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  • Selections for the pros for a five-course pairing menu
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January 2007

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Say Cheese

‘Madame de Fromage’ and other experts elevate the pairing of wine and cheese at parties

Savor Wine Country Magazine, Winter 2006
Stories by Diane Peterson • Photographs by Mark Aronoff

Colette_1 Among all the flavor in the world of food, the flavor of cheese stands alone.

“Cheese is the most savory thing you can eat,” says Colette Hatch, a petite Frenchwoman known throughout Wine Country as Madame de Fromage. “It changes everyday ... so you grow with the product. You kind of bond with it.”

Hatch bonds with cheese fans all across the country as a consultant to gourmet markets and cheese shops. Around here, she shares hr expertise during pairing seminars held at wineries like Landmark Vineyards in the Sonoma Valley and Ferrari-Carano in Dry Creek Valley. But the vivacious brunette is best known for doling out advise—along with tastes of some extraordinary cheeses—from behind the counter at Oliver’s Market in Santa Rosa, where she runs the cheese program.

It’s how Amanda Haas of Santa Rosa, who grew up in Texas on a diet that never got more exotic than Velvetta, got to know her. She asked Hatch to give a cheese seminar at her home.

“It completely relaxes everybody, and they start discussing the cheese,” she says. “It’s been a fabulous way to raise the bar.”

Hatch, whose passion for cheese is matched only by her passion for wine, has elevated a classic party and entertainment solution with a Wine Country touch: wine and cheese pairing parties that focus on what she refers to as the “trinity” of food products” wine, cheese and bread. In place of the usual appetizer, fish and meat course, the paring party unfurls with a series of savory cheese courses and wines, starting with a leathery Pinot, peppery Syrah and luscious port.

During these feasts, guests can savor the synergy between each wine and cheese, with little else to distract them except perhaps a thin cracker, a dollop of honey or a roasted nut. Along the way, the party turns into a lively, interactive forum, with guests sharing their opinions about what works and what doesn’t.

“All of a sudden, people are paying attention, and they are putting an adjective on what they find,” Hatch says excitedly. “It’s like going on a treasure hunt.”

Pat Conway of Santa Rosa decided to host a wine and cheese party a few years ago during the busy holiday season. The soirée, held a few days before Christmas, was a resounding success, and she didn’t have to cook a thing.

“People kept drinking and talking and hanging around, from 7:30 p.m. To about 1:30 a.m.,” she says. “and they were full when they left.”

Since her husband, David, collects California wines, he was put in change of picking out specific vintages. Next, Conway consulted with Hatch on what kind of cheeses and breads to serve with the wines.

“You want the cheese and wine to stand on their own, and the little cracker is a vehicle,” she says.

Heeding Hatch’s advice to keep the spread simple, Conway bought a few small flute of sweet French bread and crisp Falwasser crackers, along with a few dried fruits. For dessert, she ordered a 5-pound hunk of Scharffen Berger chocolate to serve with port. Conway suggest setting up separate areas for each cheese course and making sure the cheeses are taken out of the refrigerator an hour or more before guests are scheduled to arrive.

For the holiday party, Conway rented crystal wine glasses so each guest would have a clean glass designed specifically for each wine. When her guests arrived, she greeted them at the door and steered them toward a table with a single wheel of triple-crème cheese surrounded by champagne flutes and sparkling wine. After enjoying the bubbly, the guests were whisked off to the dining room, where she served a white wine with five different cheeses. Then the group gathered around the kitchen island, where a medley of red wines was paired with six cheeses. The movable feast culminated in the family room, with port and the impressive chunk of chocolate. After that, folks were free to return to their favorite for one more bite.

To make your wine and cheese party a success. Conway suggests making sure there’s plenty of room for the number of people you’ve invited. However, you only need chairs for about half of the guests. If you want, you also could place heaters on your patio, allowing guests to escape for a moment and get some fresh air. And make sure you provide some bottled water to keep everyone well hydrated. Considerer getting a big self-serve container, filling it with ice, stocking it with bottles of water and putting it out on the patio.

For her holiday decor, Conway picked out silver, gold and black baubles along with lots of glittery candles that would look festive for Christmas but carry the theme beyond to the New Year holiday as well. She bought place cards and wrote down the name of each cheese, along with descriptors and information about the kind of milk it was made from – sheep, goat or cow.

All the cheeses that Hatch imports and cares for are interesting and unique, from the earthy Piemontese robiola to Normandy’s creamy Brillat-Savarin, from Ireland’s melt-in-your-mouth Cashel Blue to the nutty Abbaye de Belloc of the western Pyrenees.

“It’s a special treat, to even get to taste these cheeses,” Haas says. “it’s just a great adventure.”

January 18, 2007 in Cheese and Wine | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

The Cutting Wedge: Tips

Cheese_platter Here are a few of Colette Hatch’s tips on entertaining with cheese and wine:

  • Choose a good cheese shop and a passionate cheese person who can tell you which cheese in the shop are best.
  • Try not to start a dinner party with cheese. “It’s full of protein, you eat too much and you don’t appreciate the flavor.” If you’d like to serve a cheese before dinner, stick with a soft cheese like a triple crème. “It has more whey, so it’s lighter.”
  • Serve the cheese on an attractive piece of marble or large plate and leave room around each cheese. Mark the cheeses with a sticker or place card that is visible as you taste the cheese.
  • Serve the cheese in unique courses or stations, rather than spread out all together at a buffet table. “If you have cheese on eth buffet, you’re not sharing that you taste.”
  • Try to include cheeses made from all three most popular milks: cow, goat and sheep. And try to include color variety, such as a Shropshire blue from Neal’s Yard dairy.
  • Taste cheeses from mild to sharp, saving the deepest flavors until last. A good progression wold be triple crème, an aged goat cheese like a Crottin, then a Gruyere de Comte, Abbaye de Belloc or Appenzeller. Finish with a blue. “You want to move from delicate to more powerful and on the the ‘plat de résistance.’”
  • When you taste, take a sip of wine, try the cheese, then take another sip of wine. “In a true pairing of cheese and wine, it is the finish that counts,” she says. “It’s a ricochet effect.”
  • In choosing wines, try a theme: all Italian, all local or all French wine. Or you could do a comparative tasting of one varietal, such as Pinot Noirs from France, Oregon and California.
  • Try a comparative tasting of cheeses, such as Goudas from Denmark, Holland and Wisconsin. If you guests include family from out of state, focus on all local wines. And cheeses.
  • As accompaniments, serve a sweet baguette, thin crackers, dried fruits, flavored honeys and quince paste. Hatch suggests Falwasser crackers and a Spanish crispbread called Torta de Aceite, both available at gourmet markets. Raincoast Crisps, boasting flavors like cranberry and hazelnut, fig and olive, are perfect served with soft cheeses. (www.raincoastcrips.com).

January 18, 2007 in Cheese and Wine | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Selections for the pros for a five-course pairing menu

To get your holiday part ideas rolling, we asked Colette Hatch and three chefs – Justin Wangler of Kendall-Jackson Wine Estates in Fulton, Taki Laliotitis of Hartford Family Winery and Josh Silvers of Syrah restaurant in Santa Rosa – to share suggestions for a five-course menu of wine and cheese.

The Sparkler Course

1_3

Colotte_hatch_1 From Colette Hatch

Wine: Gloria Ferrer Blanc de Noir: “A very affordable local champagne with beautiful, lively, tiny bubbles. It has bright strawberry and black cherry aromas with subtle, vanilla highlights.”

Cheese: Brillat-Savarin, a semi-soft, aged raw cow’s milk cheese with a white edible rind made in Ile-de France; Jean de Brie, a traditional brie-style, raw cow’s milk cheese from Seine-et-Marne; and Minuet, a goat’s milk cheese enriched with crème fraîche, made by Andante Dairy in Petaluma.

Accompaniment: During the holidays, Hatch likes to serve gougères, a cheese puff hors d’oeuvre, popular in Burgundy, made with Gruyere-de Comté, Gruyere or Appenzeller cheese.

The Chardonnay Course

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Justin_wangler From Justin Wangler

Wine: Kendall-Jackson Camelot Highlands 2004 Chardonnay. “The wine has tropical flavors of pineapple, mango and papaya with a creamy rich palate.”

Cheeses: Bellwether Farms Carmody, a butter and slightly sharp semi-soft cheese made from raw Jersey cow’s milk; Garrotxa, slightly grassy and creamy flavored, semi-hard goat’s milk cheese from Catalonia, Spain; and Pleasant Ridge Reserve, cow’s mink cheese from Wisconsin that is firm and smooth with a nutty finish.

The Pinot Noir Course

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Taki_laliotitis rom Take Laliotitis

Wine: Hartford Court Land’s Edge Vineyards Sonoma Coast Pinot Noir 2005. “This is a medium-body Pinot with lots of red fruit – ripe cherries and raspberry. There’s a little bit of smoke and oak on the nose, but it’s multilayered and complex.”

Cheese: Vella Dry Jack, a dry aged grating cheese with nutty flavor, made from cow’s milk in Sonoma; Cowgirl Creamery’s Mt. Tam, smooth and buttery with a mushroomy finish, made with Straus Dairy Holstein milk; and Double Cream Robiola, i rich, pungent, soft cheese from Italy’s Piedmont region.

Accompaniment: A fig cake, panforte or any dried fruit.

The Syrah Course4

Josh_silvers From Josh Silvers

Wine: Christopher Creek Syrah 2004, Russian River Estate: “this wine has dark fruit – plum and dark cherry – with a spicy finish.”

Cheese: Bravo Farms Special Reserve White Cheddar, an aged cow’s milk cheese with balance of sweet and salty flavors, made in Visalia; St. George, a Portuguese-style cheddar, nutty and sharp, aged cow’s milk cheese from the Matos Family of Santa Rosa; cave-aged Merisa from Wisconsin, a sheep’s milk cheese with sweet cream and a bit of salinity on the finish.

Accompaniment: Marshall Farm Star Thistle Honey, roasted almonds and quince paste, with some fresh cracked pepper.

The Late-harvest Desser Wine Course5

Colotte_hatch_2 From Colette Hatch

Wine: Ferrari-Carano 2002 Eldorado Gold Dry Creek Valley: “Eldorado Gold has an intense apricot and nectar characteristic and is well balanced, not cloying or overly sweet.”

Cheese: Cashel Blue, a smooth and creamy, sharp and fragrant cow’s milk blue cheese from Ireland; Blu Del Moncenisio, an Affineur cheese aged by Luigi Guffanti in the mountains of Piedmont; and Point Reyes Blue, a cow’s milk blue cheese from a herd of Holstein cows pastured on a ridge overlooking Tomales Bay.

Accompaniment: Honey and nuts, dried fruit.

January 18, 2007 in Cheese and Wine | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)