Showing posts with label cream cheese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cream cheese. Show all posts

Monday

Cretan Cheeses and Other Dairy Products


Cretan Cheeses and Other Dairy Products


Crete is an abundant land where shepherds still care for their flocks the way their ancestors used to since ancient times. The animals graze freely in the mountains, deliver the sweetest milk, which the farmers use for daily consume, to produce cheese and other dairy products, or sell it to small local factories that use it to produce cheeses of rare character.
Cretans consider cheese an essential food product in their diet. They consume it in moderate amounts daily, appreciating its nutritional value, but focusing more on the taste.
Every good cheesemaker knows that the flavor and character of cheese come from the milk. On Crete, the taste of the milk comes from the grass and shrubbery animals consume during free grazing on the rugged terrain. The Cretan cheeses are also unique because most of them are still prepared according to old-school traditions, which further enhance their character.

Graviera

Graviera, or Graviera Kritis, is the flagship cheese on Crete – a unique product usually made of sheep’s milk or a combination of goat’s and sheep’s milk. It is traditionally matured for up to six months, often in caves, or specially-controlled cold rooms for convenience in factories. It has a full aftertaste, sweet and nutty, and pairs well with red wines, although you can also pair it with a strong white.

Kefalotyri

Kefalotyri is a salty, hard cheese, made usually from a combination of goat and sheep’s milk, although it can sometimes be produced only with one of the two. It is one of the most consumed Cretan cheeses, in the top with Graviera and Mizithra.

Mizithra

Mizithra is creamy and reminiscent of ricotta, although its taste is rather distinctive. This cheese is made of goat’s milk. Matured Mizithra is hard, salty, and delicious.

Anthotyros

Anthotyros cheese
Anthotyros cheese
A cheese similar to Mizithra, known as Anthotyros, is produced the same way, from milk and whey from sheep or goats. Its hardened variant is popular when grated and spread over pasta.

Xynomizithra

Xynomizithra is the sour variant of Mizithra. It’s a typical Cretan product and a European protected designation of origin (PDO) cheese, very appreciated on the island due to its soft, creamy texture, that is easy to work into pies and other specialties. To produce it, a combination of whey and fresh milk are allowed to set at room temperature for about 24 hours, then processed.

Xinogalo

Xinogalo is a cream cheese made with salted, soured milk. It looks like very thick yogurt, but its taste is sour and salty, very distinctive. It can be used in pies, as a dip, or as a spread.

Staka

Staka is another traditional Cretan cheese with a soft consistency. The milk is warmed slowly until the protein and fat separate, then the fat is strained. This is later used like butter, while the remaining becomes the actual staka, which is used in pies, pilafi, omelets or other dishes. Staka can also be enjoyed raw, as a cheese spread.

Pichtogalo Chanion

Pichtogalo Chanion – as its name implies – is a cheese made in the Chania prefecture of Crete. It’s a creamy cheese made with unpasteurized goat’s or sheep’s milk. It has yogurt-like consistency, but the taste is sour. It is traditionally used in the bougatsa breakfast pastries in Chania.
Of course, there are many kinds of cheese you can enjoy on the island – like Malaka curd cheese and Tyrozouli, which is made of goat and sheep’s milk curdled with fig sap. Typically, Cretan shepherds and households prepare homemade cheeses, which are not available on the market – because many of these specialized products use unpasteurized milk and they cannot be sold to the general public. Graviera and Mizithra are produced by expert fromagers widely available at cheesemongers, supermarkets, and most tavernas.
Turophiles will love the cheeses of Crete.

Thursday

BLUEBERRY-RICOTTA-TEFF TART


Hands-on: 25 min. Total: 2 hr. 15 min.

Lighter than cheesecake but with the same satisfying creamy texture, ricotta fillings
offer the perfect canvas to showcase peak-season fruit. Use any berry that is at its
ultimate best.

2.25 ounces all-purpose flour (about 1/2 cup)
3 ounces teff flour (about 1/2 cup)
1/4 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 tablespoon canola oil
1 large egg
Baking spray with flour
2 cups part-skim ricotta cheese
2 ounces 1/3-less-fat cream cheese, softened
2 teaspoons grated lemon rind, divided
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1/4 cup powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/8 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
1 large egg
1 large egg yolk
3 cups fresh blueberries
11/2 tablespoons honey


1. Preheat oven to 350°.
2. Weigh or lightly spoon flours into dry measuring cups; level with a knife. Combine flours and salt in a bowl, stirring with a whisk. Place granulated sugar, oil, and egg in a large bowl; beat with a mixer at medium speed 2 minutes or until well combined. Add flour mixture; beat until just combined. Roll dough into an 11-inch circle on a lightly floured surface. Fit dough into a 9-inch removable-bottom tart pan lightly coated with baking spray. Press dough against bottom and sides of pan. (Dough is soft and can be patched with good results.) Chill 15 minutes.
3. Line bottom of dough with parchment paper; arrange pie weights or dried beans on parchment paper. Bake at 350° for 15 minutes or until edge is lightly browned. Remove pie weights and parchment paper; bake an additional 5 minutes. Cool completely on a wire rack.
4. Place ricotta and cream cheese in a bowl; beat with a mixer at medium speed 2 minutes or until smooth. Add 11/2 teaspoons lemon rind and next 7 ingredients (through egg yolk); beat at low speed 2 minutes or until well combined. Pour filling into prepared crust. Bake at 350° for 25 minutes or until just set. Cool completely in pan on a wire rack. Remove tart from pan.
5. Combine berries and honey, tossing gently to coat. Arrange berry mixture on top of tart. Sprinkle top with 1/2 teaspoon rind.



SERVES 8 (serving size: 1 wedge)
CALORIES 292; FAT 10.7g (sat 4.7g, mono 3.7g, poly 1.2g); PROTEIN 12g; CARB 37g; FIBER 3g; CHOL 94mg; IRON
2mg; SODIUM 231mg; CALC 219mg
TEFF



Teff is a tiny, gluten-free grain—about the size of a poppy seed—that has a nutty, earthy flavor. Teff flour is finely ground and an easy way to incorporatewhole grains into your baked goods. It is also an excellent source of protein, fiber, and iron and is naturally gluten free. If you’d like to experiment with usingteff flour in your baked goods, I would suggest substituting about 25% of thewheat flour with teff flour. I’ve used a ratio of 50% in this tart to allow the flavorof teff to really shine through.