    
Fontina Cheese
To make Fontina Cheese, cow's milk is heated to 97 F (36 C). Calf Rennet is then added to curdle the milk. It is let sit for 3 hours, for the final two of which it is heated to 116 to 188 F (47 to 48 C). This is why you'll sometimes see this cheese called "semi-cooked" (or "semi-cotta", drawing on the Italian phrase).
The curd is cut and drained in nets, then put into round moulds for 12 hours. When the cheese is taken out of the moulds, it is salted, and let sit for two months in a cool place. At the end of two months, the cheese is then taken to caves where it is aged for a further 3 months (The aging apparently still happens in caves or grottoes, on pine shelves.)
During this period in the caves, the rind is washed with brine every other day, and on the alternating days, it is brushed to take away any mould that does form on it.
The rind can vary in colour from a dark golden brown to a dark yellow or a reddish-brown. The cheese inside is firm and light yellow with tiny holes. It has a mild, nutty taste.
When young, Fontina can be used as a "table cheese". When old, it becomes a grating cheese.
Fontina is produced in Valle d'Aosta . It has an image of the Matterhorn Mountain stamped on its rind.
Fontina received its PDO status in 1996.
It was the Danes who popularized Fontina in North America, with their version of Fontina.
Cooking Tips
Melts well; can be used in fondues.
Substitutes
Taleggio; Goat's Cheese, Appenzeller, Gouda. One food writer suggests mixing to an even paste grated Gruyère with grated Parmesan, some milk and a drop of vinegar. (Some substitute; by the time you'd got all that done you could have been to the store and back.)
Nutrition
Per 3.5 oz (100g): 350 calories
45% fat content.
Equivalents
3 oz Fontina Cheese = 1/2 cup, diced.
History
Producers claim that Fontina has been made in the Aosta valley since the 1100s (though you will also see the 1200s cited). If so, this may not have been Fontina as it is now made, because in the Middle Ages, people used cows to pull ploughs, not for milk.
You'll see writers who also claim that cheese pictures in 13th century frescoes must be Fontina because they have the shape of Fontina cheese -- a round wheel of cheese which, of course, no other cheese in the history of mankind has ever been shaped like.
Language Notes
It's full name, Fontina d'Agosta, is actually short for "Fontina Val d'Aosta".
In the Valle d'Aosta region, on the Italian side of the Alps, there is a municipality (or "comune", as the Italians call it) called Quart, within whose jurisdiction falls pasture land referred to as "Font". This is where the "font" in "Fontina" comes from. That's one theory, anyway. The second relates to how well the cheese melts, which in old French was "fontis" or "fondis". The name "Fontina" was first recorded in 1717, in a document produced by the monks of the Great St Bernard Hostel.
Also called: Fontina d'agosta
Fontina Val d'aosta Fontina d'Agosta, Fontina Val d'Aosta (Italian)
See Also
Firm Cheeses
Other entries for Washed-Rind Cheeses
Appenzeller Cheese, Bishop Kennedy Cheese, Epoisses Cheese, Fontina Cheese, Pied de Vent Cheese, Port du Salut Cheeses, Port Salut Cheese, Reblochon Cheese, Soumaintrain Cheese, Stinking Bishop Cheese, Taleggio Cheese, Tête de Moine Cheese, Tilsit Cheese
Other entries for Cheese
Affinage, American Cheeses, Casu Marzu, Cheese Rinds, Creamery, Double/Triple-Cream Cheese, Extra-Hard Cheeses, Firm Cheeses, Goat's Milk Cheeses, Mexican Cheeses, Pate (of a Cheese), Processed Cheese, Queso Fundido, Rennet, Semi-Firm Cheeses, Sheep's Milk Cheeses, Skim-Milk Cheeses, Smear-Ripened Cheeses, Soft Cheeses, Surface-Ripened Cheeses, Sweet Curd Cheeses, The Crumblies, Truckle, Washed-Curd Cheeses, Yak Cheese, Yeel Cheese
Other entries for Dairy
Butterfat, Butter, Milk, Nondairy Topping
Top...
| |
|