Traditional Dutch Recipes
It is hard to imagine Holland without its lush green pastures and gently grazing cows. They are as much part of the national identity as clogs, windmills and tulips. Not surprising, when you consider that the Dutch have been making cheese since 400 AD. Nowadays, Holland is the largest exporter of cheese in the world. Its dairy industry as a whole has a turnover of around Euro 7 billion.
It is hard to imagine Holland without its lush green pastures and gently grazing cows. They are as much part of the national identity as clogs, windmills and tulips. Not surprising, when you consider that the Dutch have been making cheese since 400 AD. Nowadays, Holland is the largest exporter of cheese in the world. Its dairy industry as a whole has a turnover of around Euro 7 billion.
Cheese markets are still held in Holland. Some are just for tourists, such as the Alkmaar, Hoorn and Edam
markets, but they are still worth seeing. The traditional cheese market
trade is re-enacted in these towns every summer in front of the
gorgeous old cheese weigh houses. The ritual features cheese bearers
donning straw hats, brightly colored wooden stretchers and lots of
cheese. The Cheese Museum in Alkmaar is also worth a visit.
The cheese markets at Woerden and Gouda
are the only remaining functioning commercial markets. Farmers from the
area have their cheese weighed, tasted and priced here. Cheese has been
traded on the Gouda cheese market for over three hundred years. Buy
some Gouda cheese there, or peruse the many exhibitions related to
cheese production surrounding the market. At Woerden, you can buy boerenkaas,
delicious artisanal raw milk farmhouse cheese. Some farmers also open
their farms up to the public for tours and tasting sessions.
Also worth a visit is Reypenaer's Tasting Room
on the Singel, one of Amsterdam's old city center canals. Foodies the
world over have long embraced Reypenaer cheese, an artisanal Gouda and a
two-time Supreme Champion winner (best European cheese out of all
categories) at the Nantwich International Cheese Show, the world's
largest.
Dutch Cheese Varieties
Graskaas is made from the first milkings after the cows return to the grassy polders from a winter spent inside. The fresh spring-time grasses lend the 1 month old cheese a rich, creamy texture and naturally yellow color. When graskaas is only aged for up to 1 week it has a milky color and is called meikaas. Jonge kaas (aged for 4 weeks) and jong belegen kaas (2 months) are well-suited for sandwiches. Other Goudas are fantastic for cooking; try extra belegen (aged for 7-8 months) if you're looking to substitute Jack or Cheddar cheeses. The oldest varieties, such as oude kaas (aged for at least 10 months) and overjarig (1 to 2 years), are excellent for eating in crumbly shards with a nice, sharp mustard or slick of apple syrup.
About 50% of the cheese production in Holland is devoted to this iconic cheese, making it our most important and best-known cheese. Gouda usually comes in cheese wheels weighing 26.5 pounds (12 kilos) and Baby Goudas of half a pound to a pound (250 g to a kilo). Beemster, Reypenaer and Old Amsterdam are popular commercial brands.
From:
http://dutchfood.about.com/od/aboutdutchcooking/a/SayCheese.htm
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