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Wheels of gorgonzola cheese ripening Dorset Blue Vinney Shropshire Blue Stichelton at a market. Blue cheese is a general classification of cheeses that have had cultures of the mold Penicillium added so that the final product is spotted or veined throughout with blue, or blue-grey mold and carries a distinct smell, either from that or various specially cultivated bacteria.
The cheese is distinctive, being pyramidal in shape and golden brown in colour with speckles of grey-blue mould, and is often known by the nicknames "Eiffel Tower" or "Pyramid". It has a square base 6.5 cm wide, is around 9 cm high, and weighs 250 grams (8.8 oz). [ 86 ]
AmaBlu, also known as Treasure Cave Blue Cheese, is an artisan blue cheese, made with unpasteurized cow milk. [1] It is produced by the Caves of Fairbault, an artisanal cheese company in southern Minnesota. [2] AmaBlu was the first blue cheese to be made in the United States, in 1936. [3] It was originally called Treasure Cave Blue Cheese.
The recalled cheese was on the shelves of major retail chains, including Aldi and Market Basket, across multiple states — Indiana, Texas, California, New Jersey, Missouri, Massachusetts, and others.
Blue cheese [a] is any cheese made with the addition of cultures of edible molds, which create blue-green spots or veins through the cheese. Blue cheeses vary in flavor from mild to strong and from slightly sweet to salty or sharp; in colour from pale to dark; and in consistency from liquid to hard.
The most heavily affected items were white cheddar cheese products, with 2,633 cases being recalled. These had best-by dates of between March and June 2024. The recall was initiated Feb. 5.
A mix of blue cheese and brie, creamy, blue-veined cheese with a white-mould rind. Saga is a very mild blue-veined cheese. It comes with a delicate blue mold, that may not appear in other varieties of blue cheeses. It is aged for more than 60 days. Samsø cheese: Samsø: A cow's milk cheese named after the island of Samsø. It is similar to ...
The process used to make Maytag Blue Cheese was developed and patented by two Iowa State University microbiologists, Clarence Lane and Bernard W. Hammer. Roquefort, another type of blue cheese, had been made for hundreds of years in Europe, but attempts to manufacture a similar cheese [4] in the United States had thus far been unsuccessful ...