Declare Ham Independence! Monday, July 2nd

Join in the celebration of La Quercia’s American artisan prosciutto, handmade from sustainably raised pork from the frontier territories. Let’s toast our independence, eat some delicious cured meats and have a good time!

When: Monday, July 2nd, 1-4PM

Where: Murray’s in Greenwich Village, 254 Bleecker Street between 6th & 7th Avenues

What: Ham Independence Day Party! Life, Liberty, and the Prosciutto of Happiness. La Quercia’s Herb Eckhouse and the Murray’s mongers will be sampling La Quercia cured meats alongside refreshing summer beverages. Come taste sweet and nutty bone-in Tamworth Prosciutto, savory pancetta, and crispy bacon. Plus special deals on all so you can really pig out!

The Greatest Email We’ve Ever Received

We get a lot of great emails from customers gushing about how much they adore their latest cheese find, or how they had a great party, or asking for help tracking down something they tasted in Italy years ago. We love these emails. But the Greatest Email We’ve Ever Received came to us just the other day, from the winner of our Cochon555 giveaway of a YEAR of Cheese of the Month AND Meat of the Month Clubs. After reading her email we knew that it was meant to be. Heather, thanks for writing The Greatest Email We’ve Ever Received, and for letting us share it here. We hope you have the best year ever!

Eeeek!!! Oh my God, oh my God, Oh my God!  This is the single best email I have ever received

I am ready to start my foodie extravaganza ASAP! I do indeed live in the US and you can send my delicious meat and cheese to: [Mystery Town, USA].

I actually read the email 3x before I believed that it wasn’t a joke or some kind of horribly evil spam.  I am so friggin excited!  I love you Murray’s Cheese! From the first gift box delivered to my old home it was love at first taste.  Our love affair has grown over the years and now you have given me the gift that will last a lifetime (well at least a year).  Thank you for taking our relationship to the next level!

Thank you so much!

Heather

 

Missed out on this contest? Make sure to sign up for our emails and follow us on twitter and facebook. Sometimes we give away cheese!

Our Grilled Cheese Secrets (sshhh, don’t tell anyone)

From Steve Millard, Master Melter / Bleecker Store Director

Bread: Use either really good thick cut bread, like sourdough Pullman cut ½” thick.  Or go the other end with really cheap sandwich bread.

Butter: Butter is paramount to a superb grilled cheese sandwich.  I recommend Vermont Butter and Cheese sea salt butter.  Let the butter sit at room temperature for at least an hour to soften.  Spread an even coat of butter on the bread — not too much to make it greasy, and not too little to not even matter.

Cheese: Any cheese will melt, but not every cheese will make a delicious grilled cheese.  Look for alpine-style, melting, cheddar styles – here are a few great ones.  Generally speaking, blue cheeses do not make for good grilled cheese sandwiches.  Hard, Grana-style cheeses will work as an added flavor, but should not be the main cheese.  If you’re in  a hurry, soft cheeses like Brie and any cheese that you first shred will take less time to melt.

Think in terms of flavor combinations and what sort of grilled cheese sandwich you want to make.  You can add meats, vegetables, caramelized onions, roasted peppers, jams, relish, pickles, etc. to any grilled cheese.

Method: Cook on a flat surface. A panini press works the best at about 400 degrees.  A flat surface griddle will also work – just use some weight (such as another pan) to press the sandwich on the griddle.  Whether you’re using a press or a griddle, flip the sandwich half way to ensure even toasting.  The bread should be adequately toasty and not greasy.  Don’t rush the sandwich: 4-5 minutes will make for a sublime grilled cheese that will have wonderfully melted cheese and perfectly toasty bread.

Add-ons: Chips, tomato soup and a crisp, bubbly beverage.  I love GuS Dry Soda — soda helps cleanse the pallet and make each bite the more enjoyable.   Of course, beer is a perfect combination, I like a Pale Ale with a nice hoppy kick.

Reinventing the Wheel: American Mountain Cheeses

The mountains of the Northeast may not approach the altitudes of the Alps or Pyrenees, but cheeses crafted in the nooks, crannies, and foothills of the Green Mountains and Adirondacks stand tall next to their European forebears. Not only is the region home to excellent cheesemakers, but it is also popular amongst those looking to get out into the great outdoors and explore the wilderness of America. Those looking to brave the elements may also want to read the reviews of various gear and equipment to help them conquer their environment.
American cheesemakers are in many ways still blazing a trail for hand-crafted cheese, free from many of the same constraints that shaped European cheese tradition. Today the peaks and valleys of the American countryside yield some of our favorite farmstead cheeses– traditional Alpine wheels made from raw Jersey cow’s milk, terroir driven goat tommes, and luscious mixed-milk triple creams.

Spring Brook Farm-Reading, VT

While Alpine agrarians cooked and pressed the curd for their hefty wheels of Gruyere out of necessity (who wants to schlep a hundred balls of soft burrata down a mountain slope instead?), today you’ll find Alpine-style Tarentaise from Spring Brook Farm made an expansive Vermont meadow, where a herd of 100 doe-eyed Jerseys (prized in the cheesemaking community for their rich milk) get their fill of lush grass in fields surrounding the cheese house. The terrain might not be Alpine, the process certainly is: cheesemaker Jeremy Stephenson heats curds in traditional copper kettles, and finished wheels are washed and turned for months, all the while developing the characteristic Alpine flavors- a kick of pineapple, followed by a savory nuttiness akin to hazelnut butter.

Twig Farm-West Cornwall, VT

If meaty washed rinds like Forsterkase and Vacherin Mont d’Or are more your speed, trek 60 miles across the Green Mountains to Twig Farm in West Cornwall, Vermont, where Michael Lee and Emily Sunderman milk a small herd of Alpine goats for their raw milk cheeses. Twig’s Soft Wheel peaks in these mid-winter months, the buttery late-season milk redolent of wild grasses and wilder flowers, with a characteristic brightness. Soft Wheel, aptly named, is washed in whey brine, which encourages its healthy pink rind and enhances its depth of flavor.

Nettle Meadow Farm-Warrensburg, NY

At Nettle Meadow Farm in the southern Adirondacks, cheesemakers Lorraine Lambiase and Sheila Flanigan have embraced their rich, expressive milk and fashioned Kunik, a triple cream dream worthy of a picnic at any elevation. Though bloomy rinds reign the coastal regions of France, we think New York’s Kunik fits right in nestled in wooded, sloping terrain. Made from the milk of Nettle Meadow’s herd of browsing goats, with an added dollop of cream from neighboring Jersey cows, Kunik is an unmistakably peanutty butter bomb, an edible testament to a balance of traditional skill and American ingenuity.

This month try all three in our American Mountain Trio – click here to learn more.

By Sascha Anderson