Goat cheese

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Goat Cheese

Goat cheese, or chevre (/ˈʃɛvrə/ or /ˈʃɛv/; from the French word for goat), is cheese made from goat's milk. Goat cheeses are made in a wide variety of styles, from soft fresh cheese to hard aged cheese.

Properties[]

Cow's milk and goat's milk have similar overall fat contents.[1] However, the higher proportion of medium-chain fatty acids such as caproic, caprylic and capric acid in goat's milk contributes to the characteristic tart flavor of goat's milk cheese. (These fatty acids take their name from the Latin for "goat": capra.)[2] It also has a lower lactose content than cow's milk.

Goat cheese has been made for thousands of years and was probably one of the earliest made dairy products. In the simplest form, goat cheese is made by allowing raw milk to naturally curdle, and then draining and pressing the curds. Other techniques use an acid (such as vinegar or lemon juice) or rennet to coagulate the milk. Soft goat cheeses are made in kitchens worldwide, with cooks hanging bundles of cheesecloth filled with curds in the warm kitchen for several days to drain and cure. If the cheese is to be aged, it is often brined so it will form a rind, and then stored in a cool cheese cave for several months to cure.

Goat cheese softens when exposed to heat, although it does not melt in the same way many cow cheeses do. Firmer goat cheeses with rinds are sometimes baked in an oven to create a softer, more viscous texture.

List of goat cheeses by region[]

Asia[]

China[]

Japan[]

  • Yagi Cheese is a goat cheese made in Japan.[clarification needed]

Europe[]

Eastern Mediterranean[]

  • Labneh is a goat, cow or sheep yogurt cheese consumed in many parts of the world including the Eastern Mediterranean. It is often eaten with olive oil, olives, zaatar and fresh vegetables on flatbread for breakfast.

France[]

Chevre with lavender and wild fennel

France produces a great number of goat's milk cheeses, especially in the Loire Valley and Poitou, where goats are said to have been brought by the Moors in the 8th century.[3][better source needed] Examples of French chèvres include Bucheron, Chabis, Chavroux, Clochette, Couronne Lochoise, Crottin de Chavignol (largest produced goat cheese AOC), Faisselle, Montrachet (Burgundy), Pélardon, Picodon, Pouligny Saint-Pierre, Rocamadour, Sainte-Maure de Touraine, Chabichou du Poitou, Valençay, and Pyramide.

It is sometimes served hot as chèvre chaud.

Belgium[]

Belgium produces several goat cheeses, most of them soft cheeses and some half-hard types. Some artisanal farm house cheeses are made with raw, organic goat milk: in Lummen (province of Limburg), Farm Polle in Lichtaart (province of Antwerp) and Ferme du Chemin Chataigne in Ayeneux (province of Liège). While others are made by artisanal producers with raw or pasteurised, organic goat milk: the fromagerie Gros Chêne in Mean (Ardennes) and Het Hinkelspel in Ghent (East-Flanders).

Greece[]

Italy[]

  • Caprino is a term encompassing at least 33 different goat's milk cheeses produced in Italy, equivalent to the French chèvre
  • Acidino (tr. slightly acid), produced in Veneto
  • Agrì di Valtorta, produced in Lombardy
  • Formaggio di capra di Lagundo (or Algunder Ziegenkäse), produced in South Tyrol
  • Canestrato di Moliterno Stagionato in Fondaco, produced mixing sheep and goat milk in Apulia and Basilicata
  • Cavrin (or Cevrin) di Coazze, produced in Piedmont
  • Ircano, produced in Sardinia
  • Salignon, a smoked cheese produced in the lower Aosta Valley

Malta[]

A selection of fresh and cured ġbejna
  • Ġbejna is a soft goat or sheep cheese. Various types are found which include; fresh (friski or tal-ilma), sundried (moxxa, bajda or t'Għawdex), salt cured (maħsula), peppered (tal-bżar) seasoned (imħawra).

Netherlands[]

  • The Westerkwartier, the region west of the city of Groningen, has a relatively large concentration of organic goat-cheese farms. Well known goat cheeses from this region are Machedoux and Quiorio, brie-like cheeses served in restaurants all over the Netherlands and in Belgium and northern Germany. In other parts of the Netherlands, goat cheese is usually made in the Gouda style.

Norway[]

  • Geitost, which means goat cheese, is brown and made from goat milk and whey. You can also buy other brown cheeses, for example Brunost ("Brown cheese") which are made from cow milk whey, goat milk whey or a combination of both.
  • Snøfrisk is a fresh goat milk cheese that comes in different varieties including natural, chanterelles, herbs, and various other additions.

Portugal[]

Goat cheese from Yeghegnadzor, Armenia

Spain[]

Turkey[]

  • Tulum Cheese is a goat cheese made in Turkey.
  • Sepet Cheese and Kaşar Cheese are also produced from goat milk and marketing as Goat Sepet Cheese and Goat Kaşar Cheese.
  • Beyaz Peynir ("White Cheese" in Turkish) is a brine cheese produced from sheep, cow, or goat milk and when it is made of 100% goat milk, then it is also categorized as Goat Cheese in Turkey and named as Coat White Cheese.
    • Ezine Cheese, originating from Ezine, Çanakkale, is a type of Beyaz Peynir including at least 40% goat milk according to the geographical protection rules.[4]

United Kingdom[]

  • Pantysgawn is a Welsh goat's milk cheese.
  • Capricorn is a Somerset goat's milk cheese.

Americas[]

United States[]

  • Kunik is produced at Nettle Meadow Goat Farm in Thurman, New York and made from goat and Jersey cow milk blend, mold-ripened with similar properties to Brie.
  • Humboldt Fog is a mold-ripened goat cheese with a central line of edible white ash made in California by Cypress Grove Chevre

Venezuela[]

  • In Venezuela, specifically in the states of Falcón, Lara and the population of San Jose de Turgua in Miranda state, many types of goat cheese are produced using traditional methods.[citation needed] A variety of artisanal cheeses are manufactured by smaller producers.[5]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Content of Milk by Species". havemilk.com.
  2. ^ "Capric acid", Chemical LAND21.com. Accessed 26 June 2008.
  3. ^ "Get your goat you've pulled..." Impressions Magazine. 2008-11-13. Archived from the original on 2008-11-13. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ Idalia De León. "Estampas" (in Spanish). El Universal. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.

External links[]

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