Showing posts with label cheddar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheddar. Show all posts

Tuesday

Cheese Trees or Snowman

Pesto, Pine nuts, Kale

Recipe by: Betty Crocker

Serves: 1 Servings

Ingredients:

3 pk (8 oz) cream cheese;
-softened
4 c Cheddar cheese (16 ounces);
-shredded
2 tb Pesto
1 tb Grated onions
1/4 ts Ground mustard
2 dr Red pepper sauce; (up to 3)

Instructions:

-----------------HAVE READY AT SERVING TIME-------------

1/4 c Pine nuts or sliced almonds
2 tb Chopped red bell pepper
Assorted crackers
Kale or Bibb lettuce

Mix cream cheese and Cheddar cheese; divide in half. Mix pesto into 1 half;
mix onion, mustard and pepper sauce into other half. Cover each halh and
refrigerate about 4 hours or until firm enough to shape.

Place cheese mixtures on cookie sheet. Shape each half into cone shape to
resemble Christmas tree. Wrap each tree and freeze..Can be stored up to 1
month...

12 hours before serving, remove trees from freezer. Thaw in wrapper in
refrigerator. Just before serving, roll trees in parsley, pressing parsley
evenly onto trees. Press pine nuts onto trees in string form for garland.
Press bell pepper pieces onto trees for ornaments...Top each tree with star
shape cut from lemon peel.... Dress up the trees with a tree skirt using
kale or Bibb lettuce.

For Snowman: Omit parsley,pine nuts and bell pepper. Mix cheeses together
and divide into 3 equal parts. Combine 2 parts to equal two-thirds pf
mixture; mix in pesto. Mix onion, mustard and pepper sauce into remaining
one-third mixture. Refrigerate as directed. Shape each cheese mixture into
ball; roll in 1/3 cup finely chopped blanched almonds. Wrap each ball and
freeze.

12 hours before serving, remove balls from freezer. Thaw in wrappers.
Arrange balls on serving plate with smaller ball on top for head of
snowman, flatten slightly. Insert pretzel sticks for arms. Decorate as
desired with sliced olives, capers, chopped bell peppers,ect...

NOTES : Makes 2 trees or 1 snowman....


Readmore »»

Monday

Cheese and Bacon Pinwheels

Rye bread, jelly roll


Serves: 28 Servings

Ingredients:

1 c Shredded cheddar cheese
1/4 c Crisp bacon; crumbled
1/4 c Margarine; softened
2 tb Green onions; chopped
7 sl Rye bread; crusts removed

Instructions:

In a small bowl, stir together all ingredients except bread. Flatten each
bread slice with a rolling pin. Spread each slice with 1 1/2 Tablespoon
cheese mixture.

Roll up jelly roll style. Place 4 toothpicks into each piece, then using a
serrated knife, cut into 4 pices. Place on a cookie sheet.

Heat boriler, and broil for 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 minutes or until lightly browned
and cheese is melted.

Serve immediately.

Readmore »»

Tuesday

Baked Mac 'n' Cheese

casserole,

Serves: 2 Servings

Ingredients:

1 cn Campbell's Condensed Cheddar
-Cheese Soup (10.75 oz)
1/2 cn Milk (use soup can)
1 ts Prepared mustard
1/8 ts Pepper
2 c Hot cooked elbow or medium
-shell macaroni (~1.5 c dry)
2 ts Margarine or butter, melted
1 tb Dry bread crumbs

Instructions:

*** In 1 quart casserole, combine soup, milk, mustard and pepper. Stir
in macaroni.

*** In cup, combine margarine and bread crumbs. Sprinkle over
casserole.

*** Bake at 400'F. 20 minutes or until hot and bubbling.

Makes 2 1/2 cups, 2 main dish or 4 side dish servings.

Readmore »»

Cheddar cheese

Cheddar cheese, Farmhouse, Colby


Cheddar cheese is a pale yellow, sharp-tasting cheese originally made in the English village of Cheddar, in Somerset. Cheddar-style cheeses are produced in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, the United States, South Africa, New Zealand, Australia (where it is often called ´´Tasty cheese´´) and Sweden. Much of this cheese is mass-produced and quality varies enormously. The strong flavor develops over time, with a taste diverse enough that food packaging will usually indicate a strength ("mild" to "strong/sharp/mature"), or the maturation period.

Cheddar has perhaps always been the most popular cheese in England. A pipe roll of King Henry II records the purchase of 10,420 pounds (avoirdupois pounds and troy pounds did not exist then, probably tower pounds or about 3650 kg) at a farthing per pound (£3 per tonne).

Cheddaring refers to an additional step in the production of cheddar-style cheese where, after heating, the curd is cut into cubes to drain the whey, then stacked and turned.

Cheddar cheese has become too widely produced to have a ´protected designated origin´. However, the European Union recognises ´West Country Farmhouse Cheddar´ as a protected designation of origin. To meet this standard the cheese must be made in the traditional manner
using local ingredients in four designated counties of south-west England.

Like many cheeses, the colour of cheddar is often modified by the use of food colourings. Annatto, extracted from the tropical achiote tree, is frequently used to give cheddar an orange colour. The origins of this practice are clouded, but the three leading theories appear to be to allow the cheese to have a consistent colour from batch to batch, to assist the purchaser in identifying the type of cheese when it is unlabelled, or to identify the cheese´s region of origin.

In the United States, cheddar cheese comes in several varieties, including mild, medium, sharp, New York Style, Colby/Longhorn, white, and Vermont. New York Style Cheddar cheese is a particularly sharp cheddar cheese, sometimes with a hint of smoke. It is usually slightly softer than milder cheddar cheese. Colby/Longhorn Cheddar cheese has a mild to medium flavor. The curds are still distinct, often marbled in color, varying from cream to yellow. Cheddar that has not been coloured is frequently labelled as "white cheddar" or "Vermont cheddar", regardless of whether it was produced in the state of Vermont.

Cheddar is one of several products used by the United States Department of Agriculture to track the dairy industry; reports are issued weekly detailing prices and production quantities. The state of Wisconsin produces the most cheddar in the United States; other centers of production include upstate New York, Vermont, and Tillamook, Oregon.

Cheddar is also a good source of vitamin B12 and therefore recommendable for vegetarians. A slice of vegetarian cheddar cheese (40g) contains about 0.5 µg of vitamin B12.
Readmore »»
Bookmark and Share