There’s something about Cheese that elicits a kind of passion and loyalty unrivalled in the culinary world. That might be why people are willing to traverse mountains, wander through caves, and milk even the most mighty beasts, all in the pursuit of a delicious dairy product.
Beyond the storied, classic purveyors of Brie and burrata, however, there’s a vast network of adventurous cheesemakers and afficionados. Here are six places where fans can fulfil their love for fromage.
- Kaltbach, Switzerland – Kaltbach Cave: In the Undulating green sprawl of an Alpine valley not far from Lucerne, where clouds swim against snow-capped mountains and placid cows graze on verdant meadows, a cave formed from a prehistoric seabed carries a glorious culinary secret. Many shoppers browsing cheese aisles in grocery stores around the world will recognize the little wedges of Emmi Kaltbach Le Gruyere, with their distinctive black featuring a blue company logo and Swiss cross. But few know that the cheese is meticulously aged in the Kaltbach Cave, a tunnel-like sandstone formation inside Santenberg mountain with climatic conditions that are just right for ripening cheese. The cool subterranean labyrinth, said to be 22 million years old, is the natural incubator for up to 1,20,000 wheels of cheese, mostly Gruyere and Emmental. Stacked shelves stretching more than one and a half kilometers hold the cheese at a temperature of 12.5 degrees Celsius year round, and the cool waters of the river (Kaltbach means ‘cold river’) that runs through the cave keep humidity levels around 96 percent. The cave’s unique climate and the interaction between the sandstone’s mineral deposits and the cheese create a distinctive flavor and aroma, and give the rinds t heir signature dark brown color. Like artists working on their masterpiece, cave masters turn, wash, and brush the wheels with a brine solution every seven to 10 days. The cheeses stay in the cave for up to nine months, diligently monitored until they reach just the aromatic and textural maturity. The art of caring for and gauging the maturity of cheese is a skill transferred down through generations of cave masters at Kaltbach, with no written record of the training. The cave was discovered in 1953; in need of storage space, local cheese makers began keeping their cheese there. In 1993, Emmi acquired the cave and has been crafting, storing, and aging their finest cheeses in it since then.
- Bjurholm, Sweden: The Elk House (Algens Hus): Moose Milk is sold commercially in both Russia and Sweden, but one small farm with a herd of 11 moose, The Elk House (moose are known as elk in some communities) is the only place in the world that produces moose cheese. The proprietors of the farm are famous enough for their moose-based dairy products that they now have an upscale restaurant, gift shop, and museum for visitors, who can meet the domesticated moose.
- Tillamook, United States: Tillamook County Creamery Association: In the Northwest state of Oregon, cheese cubes hang from the ceiling in this creamery’s recently renovated visitor’s center, which also features such memorabilia as a 1927 butter churner and a stamp used to authenticate packaged blocks as genuine Tillamook cheese. Most impressive is the view of the factory floor, where blocks of cheese as big as milk creates roll down a conveyor belt and are boxed, then transported to a warehouse where they are aged from 60 days to ten years. You can also get a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the production and packaging process; each day, the creamery processes 8,00,000 kilograms of milk and churns out at least 85,000 kilograms of cheese. It is both a marvel of cheese engineering and a slice of the past. Cheddar cheese has a long history in Tillamook Country. A local cheddar won the grand prize at the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair. In 1909, several creameries in the area formed the Tillamook County Creamery Association (TCCA) to act as a quality control organization for the cheddar made throughout the county. A cheddar recipe first developed in the 19th century is still used, and the spirit of excellence has not waned. Last year the TCCA took home two golds, two silvers, and two bronzes at the International Cheese and Dairy Awards.
- Plancherine, France: Tamie Abbey: Tamie Abbey sits in serene surroundings in the Bauges mountain range in France’s Savoie department. Founded in the 12th century, it is today home to around 25 Trappist monks who run a small dairy and cheesemaking operation that produces Abbaye de Tamie, a soft cheese made from raw cow’s milk. As of 2021, the monastery processed around 3,500 liters of milk per day, making about 420 kilograms of Abbaye de Tamie cheese, which is pressed and molded into wheels. It’s then immersed in a brine bath for two or three hours before being moved to the abbey’s cellars, where it is turned every other day and aged for four weeks. Not wanting to waste anything during the cheesemaking process, the monks of Tamie Abbey came up with an innovative use for their by products. In 2003, they built an anerobic digestion plant, and are able to use excess whey and wash-water to produce bio-gas. This is used to power the abbey’s hot water system. The success of this initiative has inspired similar systems in France, most notably the “cheese-based” power plant in nearby Albertville, which supplies enough electricity to meet the annual needs of more than 300 local homes. Abbaye de Tamie cheese is often compared to reblochon, but is slightly thicker. Both cheeses are made using raw milk, enhancing its terroir — or the characteristic taste and flavor imparted to the cheese by the environment in which it is made. This helps give Abbaye de Tamie its nutty, fruity, and distinctively earthly flavor.
- Bethlehem, United States: Abbey of Regina Laudis: The Abbey of Regina Laudis, appropriately located in the town of Bethlehem in the northeastern state of Connecticut, is home to Benedictine nuns with a taste for life’s finer cheeses. Mother Noella, who earned the nickname the ‘Cheese Nun’ after appearing in a 2002 documentary of the same name, spearheaded t he abbey’s foray into the artisanal market. A local farmer gave the abbey its first cow in the 1970s and the nuns began creating their specialty: the raw milk, uncooked, fungal-ripened Bethlehem Cheese, which is similar to France’s Saint-Nectaire cheese. They learnt their technique from a third-generation French cheesemaker. Mother Noella was even able to use Bethlehem Cheese as the basis for her graduate research, earning her a Ph.D in microbiology from the University of Connecticut. A Full bright scholarship later brought her to France, where she ventured into the county’s cheese caves to study fungus. She used her research to determine how fungus affects the odor and taste of different cheeses as they mature. When she first began creating cheese at the abbey, there was only one other artisanal cheesemaker in Connecticut. Though the industry has since boomed in the United States, the Abbey of Regina Laudis remains one of a small number of dairies that are licensed to produce and sell raw milk products. The nuns still make Bethlehem Cheese at the abbey, as well as other varieties like ricotta, mozzarella, and cheddar. Most of the cheese is consumed by residents of the abbey and guests, but it is sometimes sold in the abbey’s gift shop along with other homemade treats like bread, honey, jams, and jellies.
- Zeitz, Germany: Cheese Mite Memorial: In the Tiny eastern German village of Wurchwitz stands a memorial in honor of a microscopic local hero; the cheese mite. For without this mite, locals could not produce their famous specialty cheese, Milbenkase. Milbenkase has been produced in the Saxony-Anhalt region since the Middle Ages, but the traditional method was almost lost in the mid-1900s when the East German government outlawed the production and sale of mite-infested products. After the fall of the Soviet Union and the reunification of Germany, local science teacher Helmut Poschel, using techniques passed down by his mother and grandmother, managed to preserve the tradition. Today, Milbenkase is produced only in the small village of Wurchwitz. Milbenkase is made by flavoring a soft, white, and uncaged cheese called quark with caraway, dried elderflowers, and salt. The cheese is shaped into balls, wheels or cylinders, which are then dried and left in a wooden box containing rye flour and cheese mites (Tryophagus casei). This is when the magic happens. For at least three months, the cheese mites secrete enzymes over the cheese, causing it to turn yellow and then a darker-reddish brown as it ripens. Some cheesemakers let the process continue for up to one year, by which time the cheese has turned black. Well done, cheese mites. When the cheese is ready to eat, the mites are not removed; instead they are eaten along with the cheese. There are other cheeses, such as Mimolette from France, that uses mites to create a pitte rind, but Milbenkase is unique in using them throughout the cheesemaking process. It’s no wonder that local cheesemakers in Wurchwitz decide to honor the hard-working cheese mites with a memorial. It’s not the prettiest of things, but it is a fitting tribute to both the mites and the cheese they help produce.