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Sbrinz Cheese
Sbrinz Cheese is a Swiss cheese made from whole, raw cow's milk.

The milk is heated to 89 F (31.5 C), at which point starter bacteria and Calf Rennet is mixed in. After being allowed to curdle for 40 minutes, the curd is cut into large pieces, drained of its whey, then stirred and heated up to 131 F (55 C). During this heating, more whey runs off, making the curd firmer. It is then pressed, to get yet even more whey out, then put into moulds. Then it is stamped (every dairy puts its own stamp on it), covered and pressed for 20 hours.

After this, it is soaked in brine for 18 days, then cellared for 30 days at 63 F (17 C), turned once a week and rubbed. After the 30 days, it is transferred to storage rooms to age for 3 months at 55 F (13 C), during which time the weekly rubbings continue. After this time, it is then transferred to other storage rooms for longer aging: a minimum of 18 months up to 3 years in total.

When the cheese is sold young, anywhere between 18 and 24 months, it can be sold as a version called "Spalen". Having the texture of a Gruyère, it can be sliced or used for cooking.

Past that, the cheese becomes a hard cheese like Parmesan or Romano for grating with a mellow, tangy taste to it.

The cheese has a brownish-yellow rind and is dark yellow inside. It is made in wheels or logs by several dairies. The wheels average 6 inches high by 23 1/2 inches wide (15 cm x 60 cm), weighing 66 to 88 pounds (30 to 40 kg). It takes 110 imperial gallons of milk (500 litres) to make a cheese wheel.

The cheese is made in Central Switzerland in the following cantons: Lucerne, Schwyz, Unterwald, and Zoug, and the following additional places: Muri district in d'Argovie canton, and the communes of Obersteckholz, Lotzwil and Langenthal (all in Bern canton).

Sbrinz received AOC protection in 2002.

Cooking Tips
Melts well.

Nutrition
Per 100g: 31g protein, 33g fat. 45 to 50% milk fat

History
Sbrinz is another cheese whose marketers claim is the oldest cheese. The claim is that the cheese exists from Roman times. Similar claims are made for Parmesan and Mozzarella. The Roman claim is simply based on Pliny and Columella having mentioned a Swiss cheese that seems like Sbrinz, called variously "Caseus alpinus" or "Caseus Helveticus". While it's certain that in the area we know now as Switzerland there was a hard cheese being made 2,000 years ago, it's sadly too much a stretch to say that this is the same hard cheese.

References, though, are found in archives dating from 1530 in Bern, when it was called "Brientz". Brientz was at the centre of the production region for the cheese (and still is, basically), and was where many different cheeses came into to be sold on for export. The name Sbrinz "might" have come from a shortening of ex-Brienz (meaning out of Brienz). The Sbrinz name was first recorded in 1645.

Because the cheese was extra hard, it could be shipped well without refrigeration. The cheese was exported to Italy through passes in the Alps; in return, the traders brought wine, rice and spices back to Switzerland. This trade route became known as the "Sbrinz" route.

Also called: Caseus alpinus, Caseus Helveticus (Roman)


See Also
Appellation of Controlled Origin

Other entries for Extra-Hard Cheeses
Asiago Cheese, Cotija Cheese, Grana Padano, Manchego Viejo, Parmesan Cheese, Sbrinz Cheese

Other entries for Cheese
Affinage, American Cheeses, Casu Marzu, Cheese Rinds, Creamery, Double/Triple-Cream Cheese, 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, Washed-Rind Cheeses, Yak Cheese, Yeel Cheese

Other entries for Dairy
Butterfat, Butter, Milk, Nondairy Topping

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