THE OXFORD COMPANION TO CHEESE (Oxford University Press, 2016, 849 pages,   ISBN 978-0-19-933088-1 $65 USD hardbound) has been edited by Catherine Donnelly,   a food scientist at the University of Vermont and co-director of the Vermont   Institute for Artisan Cheese. She is well-known for her investigations into   microbiological safety of raw-milk cheeses. 1400 named cheese varieties and   styles are found throughout the world: they are all here, from basic fresh   cheese through Brie to washed rinds to blues. Coverage begins with cheese on the   farm, moves to the microscope, and then on to the shop and the home plate. The   Companion has about 855 entries for the cheeses, for the countries, for the   production from cow-goat-sheep through to yak-reindeer-camel, with some   important breeds within each being noted. Of 325 names (from 35 countries) in   the Directory, Kathy Guidi was a major contributor from Canada, as are Laura   Shine, Janice Beaton, Mary Ann Ferrer and others. For Canada, there is a Canada   article plus separately signed articles on Quebec and Ontario. Most articles are   signed; the rest are by the editor or editorial board. Material includes a lot   of information on microbiology and the chemistry of cheese. There are 150   black-and-white images plus some 16-page full-colour inserts. And a concluding   directory of cheese museums from around the world!
  Audience and level of use: cheese lovers, cheesemongers and   cheesemakers.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: under Cantal, in a column and a   half, we find a description based on raw cow's milk. The name itself comes from   the departement in south-central France which is loaded with grassland for daily   grazing. It's one of the oldest French cheeses, with records going back over   2000 years. It is traditionally served as "aligot" (Cantal Jeune and mashed   potatoes).
  The downside to this book: there was a lot of technical details, of major   value to cheese producers but marginal interest to consumers. Nevertheless,   that's the whole point of the Oxford Companions.
  The upside to this book: very comprehensive.
  Quality/Price Rating: 94.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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