carrots, bell peppers and garlic from a variety of Wisconsin farms

The line of local food dishes from Renaissance Farms was developed by Chef Joel Girard, of Madison. Olson plans to collaborate with different chefs, farms and cheesemakers to develop future lines of ready-to-heat dishes. The first four dishes launched this week include:

  • Lemon Basil Pesto Ravioli with Roasted Garlic Cream Sauce
  • Stuffed Sweet Bell Peppers with Cedar Grove Butter Käse
  • Butternut Squash Ravioli with Montforte Gorgonzola Cream Sauce
  • Wisconsin Stuffed Acorn Squash with Carr Valley Feta
The line of dishes from RP’s Pasta was created by owner Peter Robertson, a master pasta maker. The first three dishes in the RP’s Pasta line include:
  • Macaroni & Cheese made with Hook’s Three-Year Cheddar
  • Four Cheese Tortellini with Basil & Tomato Sauce, paired with Local Buttered Carrots
  • Four Cheese Ravioli with Roasted Garlic Alfredo, paired with Local Buttered Carrots
“As the owners of local food companies, Mark and I work with fresh, wholesome ingredients grown and crafted by Wisconsin farmers and cheesemakers every day,” says Robertson. “This line of ready-to-heat dinners allows us to share our passion for local foods with the people we love best – our customers.”

Goat Gouda in the Spring

Good news, Wisconsinites! We will have goat gouda in the spring!

Diana Murphy, Dreamfarm, made her first 18 baby wheels of goat gouda this past week. The lovely white wheels are curing nicely in her aging room on her farm near Cross Plains. Diana makes fresh goat chevre all spring and summer to sell in the Vermont Valley CSA, and now that the CSA season is over, she will make goat gouda with her milk until her 20 goats dry in up early December.

I visited with Diana on Monday of this week at what may be the prettiest farm in all of the Midwest. Situated on a bluff overlooking a lush valley surrounded by hardwood trees in the last throes of fall foliage, Diana, her husband, Jim, and four daughters truly have found their “dream farm” in the rolling hills of scenic southwest Wisconsin.

Each of Diana’s goats are of course named and loved as individuals, and I was a little sad to see that Shiloh, Diana’s signature white milking goat who sports two lovely long curved horns, had broken off one of her horns this fall. Oh well, it just gives her more character. To see the goat in mention, view this new Wis Public Television 7-minute short on the state’s growing goat dairy industry: video.

Diana’s been making farmstead goat cheeses for five years. She sells her cheeses not only in a local CSA, but also at Willy St. Co-op in Madison and at the Westside Farmer’s Market — just two weeks left to buy her cheese and fresh farm eggs (show up no later by 8 a.m. for the eggs — last week she sold 72 dozen in an hour). Yikes.

In the high season, Diana makes cheese three days a week — chevre on Mondays and Wednesdays, and feta on Fridays. Now she’s making gouda twice a week until she runs out of milk for the winter. Then it will age all winter and make its official debut this spring. Ahh, something to look forward to through another long Wisconsin winter.

Water Buffalo Fresh Mozz

In exciting news, Wisconsin may soon have a fresh mozzarella made from the milk of local water buffaloes. Whooo-hoo!

A full-page feature in this week’s The Country Today tells the story, and I must say it’s an interesting one: a man by the name of Dubi Ayalon, an Israel native, decided to start a new career. He quit his job as a school principal, packed up his stuff and moved to a Wisconsin dairy farm he had only seen on the Internet. He then began searching for a herd of water buffalo to milk.

While it sort of sounds like a Saturday Night Live sketch, turns out it’s true. Here’s my favorite quote from the story:

“When I came here I didn’t know that cows had four nipples, I swear to god.” — Dubi Ayalon

It appears to be a good thing that Mr. Ayalon is surrounded by people who do know that cows have four nipples, including Master Cheesemaker Bob Wills at Cedar Grove Cheese in Plain, who is excited to get his hands on some water buffalo milk to make fresh mozz. He’s sure “there will be a clamoring for the product when we get it done” and I agree. I continuously have people asking me for a Wisconsin-made buffalo mozz and have to tell them it doesn’t exist. In fact, there are only a handful of farms milking water buffalo in the United States — one each in Vermont, California and Michigan.

I guess if it were easy to milk water buffaloes and make fresh mozz from their milk, someone in Wisconsin would have already done it. Apparently, it’s even harder to get the animals to come into the barn for milking, as Mr. Ayalon tells The Country Today in my second favorite quote:

“Water buffalo are not like cows, you can’t push them into the barn. You just cannot do it. They are stronger and full of muscles. You need to call them into the barn. Every morning and afternoon I go to the barn and sing a song in Hebrew, and they come. They make a connection between food and song.”

Can’t wait to eat some fresh buffalo mozz from singing cows. This will be another great Wisconsin story.

Size Does Matter

I read a fascinating column in yesterday’s Fond du Lac Reporter, entitled: “Why have farms grown so large?” It was apparently written in response to an earlier column talking about a large, 7,000-cow dairy being proposed near Ripon, Wis.

No matter which side of the political fence you’re on about large, medium-sized or small dairies, the following numbers are very interesting — credit to Bob Panzer of Badgerland Financial for the below info:

According to the University of Minnesota, it takes an average of $74,804 annually to support the average farm family. The study involved 850 farms in Minnesota and the average family size was 3.5 people.

To generate a profit of that amount, the U of M looked at farm profits and determined:

  • It would take 948 beef cows to produce a profit required to provide for the average family.
  • A total of 10,717 hogs raised from weaning to finish would be needed to earn the amount required to provide for the average farm family.
  • The average farm family would need to milk 127 dairy cows. (The U of M research determined the average dairy cow – over the past five years – has provided a profit of almost $600 annually. Some years, the profit was much lower and some years higher but on average, the magic number for profitability is apparently 127 cows).

I know what you’re thinking. Why should I care about the size of farms? Well, because the milk that goes into the cheese that we all love so much comes from the state’s dairy farms.

And, because the state’s traditional farms, like the one I grew up on, where our parents raised a few cows, a few hogs and some steers, and kids like me grew up baling hay, doing chores and generallly staying out of trouble — are no longer an option to support a family in the times in which we live.

That’s why I continue to be such a huge advocate of the state’s value-added dairy industry and our specialty and artisan cheeses. Because many of these products — whether it’s Sassy Cow Creamery bottled milk or Marieke Gouda or Caprine Supreme goat yogurt — come from average farm families trying to make a living milking animals and producing a product from the milk that comes from their farm.

No matter the size of the farm, it’s the quality of the product that matters the most to me, and Wisconsin makes some of the best value-added dairy products on the market today. There’s room here for big, medium and small farms, and we’ve got the happy cows to prove it.