Tag cheese

Gooey, Stinky, Creamy and Salty

cheese plateDo you drool at the mention of Gruyere?
Does your heart skip a beat, when you catch a whiff of Parmigiano Reggiano?
Do you often dream of swimming in a pool of melted brie?

If you answered “yes” to any of these, or even remotely entertained the notion of question #3, have we got the cooking class for you!

Cooking for Cheese Lovers is the ultimate cooking class for those that share an obsession with the gooey, stinky, creamy and salty delicacy.

Cooking for Cheese Lovers
Friday, March 27, 2009
6:30 – 9:00 PM
The Cheese School of San Francisco: 2155 Powell Street, 2nd Floor
$95 per person

You’ll watch in amazement as The Cheese School of San Francisco cheese instructor Wil Edwards shows you how to make fresh a ricotta cheese. With your fellow cheesemates, you’ll taste and discuss your way through a bevy of local and artisan cheeses hand-picked by the Cheese School’s team of experts.

More gooey fun ensues as you step into the kitchen with us for a hands-on cooking lesson, where you’ll learn to make positively cheesey gourmet appetizers dreamed up by Parties That Cook’s chefs. Each savory morsel is designed with a unique cheese profile in-mind:

Crostini of Homemade Ricotta and Red Bell Pepper Jam
Cabrales Phyllo Purses with Sherry-Raisin Dipping Sauce
Endive with Caramelized Onions, Apricot Jam and Cowgirl Creamery Red Hawk
Crab and Shrimp Quesadillas with Pumpkin Seed Salsa and Cotija
Mini Sliders with Smoky Cheddar
Goat Cheese Amaretti Cake with Pomegranate Glazed Raspberries

Once the cooking class is over, relax and enjoy the appetizers you’ve made with… what else, but WINE! The ultimate bi-fecta of culinary ecstacy. We’ll also send you home with digital photos and recipes from your decadent evening affair.

Don’t miss this melty, crumbly, oozey Cooking for Cheese Lovers class! Space is limited to 40 guests, so sign up yourself and all your cheese lover friends today! Vegetarian options can be accommodated with advance notice.

Click here for more info.
Buy tickets online or call Parties That Cook at (415) 441-3595.

Shopping Local: Highland Ave. in Somerville, MA

Contributed by Guest Blogger Katherine Hunt

I just finished a little pre-writing snack: two slices of bread, toasted, spread with cheese. Simple, but made with extraordinary components. The bread contained kalamata olives, roasted red peppers, and garlic, and emerged from the oven only a few hours before I picked it up. It came from When Pigs Fly bakery, on Highland Ave. in Somerville, Massachusetts, which I pass on my walk home from work.

When I stopped in tonight, the woman behind the counter greeted me, as she usually does, with samples from three or four different fresh-baked loaves. I tried a slice of the apple-cinnamon, which tasted spicy and sweet, but still like bread, not dessert. Then I picked out my loaf from selections that ranged from the mundane – sourdough, multigrain, whole wheat – to the exotic – potato, rosemary and chives; green olive and sweet pepper. Good, basic bread makes the perfect blank canvas for such culinary creativity, and I’m always delighted to try whatever concoction the staff of When Pigs Fly has to offer me.

Then, I ventured next-door to Kick Ass Cupcakes and Dairy Bar for more provisions. The concept of this place, as its name suggests, approaches perfection: they sell fresh-made cupcakes and dairy products. And that’s about it. The dairy products come from local sources: Vermont and New Hampshire farms, mostly.

This particular evening, I bought a small container of soft goat cheese and a half-gallon of skim milk, which, I swear, tastes better than the watery stuff I get from most other stores. Then, I picked out a pair of cupcakes, even though they weren’t technically on my list of staples: one of my favorites, the mojito flavor, which tastes like it has a shot of rum baked into it, and the other, a reliably delicious vanilla.

These two stores share a mission – they focus on the quality of what they sell, not the variety of their products. And while I appreciate the quality, I love them most for their specificity (not that you can totally separate the two). I love that, on my walk from the train to my apartment each day, I can stop in at a few small stores, without massive lines and an overwhelming array of selections, and get my milk and bread. And, of course, my dessert.

I feel like I’m shopping in an older model, before chain grocery stores consolidated bakers, butchers, and produce vendors under one roof. This strip of Highland Ave. isn’t perfect – no stores sell meat or veggies, for example. But it provides an easy, local, delicious supplement to the big grocery store a few blocks away, and for that I am grateful. And above all, I am grateful for my mojito cupcake.

Boston-based freelance writer and editor Katherine Hunt may be reached at huntkr@gmail.com.