The Last Bass Outpost

Main Forums => The Outpost Cafe => Topic started by: the mojo hobo on January 23, 2013, 06:24:44 AM

Title: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: the mojo hobo on January 23, 2013, 06:24:44 AM
I know it sounds like a great name for a band, but it is a news item:

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/giant-goat-cheese-fire-closed-norwegian-tunnel-week-004030955.html

Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Dave W on January 23, 2013, 08:27:24 AM
Brunost has an interesting taste. I had no idea it was flammable. Wonder if you can use it instead of kindling?
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on January 23, 2013, 04:23:55 PM
There was a young lady from Leith...
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Rob on January 23, 2013, 06:32:56 PM
LMAO!  I had to Google that one :sad:
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: uwe on February 05, 2013, 05:45:58 AM
My favorite Scandinavian cheese. Curious mix of sweet and sour, certainly an acquired taste, feels a bit like window putty in your mouth and sure looks the part. Imagine a mix of cheese and chocolate spread and you're there.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Denis on February 05, 2013, 05:49:42 AM
I had some cheese the other day which smelled like someone emptied the cat litter box into my clothes hamper. It was phenomenal tasting though!
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Stjofön Big on February 07, 2013, 12:25:03 PM
That Norwegian goats cheese has got great taste. Like Uwe says, it's both sweet and sour. In Scandinavia one can buy it under the name of Gudbrandsdalen. Until recently I had a Danish woman, living just 50 miles from my home, who had her own goats and made her own cheese. Fantstic! The older, the better. Smelled like someone had died, but tasted lovely. But, as I was growing older, she grew older too. And decided to stop the cheese production, just make her own. But I'm laying low, expecting her to want to expand her wallet. Then I'll be there. Ready and a-waiting. There won't be any kind of hesitating! 8)
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 07, 2013, 03:49:13 PM
The Stjofön Big Cheese Shop Conspiracy... ;D
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Dave W on February 07, 2013, 09:52:03 PM
...... Smelled like someone had died, but tasted lovely. ...

I think the word you're looking for is "aromatic."  ;D

That does it. All this talk means I will be headed to Ingebritsen's in south Minneapolis next week for some Gjetost. And maybe even some Bond Ost if I'm in the mood.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 08, 2013, 05:23:33 PM
It's not good for your condition... ;)

Cheese and veggies are a severe bone of contention... :rolleyes:
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Dave W on February 08, 2013, 08:55:01 PM
It's not good for your condition... ;)

Cheese and veggies are a severe bone of contention... :rolleyes:

Are you kidding? The aroma alone might clear my congestion.  :)
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 09, 2013, 04:17:33 PM
THAT pungent...? :o
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Stjofön Big on February 10, 2013, 03:15:55 PM
Well, Dave? Any goats cheese yet? And remember, a nice red wine, or wine from Portugal, is just wunderbaar to accompany the cheese!
 :P
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Dave W on February 10, 2013, 04:59:49 PM
Well, Dave? Any goats cheese yet? And remember, a nice red wine, or wine from Portugal, is just wunderbaar to accompany the cheese!
 :P

Not yet! I've been fighting an awful cold, so I haven't been out except for a few groceries.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Pilgrim on February 11, 2013, 01:36:31 PM
Not yet! I've been fighting an awful cold, so I haven't been out except for a few groceries.

From the reports here, sounds like it would be just the thing to clear your sinuses!
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 11, 2013, 04:30:19 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VK_6TU1T7V8
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Dave W on February 11, 2013, 05:24:35 PM
From the reports here, sounds like it would be just the thing to clear your sinuses!

I was joking. It's not like limburger.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Dave W on February 19, 2013, 01:30:57 PM
Finally got out and bought some yesterday. It's a nice change of pace. No wine to go with it, though, I'm just not a wine drinker.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 19, 2013, 04:21:42 PM
[hic] Merlot, by the neck, pleashe... [/hic]
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Pilgrim on February 19, 2013, 05:01:51 PM
I recommend the Verboten Caramel Porter that I had last evening...

http://www.coloradoan.com/article/20130214/BREWERY07/302140011/Brew-Notes-Verboten-Brewing-dabbles-caramel-porter

(http://cmsimg.coloradoan.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=G2&Date=20130214&Category=BREWERY07&ArtNo=302140011&Ref=AR&MaxW=300&Border=0&Brew-Notes-Verboten-Brewing-dabbles-caramel-porter)
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 19, 2013, 05:16:31 PM
There is a cruel and intollerable fact that Guinness, in any format, is not suitable for sad-bastards veggies...

Reputedly, Murphys (by the neck or can) is...

Go figure...
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: uwe on February 20, 2013, 05:42:36 AM
What's unveggie about Guiness? Is it true that it is made from the fermented menstruation blood of freshly slaughtered Ulster Force virgins under heathenish Catholic forbidden rituals? It does taste like it a bit.  :rimshot:
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 20, 2013, 03:34:39 PM
(probably something it passed through, at a guess, but) I believe the issue is they won't say it is veggie, or isn't...

Southern Comfort gave the same (non) answer...

Plenty more fish in the sea bottles and cans on the shelves... ;)
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Pilgrim on February 20, 2013, 04:06:19 PM
I believe the issue is whether you like Guinness or not.

There's grain, hops, water and not much else in beer. Stray atoms floating in the atmosphere don't count.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 21, 2013, 04:43:08 AM
The veggie "issue" is isinglass finings with most beers, commonly in use over here...

Guinness had a UK brewery at a place called Park Royal in London but closed it some years back - I worked within it's walls on several occasions and had "inside knowledge" that UK production was "ok" and I was one of those "marmite" types that was a "like" - that's what my squirrel's drinking... ;D ... but that was closed and a question was asked and they declined to answer - they do not care - does not affect their business model...

An example of their stubborness...
I worked for seven years for a company supplying commercial glasswashing equipment to a UK based op called J D Wetherspoon and they have a hard-sell business model - they go to small or large suppliers and say to them, "We'll buy so many x at y" - the choice is simple - sell or lose the business - this hacked off the cartel's standard suppliers as they kept prices varied for clubs and bars and often pump-up prices if you do well, with lock-in spirit supplies too...
Now then, Guinness said no...
JDW said fine, then we'll drop your product, offer Murphy's to our incentive-sales based managers as a much cheaper line, and you lose all our business...
There response was indifferent, but over the next year they watched JDW open a new bar at a rate of three a week - these were not small bars - some of their sites turnover in excess of £500k a week - single sites - they don't have the largest bar in the UK, they have the largest bars in the UK, converting old cinemas, banks, post-offices, shops, into bars - not the worlds biggest but they are still monsters by UK standards - they use the "pile-it-high-and-sell-it-cheap" model and undercut even their biggest rivals - presently they have about 800 sites...
Guinness caved in and you can still buy a pint of Guinness in a JDW site cheaper than pretty much any other bar in the UK, and not just a couple of pence cheaper - a lot of drinks are 15-20% cheaper than their biggest rivals... go figure...

So, the answer is, they don't care about the veggie market - too small to make a difference...

Mars group did something the other way a few years back - being veggie stateside is a nightmare and you need to contact pretty much every manufacturer to verify what goes into the product (if you don't ask, you don't know), but let's concentrate on the Eurotrash...
For all their products you had to obtain a list and then check the packaging for a GB on the product code under the fold and if it was one of those it was ok, but so much had GR (Greece) or PL (Poland), etc...
They announced that they would no longer be making products specifically for the UK veggie market as it was not a significant part of their business - big mistake...

Their website crashed that day and stayed down for weeks - they could not do business in Britain - turns out the estimated 1,000,000+ veggies in the UK that also ate chocky bars targeted their inbox...

The national papers had adds within a week that they had made a significant business error, and in fact were going to clearly advertise "Suitable For Vegetarians" on any product that was, and introduce more than their were - it would take about 2 months to clear the shelves, but customers should soon be able to buy with certainty...

Now here is a simple reality for all of us - unless it contains one ingredient or you make it yourself most people have no idea what they are eating... in the UK food addatives commonly used in baking are "emulsifiers", or E468 thru E483 - commonly stateside called diglycerides of fatty acids or some such - these are commonly animal derived, often the lining of a cow's stomach - bread from a bakers contains none (usually) but the stuff on the shelf lasts longer because of this stuff, amongst other muck...
Cheese contains a material called rennet, again mostly from cow's stomachs, to cause it to go hard but does not have to appear on the labeling...
Mints - Lifesavers or Polos may contain gelatine... now how is that made...? You have the left-over material from the bones once it has gone through "mechanically recovered meat" processes (for cheap burgers) what do they do with the remainder...? Well, they boil it up and skim off the liquid from the surface and it is a clear liquid known as gelatine... yep, the (pretty much) last thing they can squeeze out of the bones... this then goes into all those soft sweets you feed your kids...

Now, I know there is a "hunting" culture in the US but here there is not - the average person (anywhere in the world) has never seen a sheep or cow getting slotted (I was four when I first went into the "production" area of a slaughterhouse so I know exactly what happens) - you can have images of murder and war enter your house on a daily basis, body parts scattered across a screen... that is called "news"...

Try showing any footage from a slaughterhouse at anytime and it will be pulled from the air before broadcast...

Styrofoam packaging covered in "skinwrap" in spotlessly, almost clinically clean aisles, in supermarkets are all you see, and heaven forbid the site of a carcass in case it distresses the customers...

Europe is going through a major issue with "labeling" due to horsemeat being sold as cow - best incentive I've seen for going veggie yet...

Yes I eat eggs and cheese and the last living thing I knowingly ate I caught and killed it myself...

How may here have slotted and ate the same...?
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: nofi on February 21, 2013, 07:20:21 AM
was that squirrel flambeau.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 21, 2013, 08:30:05 AM
Jackie's late uncle (moun'in folk Kentuckians) used to describe them as gud-eetun, but then again he also enjoyed 'coon and a bunch of stuff...

Had some nice 'shine too... ;)
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Pilgrim on February 21, 2013, 10:19:24 AM
Interesting.  I'm a cheerful omnivore, not a vegetarian, but in the US it's now common to check for those who prefer the veggie meals at meetings and conferences and plan meals accordingly - but you get what the hotel or meeting venue considers to be the "vegetarian" meal..  Getting into the details of animal-sourced products is a daunting task.

I have worked in agriculture and media production long enough that I have shot video of cattle slaughter, carcass stimulation with electricity (hastens tenderizing), and toured a Tyson chicken processing plant, so I'm under no illusions as to where hamburger, sausage, chicken or other animal products come from.  I realize there are plenty of people who think hamburger falls out of the sky into the supermarket in neatly wrapped packages.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Dave W on February 21, 2013, 05:18:52 PM
Back in my days as a commercial insurance underwriter, one account I handled was a chicken processor. When we got the account, we had a company loss control engineer inspect the processing plant. It was very obvious that he didn't want to be there, because his report had every gory detail you could imagine. Descriptions of gushing blood and guts and that sort of thing.  Hasn't stopped me from eating chicken, though.

Back to the brunost. Sorry, but no beer either. I will sometimes have a drink at a restaurant or at a music venue, don't keep any at home. But the cheese goes very well with coffee. In my world, most food goes well with coffee.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 22, 2013, 03:45:51 AM
Coffee goes well with coffee...

With that description I instantly went Python, tangentially...

"Anyone for coffee...?" ;D
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: nofi on February 22, 2013, 07:25:06 AM
" i like coffee and it likes me. a cuppa cuppa cuppa of coffee." - killdozer. the burl ep.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Pilgrim on February 22, 2013, 08:21:03 AM
"That's a DEAD chicken!"

"No it's not, it's only resting....."
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Dave W on February 22, 2013, 08:58:02 AM
" i like coffee and it likes me. a cuppa cuppa cuppa of coffee." - killdozer. the burl ep.

Unfortunately he was talking about Maxwell House. IIRC that was from Little Baby Buntin' LP (The Rub).

I see in another thread that Uwe is talking about the musicality of the Allmans. No one ever talks about the musicality of Killdozer.
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Pilgrim on February 22, 2013, 10:21:19 AM
I love coffee, I love tea
I love the Java Jive and it loves me
Coffee and tea and the java and me
A cup, a cup, a cup, a cup, a cup (Boy!)

I love java, sweet and hot
Whoops Mr. Moto, I'm a coffee pot
Shoot the pot and I'll pour me a shot
A cup, a cup, a cup, a cup, a cup

Oh slip me a slug from the wonderful mug
And I'll cut a rug just snug in a jug
A sliced up onion and a raw one
Draw one -
Waiter, waiter, percolator

I love coffee, I love tea
I love the Java Jive and it loves me
Coffee and tea and the java and me
A cup, a cup, a cup, a cup, a cup

Boston bean (soy beans)
Green bean (cabbage and greens)
I'm not keen about a bean
Unless it is a chili chili bean (boy!)

I love java sweet and hot
Whoops Mr. Moto I'm a coffee pot (yeah)
Shoot me the pot and I'll pour me a shot
A cup, a cup, a cup (yeah)

Slip me a slug of the wonderful mug
'An I'll cut a rug just as snug in a jug
Drop a nickel in the pot Joe
Takin' it slow
Waiter, waiter, percolator

I love coffee, I love tea
I love the Java Jive and it loves me
Coffee and tea and the java and me
A cup, a cup, a cup, a cup, a cup!
Title: Re: Flaming Goat Cheese
Post by: Highlander on February 22, 2013, 03:52:24 PM
Yes, they did do a skit on coffee... not everything is memorable... ;)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ijIq_-8HJo8