I love the genuine curiosity and interest that comes accross in these videos. She is not just making just another video, its exploring with the cheesemakers and helping us appreciate their important craft. The pace is perfect, no rushing. Just like the cheese process. Not talking loud and fast - respecting the environment of the cheese house. Thanks for your channel!
I have been a lover of blue cheese for most of my 74 years of life. While, in the British Officers Mess in Rheindahlen I was introduced to Stilton Blue Cheese. Wow, I was hooked. I am fortunate to live in an area near Cincinnati where I can buy the cheese. It is simply the best.
Claudia I am a cheese maker in Australia and I’ve been watching your programs for several years now. I love your simple approach and understated passion for all things food. You are a true global ambassador- thank you.
No I don't. I used to teach camembert at a winery and formagerie and was featured in that website but since then I've just focussed on my own cheese making, smoking and curing. Just experimenting with duck chorizo at the moment. So far great results.
The skills of this cheesemaking team and the camaraderie heard in the background tell me this cheese is as perfect as the children of happy, “salt-of the earth” parents living in an idyllic English village could be. So now off I search the internet for a place to buy it. Thank you Claudia for your ongoing, laid back forays into the world of European food.
@@AFMR0420, Thanks for the recommendation. I located their website. Artisanal cheese makers usually provide a better product than found at US stores and are worthy of support. Unfortunately, the cheese featured here isn’t available outside the UK.
about 20 seconds into Joe talking I immediately had to figure out what the deal was with his accent, glad you covered it at the end! I can confidently say I've watched, and enjoyed, more cheese making videos from you than any other person or outlet. Great video!
A lot of hard work, patience and dedication, along with a perfected exact science to make this beautiful cheese. I immediately went on their web site to see how easy it is to order on line and was pleased to see how this is very possible. Lovely video presentation from this young lady. Thank you for introducing me to this almost lost cheese.
There is no point in my life, where I had felt even the tiniest hint of the suggestion of an interest in the making of cheese. Here though, I am so very happy that I was too fascinated to click away. A wonderful experience, and great learning. Thank you, and may the team keep growing in success👏👏👏👏👏👏👍👍👍
I watched this sitting in my car outside a supermarket in Australia. I was only going in for toilet paper, but my mouth was watering so hard that I had to stop by the cheese counter. I could obviously only get Stilton, but it did the trick. 👍
She didn't say what here favorite blue cheese is :) It would probably be a race between the French and Italian ones. But I have to say, I have a soft spot for English cheeses. There is something precious about the crumblier texture and the deeper flavors. As a teenager I'd often sit with my parents after coming home from visiting friends, joining them for some cheese and wine before bed. My father loved the raw-milk cheeses, but my mother cursed him for their stinkiness. It was nice, we got to talk more than during the busy day. People should see eating as communication again, not just slinging down their meal.
I liked this one a lot! We do something similar in my family, we all sit down to have some cheese in the afternoon around 5-6 to talk about our work day. I agree, it's such a beautiful way to connect with other people
@@TheLobstersoup The family that eats together stays together. We always ate as a family every day as it was the best time of day to catch up and keep the channels of communication open, especially when the kids were teenagers. Its a shame its not so common now, especially in the UK. Its definitely easier when you have good food to share and perhaps that is part of the problem.
I might be an American local yokal, but Stilton is better than Stichelton, or any French Blue. It's like eating dehydrated butter with veins of blue mold. Stichelton has more of a dirt flavor to it, although the piece I was eating might have been "well-aged." If I were to buy a French cheese, I would rather buy some Camembert, or a wheel of Vacherous. French Blues are far too acrid for me to enjoy. I like buttery cheeses, what can I say.
@@Canaris_Kiss As baguette lander, I mid agree with that's statement. English blues are not better, or worst, they just taste different by the way they make them compared to us. If you find French blues acrid, you probably got your hand on Roquefort, the strongest one, or Bleu de Gex. In case of, there's over a dozen of Blues here, if you come to baguette-land (again maybe?), I advice to give a try to an artisanal Fourme d'Ambert or Montbrison, or a Bleu de Bresse. Waaay softer and buttery blues that you should like ^^
I recently got to try some Stilton and wow was it an experience; I like bleu cheese, boy did this pack a wallop, I was not expecting how bold it was and how strong the aftertaste was and how creamy the cheese itself would be, it was really good and I hope I can have more eventually.
If you're lucky enough to taste Stichelton once in your life, that's already an achievement! Joe's cheese are delicate and that was one of my last discovery in terms of cheese.
Lidl Netherlands has it now as part of their international week thingie. I've had style Stilton cheeses made here but not as good as the Stilton from Lidl.
Claudia, you are the best technical cheese making reporter on the planet! Thank you again for a great video. The cheeky shot of the white board at 1:44 is brilliant 😀
Great video. Stichelton is one of my favourite cheeses and I'm lucky enough to live just 3 miles from the Welbeck Estate farm shop. As a result it's a regular in my kitchen. Thanks for sharing this.
I would like to taste Stichelton some day. It's nice to see new local producers of good food. We need that. The manufacturers of Stilton cheese in Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire applied for and received Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) status in 1996. At that time they used pasteurised milk. Stilton cheese cannot be made in Stilton village, which gave the cheese its name, because it is not in any of the three permitted counties. The Parish of Stilton applied for an amendment to the Stilton PDO but was unsuccessful. All of this was not decided by the EU but by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. Today Stilton cheese is exported to USA but not to the EU because of lacking Export Health Certificates.
This Stichelton and French St Agur are my two favorite Blue Cheeses. Thank you for covering this wonderful cheese production. I am a huge raw cremery proponent!
Say cheese. 👍 Amazing, the workmanship and dedication to make this product. I'll try to get this traditional blue cheese since I love different kinds of cheeses.
@@claudia-romeoFunny you say that. I love the stronger variety of Gorgonzola, which I like with bread and some good quality extra virgin olive oil. But as a spread I also use the creamy version. Only problem is it’s too addictive.
Your best episode that I have seen! Since I make cheese at home, I know the level of detail Joe gave was impressive. I am off to my American cheese monger! I hope to see more of your work in the future.
She is not just making just another video, its exploring with the cheesemakers and helping us appreciate their important craft. The pace is perfect, no rushing.
Thank you, Claudia. Blue cheese is one of my favorite cheeses, and this video let me in the intimacy of its production by a man that has a deep love for the craft.
This is the only English blue cheese that I eat. So glad somebody revived this type of cheese made from raw milk even though I wince a little when I see the price! A story: sometime in the mid eighties I acquired the late Major Patrick Rance’s book on English cheeses, and was driven to visit his cheese emporium in Streetly on Thames; it was then that first tasted the fabled Stilton made by Colston Bassett, which was a completely different world from creamery Stilton I had previously eaten. It was in those days still made from raw milk, and what a difference. As my visit was shortly before Xmas, and I was so moved by the experience of the tasting, I bought a whole cheese! It lasted until February the following year and was, by that time a little ‘bitey’. I feel privileged to have experienced a very great British cheese; I don’t buy Colston Bassett Stilton any more..
Hello from Ireland! I love blue cheese sauce with buffalo chicken Wings! ...in Ireland we have Cashel blue cheese made in Tipperary in midland of Ireland!
Cashel blue cheese is next level! I'll add it to my burgers, pizza, salads, make dressings with it, in a sauce for wings, eat it on crackers with a drizzle of honey on crackers or eat it on its own. By far the best blue cheese out there, I'll find an excuse to add it to anything!
Thank you Claudia for making this excellent film with so much detail on the Cheesemaking technique. As a cheesemaker is great to have these type of references, there's always some of their ways that will make it to our cheeses.
What a great video. A dry red, some pull apart bread and dipping sauce would complete my picture! I'm salivating on myself here wanting a taste of that lovely blue. Unpasteurized cheese always tastes best for us.
Wow are you filming this all by yourself? I can't wait to see you get your own program on Vice or another network, you're a natural presenter and story teller
Amazing video. Food means so so much more when you see how it is made. The love and care and skill and professionalism that goes into creating it. Thank you to the designers and workers and the filmmakers.
One of the best cheese experiences of my life was attending the Melton-Mowbray cheese festival a few years ago. Nothing better than tasting so many local cheeses and then topping it off with a famous M-M pork pie and some cider!
@@claudia-romeo just returned from a trip to Liguria (Sestri) and was looking forward to sampling all the great focaccia - unfortunately a week before we left I found out I was lactose intolerant 😢 so my 🧀indulgence turned out to be small samples thanks to lactose pills!!
Love cheese; *love* blue cheese (from our own Gorgonzola to Roquefort; from the French Bleus to Cabrales; from traditional Italian "Blu di-"s to goat and buffalo milk blue cheeses); *LOVE* Stilton 🖤; had Stichelton once in a fancy restaurant: oh my 😍
@@krysab6125 really want to buy got to save up. Right now my check doesn't even last the month through. So it's not easy. But I would love to see the UK.
I gotta find this cheese and other cheeses you have featured! They all look so good. I'm sure, somewhere near NYC, there are cheese shops that would carry something like this. I love muenster, triple creme brie, fresh Mozzarella, etc, but would like to start trying some of these exotic, less mainstream cheeses. I like my cheeses on a Charcuterie board with a variety of sliced sausages and real bread. Thank you for the great video! Gracie e ciao!
I don't even like bleu cheese but my goodness, the science and precision of this production arouses both my interest and curiosity! These type videos are perfect for my insomnia and my random knowledge repertoire! Absolutely undefeated 💪🏾❤️ great video😊
Very well produced video . My favourite was the one on the anchovies in Portugal but this is good too. I like cheese in macaroni so next time if I see blue cheese I’ll know how it was made
Absolutely love these videos. I learn about all kinds of new foods, learn new things about my favorite foods, and get to see the pride craftsmen (and women!) put into making all of these products.
I have never heard of this one, even though I live not far from Nottingham. The Leicester Handmade Cheese Co. (Sparkenhoe, near Bosworth), also make an unpasteurised stilton close look-and-tatste-alike - Sparkenhoe Blue. If you like rich and creamy blue cheese, it is fantastic. It would eat it in preference to most supermarket stilton, any day.
French butter tastes different to me than English butter. French butter tastes very slightly of brie, and I wondered if this was because they used raw milk. Also, I love the taste of stilton, but the dryness and crumblyness makes it a faff to eat. I look forward to trying stichelton. Very interesting video.
You may be picking up the difference between cultured and uncultured butter... Cultured butter is made from clabbered cream, (raw and allowed to turn naturally, or innoculated). Cultured butter is hard to find in the UK. Unless you make it yourself 😊
@@rbettsxwonderful reply! I was about to respond with similar thoughts - namely that the slight tang described as "like brie" was less about the "Frenchness" per se and more to do with the slight fermentation that happens during the making of "French butter" - like a typical middle aged codger, despite being perfectly well aware of cultured butter, had a senior moment and totally forgot it was called that so as well as neatly identifying and dicing out what the original comment was about, you also put me out of my misery😄
OK, hold on there. My first job was QA for a Stilton Dairy, many years ago. While Blue Stilton is made with pasteurised milk these days traditionally it was made with raw milk. It was only after Britain joined the EU that Stilton production went fully to pasteurised milk. So relatively recently. I can't really see it going back to being made with raw milk, its been fifty years now, but Stichelton being made with raw milk is not as big a difference as many suppose, at least traditionally. It has only been the case since the 70's.
This actually made me a little emotional. To see the dedication of the team to make a beautiful product. Well done everyone. Could we not resurrect a raw milk Stilton?
What an interesting insight into cheesmaking. I sort of knew there was a precision to it but not to the level evidenced here. Then there is the alchemy. I will try to source some of this cheese to try it out.
Whenever l see how something like cheese is made, it always amazes me how such processes were developed to produce the perfect product. It must have take many years to achieve the perfect results.
I first got into blue cheese funnily enough from a burger joint that did blue cheese burgers, they took longer to make as the cheese went on the burger after it left the griddle. I was 19years old and fell in love with cheese. My local market in Wiltshire has a lot of cheese stalls. Some farm made and some commercial. The difference is like chalk and cheese, pun intended. I have had thousands of different cheeses from all over the world but British cheese has always had the edge. Although I did eat a Peruvian cheese that was from either goat/ sheep that was exceptional at an international street festival. I come from a farming family and until around the year 2000, we had raw milk all the time, until the European union banned it. As it happens I don't live too far from Cheddar, and a visit to cheddar caves to see the cave aged cheese is bliss ! And true aged cheddar is nothing like you get in supermarkets. I could go on, but won't bore you all 😆
I appreciate the down to earth curiosity style of these videos. The context shared here feels very genuine, human, without the over sensationalism other videos might have
It's nice to hear this described without all the usual pretentious bullshit that cheesemakers often rant on about. There is *so much* about this cheese that needs to be perfect, and *so much* that is just pure art, that no one needs bs about any part of it I guess. Anyway, this is a remarkable thing that they've committed to. Talk about contributing to the joy of life!
I love the genuine curiosity and interest that comes accross in these videos. She is not just making just another video, its exploring with the cheesemakers and helping us appreciate their important craft. The pace is perfect, no rushing. Just like the cheese process. Not talking loud and fast - respecting the environment of the cheese house. Thanks for your channel!
Thank you so much! It's very important to me to give space to the people as well as the food. Thank you for watching!
Blessed are the cheesemakers...
Quiet, big nose ;-)
SPEAK UP.... cant hear a bloody thing.
I think it applies to any manufactures of dairy products.
found the american
Yuck, Blue Cheese sucks! The most hideous cheese in the world!! Hate the taste!!!
I have been a lover of blue cheese for most of my 74 years of life. While, in the British Officers Mess in Rheindahlen I was introduced to Stilton Blue Cheese. Wow, I was hooked. I am fortunate to live in an area near Cincinnati where I can buy the cheese. It is simply the best.
We have some good cheesemongers in Cincy.
If you come to France, check out the Vercors Blue ( not easy to find ). You will be astonished.
Claudia I am a cheese maker in Australia and I’ve been watching your programs for several years now. I love your simple approach and understated passion for all things food. You are a true global ambassador- thank you.
Please learn to make cheese 🙏
Claudia, i guess you have an invitation here
Thank you!
Do you have a website?
No I don't. I used to teach camembert at a winery and formagerie and was featured in that website but since then I've just focussed on my own cheese making, smoking and curing. Just experimenting with duck chorizo at the moment. So far great results.
The skills of this cheesemaking team and the camaraderie heard in the background tell me this cheese is as perfect as the children of happy, “salt-of the earth” parents living in an idyllic English village could be. So now off I search the internet for a place to buy it. Thank you Claudia for your ongoing, laid back forays into the world of European food.
I’m eating some blue from point Reyes. Woman owned company. It’s delicious, even if I am allergic.
Also, wish she’d come to California. We have some of the best cheeses, wines and olives world wide.
@@AFMR0420, Thanks for the recommendation. I located their website. Artisanal cheese makers usually provide a better product than found at US stores and are worthy of support. Unfortunately, the cheese featured here isn’t available outside the UK.
@@AFMR0420 wish the spaghetti eating WOP would piss off back to its Mussolini country
CA wines - yes - but cheese and olives - never in a month of Sundays! Sorry, my friend.@@AFMR0420
about 20 seconds into Joe talking I immediately had to figure out what the deal was with his accent, glad you covered it at the end! I can confidently say I've watched, and enjoyed, more cheese making videos from you than any other person or outlet. Great video!
I love these videos, the cheese making process of companies like these is truly an art
Hey JOE GOOD TO SEE YOU AFTER 20 years the best cheese maker I ever worked with !! Philippe
Salute to you. 20 years. Man, you must be expert and I salute you as a cheese lover!
A lot of hard work, patience and dedication, along with a perfected exact science to make this beautiful cheese. I immediately went on their web site to see how easy it is to order on line and was pleased to see how this is very possible. Lovely video presentation from this young lady. Thank you for introducing me to this almost lost cheese.
Man i love how you vibe with the gentleman. You are so natural and interested, really opens up the artisans
Thank you! Joe was great on camera too!
There is no point in my life, where I had felt even the tiniest hint of the suggestion of an interest in the making of cheese. Here though, I am so very happy that I was too fascinated to click away. A wonderful experience, and great learning. Thank you, and may the team keep growing in success👏👏👏👏👏👏👍👍👍
Thank you! Nice to see love for cheese being so contagious 🧀
I watched this sitting in my car outside a supermarket in Australia. I was only going in for toilet paper, but my mouth was watering so hard that I had to stop by the cheese counter. I could obviously only get Stilton, but it did the trick. 👍
She didn't say what here favorite blue cheese is :) It would probably be a race between the French and Italian ones. But I have to say, I have a soft spot for English cheeses. There is something precious about the crumblier texture and the deeper flavors. As a teenager I'd often sit with my parents after coming home from visiting friends, joining them for some cheese and wine before bed. My father loved the raw-milk cheeses, but my mother cursed him for their stinkiness. It was nice, we got to talk more than during the busy day. People should see eating as communication again, not just slinging down their meal.
I liked this one a lot! We do something similar in my family, we all sit down to have some cheese in the afternoon around 5-6 to talk about our work day. I agree, it's such a beautiful way to connect with other people
@@claudia-romeo Nice, glad to hear people connect in the same way with their loved ones. Thanks for sharing and liking!
@@TheLobstersoup The family that eats together stays together. We always ate as a family every day as it was the best time of day to catch up and keep the channels of communication open, especially when the kids were teenagers. Its a shame its not so common now, especially in the UK. Its definitely easier when you have good food to share and perhaps that is part of the problem.
I might be an American local yokal, but Stilton is better than Stichelton, or any French Blue. It's like eating dehydrated butter with veins of blue mold. Stichelton has more of a dirt flavor to it, although the piece I was eating might have been "well-aged." If I were to buy a French cheese, I would rather buy some Camembert, or a wheel of Vacherous. French Blues are far too acrid for me to enjoy. I like buttery cheeses, what can I say.
@@Canaris_Kiss As baguette lander, I mid agree with that's statement. English blues are not better, or worst, they just taste different by the way they make them compared to us.
If you find French blues acrid, you probably got your hand on Roquefort, the strongest one, or Bleu de Gex. In case of, there's over a dozen of Blues here, if you come to baguette-land (again maybe?), I advice to give a try to an artisanal Fourme d'Ambert or Montbrison, or a Bleu de Bresse. Waaay softer and buttery blues that you should like ^^
I can't express enough just how much I loved watching this process and how it made me respect Blue Cheese more overall.
I recently got to try some Stilton and wow was it an experience; I like bleu cheese, boy did this pack a wallop, I was not expecting how bold it was and how strong the aftertaste was and how creamy the cheese itself would be, it was really good and I hope I can have more eventually.
If you're lucky enough to taste Stichelton once in your life, that's already an achievement! Joe's cheese are delicate and that was one of my last discovery in terms of cheese.
Where do you buy the cheese??
Lidl Netherlands has it now as part of their international week thingie. I've had style Stilton cheeses made here but not as good as the Stilton from Lidl.
Claudia, you are the best technical cheese making reporter on the planet! Thank you again for a great video. The cheeky shot of the white board at 1:44 is brilliant 😀
Great video. Stichelton is one of my favourite cheeses and I'm lucky enough to live just 3 miles from the Welbeck Estate farm shop. As a result it's a regular in my kitchen. Thanks for sharing this.
You're lucky to live so close to them!
I would like to taste Stichelton some day. It's nice to see new local producers of good food. We need that.
The manufacturers of Stilton cheese in Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire applied for and received Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) status in 1996. At that time they used pasteurised milk. Stilton cheese cannot be made in Stilton village, which gave the cheese its name, because it is not in any of the three permitted counties. The Parish of Stilton applied for an amendment to the Stilton PDO but was unsuccessful. All of this was not decided by the EU but by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. Today Stilton cheese is exported to USA but not to the EU because of lacking Export Health Certificates.
My understanding is that Stilton cheese was not originally made in the village of Stilton, but sold in a coaching inn there.
/:
Great examples of the retarded logic that stifles reason & culture, complements of government.
We got it in Ireland around Christmas.
You can get Stilton in Germany for sure, so maybe they sorted out the export issue.
*I LOVE THIS STORY!*
_When food finds its roots in the culture, so it becomes medicine_
_Thank you, Claudia, for this wonderful video!_
_BIG LIKE_
This Stichelton and French St Agur are my two favorite Blue Cheeses. Thank you for covering this wonderful cheese production. I am a huge raw cremery proponent!
Thank you for watching!
Say cheese. 👍 Amazing, the workmanship and dedication to make this product. I'll try to get this traditional blue cheese since I love different kinds of cheeses.
Another fascinating exploration of a culinary topic! Thank you, Ms. Romero! 👏👏👏👏
Top quality video - thank you! Colston Bassett Stilton is my favourite blue cheese so far (Gorgonzola close 2nd). Have to try Stichelton now, for sure
Thank you! I have a soft spot for the sweet, creamy variety of gorgonzola. It's amazing as a spread!
@@claudia-romeoFunny you say that. I love the stronger variety of Gorgonzola, which I like with bread and some good quality extra virgin olive oil. But as a spread I also use the creamy version. Only problem is it’s too addictive.
Your best episode that I have seen! Since I make cheese at home, I know the level of detail Joe gave was impressive. I am off to my American cheese monger! I hope to see more of your work in the future.
Thank you!
She is not just making just another video, its exploring with the cheesemakers and helping us appreciate their important craft. The pace is perfect, no rushing.
Very cool story! I come from a family with lots of Swiss dairy farmers in its ancient history, so this is fascinating.
I Love that there are still people producing food like this
Thank you, Claudia. Blue cheese is one of my favorite cheeses, and this video let me in the intimacy of its production by a man that has a deep love for the craft.
This is the only English blue cheese that I eat. So glad somebody revived this type of cheese made from raw milk even though I wince a little when I see the price! A story: sometime in the mid eighties I acquired the late Major Patrick Rance’s book on English cheeses, and was driven to visit his cheese emporium in Streetly on Thames; it was then that first tasted the fabled Stilton made by Colston Bassett, which was a completely different world from creamery Stilton I had previously eaten. It was in those days still made from raw milk, and what a difference. As my visit was shortly before Xmas, and I was so moved by the experience of the tasting, I bought a whole cheese! It lasted until February the following year and was, by that time a little ‘bitey’. I feel privileged to have experienced a very great British cheese; I don’t buy Colston Bassett Stilton any more..
ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL, THANK YOU!!!
Claudia could be showing us a video of how to make the perfect dirt and mud pie and I would watch it.
Absolutely agree))))
She radiates inner beauty!
She’d be interviewing someone about the method that would say something so right about tradition or loss of tradition it’d earn a thumbs up from me.
simp
Same here
Hello from Ireland! I love blue cheese sauce with buffalo chicken Wings! ...in Ireland we have Cashel blue cheese made in Tipperary in midland of Ireland!
Cashel blue cheese is next level! I'll add it to my burgers, pizza, salads, make dressings with it, in a sauce for wings, eat it on crackers with a drizzle of honey on crackers or eat it on its own. By far the best blue cheese out there, I'll find an excuse to add it to anything!
Hello! This is wonderful, I would like to try this cheese!
@@claudia-romeo hi Claudia, next week I am in Torino for 5 days! Any specific good food recommend? Thanks
@@danh_yummy_foodgnocchi al Castelmagno cheese and salsiccia di Bra if you can find some! Both soon on this channel😎
You also have the incredible Crozier Blue in Ireland.
Love your videos of cheese Claudia! Waiting for next one :)
Thank you Claudia for making this excellent film with so much detail on the Cheesemaking technique. As a cheesemaker is great to have these type of references, there's always some of their ways that will make it to our cheeses.
What a great video. A dry red, some pull apart bread and dipping sauce would complete my picture! I'm salivating on myself here wanting a taste of that lovely blue. Unpasteurized cheese always tastes best for us.
Wow are you filming this all by yourself? I can't wait to see you get your own program on Vice or another network, you're a natural presenter and story teller
Thank you for your support🙏🏼
The cheesemaker comes across like a lovely chap who's great to be around.
Amazing video. Food means so so much more when you see how it is made. The love and care and skill and professionalism that goes into creating it. Thank you to the designers and workers and the filmmakers.
You doing great job showing traditions of cheese making. 🎉 keep posting new videos...
Damn, tempting to make the trip to England to taste it!
One of the best cheese experiences of my life was attending the Melton-Mowbray cheese festival a few years ago. Nothing better than tasting so many local cheeses and then topping it off with a famous M-M pork pie and some cider!
On my list!!
@@claudia-romeo just returned from a trip to Liguria (Sestri) and was looking forward to sampling all the great focaccia - unfortunately a week before we left I found out I was lactose intolerant 😢 so my 🧀indulgence turned out to be small samples thanks to lactose pills!!
@@Nafregamisrocanoboh no, I’m so sorry to hear that! I hope you made up for it with some focaccia and trofie al pesto 🍝
What is a pork pie??
Fantastic, I never heard of this cheese before! I just ordered some from their website. Thank you Claudia ❤
I just found this channel. I loved Claudia from her food videos with another channel. This is better. It adds the passion.
I love the attention to detail. True artisan and this needs to be protected. Thank you for enlightening me on the provenance of this cheese.
What, having an American make it?
Love cheese; *love* blue cheese (from our own Gorgonzola to Roquefort; from the French Bleus to Cabrales; from traditional Italian "Blu di-"s to goat and buffalo milk blue cheeses); *LOVE* Stilton 🖤; had Stichelton once in a fancy restaurant: oh my 😍
Joe has the perfect mindset for his field of work. The love for his craft is inspiring. I hope I remember about stichelton next time I go to the UK.
I love cheese,but when i tried a aged cheddar imported from the uk wow! So much flavor. I got to go to the uk and try various cheeses.
Do it! We make some lovely cheeses here, all round the country
@@krysab6125 really want to buy got to save up. Right now my check doesn't even last the month through. So it's not easy. But I would love to see the UK.
14:39 Excellent music choice for the very best part… the tasting. That looks amazing. 😍
Thank you for this very interesting and informative video. I don't miss much about the Uk but when I see things like this it makes me a bit homesick.
Claudia is back :D
I’m old enough to remember proper, unpasteurised Stilton, would love to try this one.
I gotta find this cheese and other cheeses you have featured! They all look so good. I'm sure, somewhere near NYC, there are cheese shops that would carry something like this. I love muenster, triple creme brie, fresh Mozzarella, etc, but would like to start trying some of these exotic, less mainstream cheeses. I like my cheeses on a Charcuterie board with a variety of sliced sausages and real bread.
Thank you for the great video! Gracie e ciao!
Now I need to buy a Stilton again - so tasty, I love it.
Greetings from Ukraine, I love cheese, thank you for helping to discover new varieties of cheese.
great video, Claudia! Thank you
Thank you!
Can’t believe I watched this whole video! I love good traditional food.
wow that was super interesting to watch,,i really enjoyed this short documentary very much!...now im dying to try this Stichelton version..
One of your best vids yet Claudia. Very in-depth! Thanx!
very cool. very glad to see Claudia now has her own channel. She has always done an amazing job with these videos.
What a nice video! Joe and his team seems to have a great chemistry (pun intended) and your presentation is excellent.
Thank you!
Like very much. Thank you. Have loved Stilton all my life. Will want to try and get hold of the Stichelton.
Claudia can you take me to that man, i love how he expresses his art
I don't even like bleu cheese but my goodness, the science and precision of this production arouses both my interest and curiosity! These type videos are perfect for my insomnia and my random knowledge repertoire! Absolutely undefeated 💪🏾❤️ great video😊
Thank you for watching!
on a note not related to cheese, his voice is so lovely to listen to!
Joe and Claudia, thanks for this great story.
Very well produced video . My favourite was the one on the anchovies in Portugal but this is good too. I like cheese in macaroni so next time if I see blue cheese I’ll know how it was made
Wonderful video. Extraordinary man and presenter. Thank you.
What a fantastic bloke. Video is superb. I generally have little time for Americans but I make a total exception and exemption here.
Absolutely love these videos. I learn about all kinds of new foods, learn new things about my favorite foods, and get to see the pride craftsmen (and women!) put into making all of these products.
Thank you 🥳🥳
My mouth is just watering. Man, I love great blue cheese!
I have never heard of this one, even though I live not far from Nottingham.
The Leicester Handmade Cheese Co. (Sparkenhoe, near Bosworth), also make an unpasteurised stilton close look-and-tatste-alike - Sparkenhoe Blue. If you like rich and creamy blue cheese, it is fantastic. It would eat it in preference to most supermarket stilton, any day.
Oh God that's some beautiful cheese!!!!😊
Always enjoyed your work and learned so much from it! Glad to see you have branched out on your own. Thank you!
Mille grazie! Wonderful video. I hope. Can find some soon.
As a blue cheese ever I was wowed. IT Looked so good. . Thank you . Blessings
Great episode as always!
Thank you!
Lovely, always enjoy when it sounds like the host is smiling
Enjoyed learning about it.
French butter tastes different to me than English butter. French butter tastes very slightly of brie, and I wondered if this was because they used raw milk. Also, I love the taste of stilton, but the dryness and crumblyness makes it a faff to eat. I look forward to trying stichelton. Very interesting video.
You may be picking up the difference between cultured and uncultured butter... Cultured butter is made from clabbered cream, (raw and allowed to turn naturally, or innoculated). Cultured butter is hard to find in the UK. Unless you make it yourself 😊
@@rbettsxwonderful reply! I was about to respond with similar thoughts - namely that the slight tang described as "like brie" was less about the "Frenchness" per se and more to do with the slight fermentation that happens during the making of "French butter" - like a typical middle aged codger, despite being perfectly well aware of cultured butter, had a senior moment and totally forgot it was called that so as well as neatly identifying and dicing out what the original comment was about, you also put me out of my misery😄
@@rbettsx Interesting, thanks :)
@@mrkiplingreallywasanexceed8311 Just to clarify; I meant butter bought in France, not "French Butter" from sainsburys.
Depends on what the cows eat. French butter is more yellow than italian or english one. Is more aromatic but more fat
I don’t understand how people refuse to like this stuff. Ever since I was a kid I knew it was mold but even still I didn’t care and loved it
OK, hold on there. My first job was QA for a Stilton Dairy, many years ago. While Blue Stilton is made with pasteurised milk these days traditionally it was made with raw milk. It was only after Britain joined the EU that Stilton production went fully to pasteurised milk. So relatively recently.
I can't really see it going back to being made with raw milk, its been fifty years now, but Stichelton being made with raw milk is not as big a difference as many suppose, at least traditionally. It has only been the case since the 70's.
This actually made me a little emotional. To see the dedication of the team to make a beautiful product. Well done everyone. Could we not resurrect a raw milk Stilton?
This is raw milk Stilton, but they're not legally allowed to name it as such.
Wow that is incredibly labor intensive!
Claudia! Glad I found your work again. You're awesome!
Thank you!
What an interesting insight into cheesmaking. I sort of knew there was a precision to it but not to the level evidenced here. Then there is the alchemy. I will try to source some of this cheese to try it out.
Whenever l see how something like cheese is made, it always amazes me how such processes were developed to produce the perfect product. It must have take many years to achieve the perfect results.
I first got into blue cheese funnily enough from a burger joint that did blue cheese burgers, they took longer to make as the cheese went on the burger after it left the griddle. I was 19years old and fell in love with cheese.
My local market in Wiltshire has a lot of cheese stalls. Some farm made and some commercial. The difference is like chalk and cheese, pun intended.
I have had thousands of different cheeses from all over the world but British cheese has always had the edge. Although I did eat a Peruvian cheese that was from either goat/ sheep that was exceptional at an international street festival.
I come from a farming family and until around the year 2000, we had raw milk all the time, until the European union banned it.
As it happens I don't live too far from Cheddar, and a visit to cheddar caves to see the cave aged cheese is bliss ! And true aged cheddar is nothing like you get in supermarkets.
I could go on, but won't bore you all 😆
Bleu cheese is my favorite. Always will be. Never tried this kind yet..yet. These guys are nerds of cheese, and i love it.
I appreciate the down to earth curiosity style of these videos. The context shared here feels very genuine, human, without the over sensationalism other videos might have
Wonderful feedback! Thank you
It's nice to hear this described without all the usual pretentious bullshit that cheesemakers often rant on about. There is *so much* about this cheese that needs to be perfect, and *so much* that is just pure art, that no one needs bs about any part of it I guess. Anyway, this is a remarkable thing that they've committed to. Talk about contributing to the joy of life!
Just watching the video my mouth started salivating.
Thank you for another fascinating and informative post. I enjoy your channel.
thank you for watching 🙏🏼
that cheese is beautiful. i share a similar passion but in cultivation.
for something to become great, you gotta love every aspect of its process
This cheese looks really brilliant, can't wait to try it
Wow Claudia is for real into cheese, what a dream position. Thank you for the good work.
Another fantastic episode.
Thank you!
I enjoyed this video very much. I read some complaints about background music, but tbh I didn't even notice the music. It blended in so well.
Thank you!
Fascinating! Would love to try this lovely cheese.
Grazie mille Claudia per il bel video.