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Mars Cheese Castle is a specialty food store, delicatessen, and taproom which sells a variety of consumable products in Kenosha, Wisconsin. [1] Located along Interstate 94, the shop is popular among Wisconsin visitors and has been called a "cheese landmark", "one of Wisconsin's most recognizable cheese stores", and "an icon for generations of I-94 travelers".
Isaly advertising art in the mid-1960s featured the Swiss Lad, a skyscraper cone and the tag line "Peak of Quality" as an allusion to the family-operated company's Swiss heritage. Isaly's ( / ˈ aɪ z l iː z / ) [ 1 ] was a chain of family-owned dairies and restaurants started in Mansfield , Ohio , with locations throughout the American ...
Wisconsin was the last state to repeal its margarine ban, the previous being Minnesota, which overturned theirs in 1963. [32] But it is still illegal for restaurants to serve margarine, unless the customer requests it. While the ban was never enforced, it carried a $6,000 fine. [33] The state requires all butter and cheese makers to hold a license.
Wisconsin cheesemakers swept both categories in the debut of cheese curds in the World Championship Cheese Contest.
I think we are living our best lives here in cheese." The contest, hosted by the Wisconsin Cheese Makers Association since 1957, had 3,302 cheese, yogurt, butter and dry dairy products in 142 classes.
By 2018, Wisconsin cheese factories produced more than 600 varieties of specialty cheese, approximately 50% of all specialty cheeses made in the United States. [2]: 147 Wisconsin manufactured 3.36 billion pounds of cheese in 2019, accounting for 26% of all cheese produced in the United States and more than any other state. [1]: 32
The Ball family of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, poses with the Sargento mascot before getting a tour on how string cheese is produced at the plant, Tuesday, November 22, 2022, in St. Cloud, Wis.
The Freitag Homestead is a historic farm begun in 1848 in the town of Washington, Green County, Wisconsin. It is also the site of the first Swiss cheese factory in Wisconsin. The farm was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. [1] Fridolin Streiff bought the homestead's land and started the farm in 1848.