Cornish Brie is, as the name suggests, a Brie-style cheese made in Cornwall. The cheese has a bloomy rind, and beneath it, there is a yellow, smooth, and creamy paste. Made from full fat cow's milk from Cornwall, this cheese has flavors that are mild, creamy, and buttery.
Matured to perfection, Cornish Brie also features the gooey middle that's adored by Brie lovers. It's recommended to serve it on a cheeseboard, but it can also be grilled or used in a variety of sandwiches and salads.
Cotswold is a variation of Double Gloucester, originating from Gloucestershire County. The cheese is made with cow's milk, and it's enriched with onions and chives. The color of this cheese varies from golden yellow to orange, and its texture is firm, dense, and crumbly.
Cotswold's flavor is sweet, buttery, and tangy, while onions and chives provide it with an extra layer of flavor. Cotswold is also known as pub cheese in England, so it is recommended to pair it with a cold beer on the side.
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Cornish Blue is an English blue cheese produced in Cornwall. The cheese is made from pasteurized cow's milk and it's designated to be eaten young. The texture is dense, moist, sticky, and buttery. The aromas are mild and sweet, while the flavors are creamy, sweet, and mild.
Due to its mild flavors, the cheese is very versatile and can be used in cooking. It's recommended to sevre it on crusty bread with chutney on the side or crumble it over buttery new potatoes. Pair it with a glass of port. Cornish Blue has been voted Supreme Champion at the 2010 World Cheese Awards.
Somerset Brie is a soft British cheese hailing from Somerset. It comes in a cylindrical shape and has a smooth white natural rind. The cheese is made from pasteurized cow's milk. Underneath the rind, the texture is smooth and creamy. The aromas are fresh, mushroomy, and grassy, while the flavors are generally mild.
Somerset Brie is often used in sandwiches and salads, and it's recommended to serve it with cherries or apples. In 2002, it won many awards at the British Cheese Awards, including the gold medal in the category of Best Soft Cheese.
Cornish Yarg is an English cheese hailing from Cornwall. This semi-hard cheese is made from pasteurized cow's milk. It's wrapped in nettle leaves and matures for 5 weeks. The nettles give the cheese a latticed imprint, attract natural molds, and impart a mushroomy note to the cheese as it ages.
Underneath the nettle-wrapped rind, the texture is creamy and crumbly. The aromas are grassy and mushroomy, while the flavors are lemony and mushroomy. The cheese was first produced on Bodmin Moor by Alan Gray, who produced Cornish Yarg according to a 17th-century recipe found in his attic.
Stinking Bishop is a soft and pungent cheese produced by Charles Martell & Son since 1972 in Dymock, Gloucestershire. The cheese is made from the milk of the rare Gloucester cow breed, but it is sometimes combined with the milk of Friesian cattle.
The rind is washed with perry (fermented pear juice of Stinking Bishop pears, hence the name of the cheese), which gives the cheese its pungent aroma and brown or pink color of the rind. Its texture is smooth and creamy, the aromas very stinky, while the flavors are strong and rich.
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