[Cheese] Tripple Cheese
Michael J. Staver
mstaver at kendall.edu
Fri Nov 10 17:03:40 EST 2006
This is the cheese I would like to make or a variation of it, does anyone have a recipe? Thanks Michael
________________________________
From: cheese-bounces at hbd.org [mailto:cheese-bounces at hbd.org] On Behalf Of Dehaven James W
Sent: Friday, November 10, 2006 2:39 PM
To: The Cheese Makers' Digest
Subject: Re: [Cheese] Tripple Cheese
St. Andre 200 Gram Mini Wheel
Discount Price: $13.25
every day
Volume price: $11.93 <javascript:popupWindowWhole('http://www.cheesesupply.com/discount_popup.php')>
w/ $100.00 purchase
Wholesale price: $10.60 <javascript:popupWindowWhole('http://www.cheesesupply.com/wholesale_popup.php')>
w/ $300.00 purchase
<http://www.cheesesupply.com/images/pixel_trans.gif>
St. Andre 200 Gram Mini Wheel
Click to enlarge <javascript:popupWindow('http://www.cheesesupply.com/popup_image.php?pID=205')> <http://www.cheesesupply.com/images/standre2.jpg>
St. Andre 200 Gram Mini Wheel
Click to enlarge
St. André is a soft, ripened cheese in the tradition of Brie and Camembert. In 1928 a country cheese maker started the St. André Creamery in Villefranche de Rouerque, France, in the middle Pyrénées, a region also known for Roquefort cheese. Fast forward 40-some years and the soft-ripened, triple-cream cheese named St. André made its debut, with a reputation as a blend of the perfect brie mixed with equal parts of thick, sour cream and whipped sweet cream. St. André is made from cow's milk and enriched with pure cream. St. André is also fairly rare. Containing no less than 75% butterfat for every 100 grams of cheese, St. André is commonly agreed to be 50% richer than the average Camembert. This cheese is a favorite for cheese boards!
Jack Schmidling <arf at mc.net> wrote:
Lyndon Giles wrote:
> According to French law these cheeses are classified double crème
> when they contain a minimum of 60 per cent butter fat (rnatière
> grasse) per gram, and triple crème when they contain a minimum of 75
> per cent butter fat per gram.
Thanks for clearing that up but as a nit to pick, 75% says it all... per
gram confuses things. It also applies per ton.
js
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