Monday, 24 August 2009
Cheese of the Month - Mimolette
The cheese I really wanted to talk about in this post is a Maroilles. It's a cow's milk cheese made in North-Eastern France and boasts every characteristic I find irresistible in processed milk protein: Soft and spongy, unpasturised, washed-rind, and very, very smelly. The example we were served in a damp basement of La Capsule, a bar in the center of Lille specialising in local artisan beers, was wonderfully tasty, with a deep fresh farmy flavour and nutty aftertaste. I was told the rind was washed in the local beer, local really meaning local in this part of the world where a beer is rarely found on sale more than 20km from the brewery. So a traditional artisan cheese, hand-made and washed with local produce, soft and squishy and smelling like death. I was in heaven.
But I couldn't allow this Cheese of the Month to be yet another pungent, washed-rind cheese. It may be my personal favourite style but it does a disservice to all the other equally praiseworthy cheeses out there to be continually banging on about them. So in order to provide a bit of balance, this is what the French call a Mimolette:
Bearing a very superficial resemblance to an Edam, produced as a ball but with a shockingly orange hue (and thankfully tasting a lot better than the rubbery Edam), Mimolette is a salty, nutty cheese with a solid flesh which hardens and develops a richer flavour when aged. The specimen we tried was "extra-vielle" (very old) and boasted a lovely crumbly texture and strong flavour. You may also know this cheese as "old Amsterdam", which I've spotted in a number of the better cheese shops in London and is pretty much the same style, only (you guessed it) produced in the Netherlands. I only mention this because the Netherlands are a bit of a black hole food-wise (Bill Bailey once riffed very amusingly on their tendency towards cheese and ham toasties and variances thereof) and need all the encouragement they can get.
Another point the Mimolette has in its favour is its availability in London - I've seen it in Whole Foods, Hamish Johnston and La Fromagerie whereas the Maroilles has a much lower profile, although admittedly if you can't find a Mariolles I can't see why you wouldn't be just as happy with a Stinking Bishop or Ardrahan. In fact, why not get them all and see which you prefer. I'd love to see the faces on your fellow commuters when you bring back that little lot on the tube in summer.
The reason I was in Lille, in case you were wondering, was that I was invited by We Are Social, who are working with Eurostar to publicise their "Little Break, Big Difference" campaign. If the purpose of the day was to convince us that you really could fit a meaningful amount of tourism into a single day along with a return journey from St. Pancras then mission very much accomplished - although if I was to do it again under my own steam (and wallet) I probably would have started a couple of hours later and stayed in France for dinner. I have nothing in particular against 5am starts but by the time the beer and cheese tasting started mid-afternoon I was in danger of slumping head-first into my Crayeux de Roncq. Still, what a way to go.
More details and comprehensive photographic evidence of the day can be found elsewhere, and if you want to construct your own mini-break to Lille then return tickets start at £55. It's a smashing little town, well worth a visit if you have even a passing interest in French produce and cuisine, and is only 1h20m away on the Eurostar. Let me know before you do, though, as I may want you to pick up some cheese for me.
Mariolles 8/10
Mimolette 7/10
Mimolette photo courtesy of Wikipedia
Cheese selection from Philippe Olivier, photo courtesy of Food Stories
A great cheese! But you don't mention the mites that eat the rind of the older Mimolettes.
ReplyDeleteA great cheese! But you don't mention the mites that eat the rind of the older Mimolettes.
ReplyDeleteMmmm lovely mimolette.
ReplyDeleteBut Maroilles is one of my very favourite cheeses so post away!
I really enjoyed the cheese tasting and I have to say my fave was the soft stinky one too - the stinkier the better for me. Of course I appreciate your attempts to vary the cheese of the month though ;) What a great day, although completely knackering, as you say.
ReplyDeletep.s I got up at 4! 4AM! 4!
Welcome back, cheese of the month!
ReplyDeleteSo firstly, love how you did "an angle" on the Little Break. I've been thinking of mine, but I didn't take enough pictures to make most angles work.
Secondly, I have to go to Amsterdam next week for work and I know that for breakfast, I'll have ham and cheese and bread and for lunch I'll have ham and cheese and bread. My only hope is that this will make me grow to giant heights of Dutchness.
I loved the Maroilles! In fact, I was addicted to it. I must find it here in London...I have had the Mimolette before, but much preferred the smelly one!
ReplyDeleteIt *was* a lovely cheese (although the Maroilles won for me - it's one of my favourites). I've seen Mimolette served using a circular shaver in a couple of restaurants in the north of France; it's one of those cheeses which is really good eaten in very thin pieces, for some reason.
ReplyDeleteMy understanding is that a Mimolette is given a damn good brush before being put in shops, which is meant to remove all the live mites and their dead friends. This sounds a bit optimistic to me, but I appreciate the effort!
"a traditional artisan cheese, hand-made and washed with local produce, soft and squishy and smelling like death. I was in heaven." This sentence made me laugh so hard! It is true that we tend to love foods that are very specific to our own palates! Lille sounds lovely, after this recommendation I'm going to keep my eyes peeled for Mimolette. xo Naimah
ReplyDeleteCoolBlackChef.co.uk
Nice post :) Actually Mimolette was my favourite cheese but softer orange one... I think it was Maroilles was delicious too :)
ReplyDeleteAh yes, allegedly Charles de Gaulle's favourite...
ReplyDeleteHello Libby,
ReplyDeleteGreat post about Mimolette! it is a very versatile cheese that you can use everywhere, from Mac & Cheese to Gougères Bourguignonnes. it gives such a nice taste to everything! A must!
Couldn't agree more. The smellier the better. Thanks for the useful info. Didn't know that the rind of Maroilles was washed in beer,
ReplyDeleteThe Greasy Spoon
God, they were great cheeses. I adored the maroilles. Welcome back cheese of the month! :)
ReplyDelete