Do we have a cheese and port thread?
- Michael M.
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Oh, what a bummer! No chance of change?ac-fast wrote:No no no no..... i hate cheese.![]()
For me, a good cheese is one of the most delicious things I can imagine.
With young LBV or VP I do love an aged Gouda Cheese. The best one I know is the Reypenaer V.S.O.P.. I love the Dutch for making this one. Another one I do like very much with Port is a french blue cheese from Auvergne called "Fourme d'Ambert". It's much milder than a "Stilton" and does not dominate the Port. But I won't agree, that Stilton does not match with young Port.
Michael
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- Michael M.
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Conky, am I right that you do not intent to spend your retirement in France?Conky wrote:I'm with you. No harm in others having as much fun in the world as they can get, but keep that smelly rubbish away from me.ac-fast wrote:No no no no..... i hate cheese.Dont mix it with port



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- KillerB
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But but but... you're Danishac-fast wrote:No no no no..... i hate cheese.![]()

I like to have cheese and was actually eating some last night with a Fonseca Guimaraens 88 last night. However, generally stilton is a VP-killer, unless the Port is young and/or tannic.
Port is basically a red drink
- Michael M.
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That's right! In Germany, we are in the very comfortable position to have allways our Sauerkraut. BTW: Did you know that every flat, even the smallest must have a small room which holds at least 50 big cans of Sauerkraut? An old tradition hearken back to Kaiser Wilhelm II on the occasion of the Boxer Rebellion. He decreed that in his famous Hun Speech on 27.7.1900. But let us return to Cheese and Port.KillerB wrote:But but but... you're Danishac-fast wrote:No no no no..... i hate cheese.![]()
Other than bacon and herring what else have you got to eat?
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- KillerB
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Oh but you have sausages as well. At least we have two meals: Fish and Chips and Roast Beef with Yorkshire Pudding.Michael M. wrote:That's right! In Germany, we are in the very comfortable position to have allways our Sauerkraut. BTW: Did you know that every flat, even the smallest must have a small room which holds at least 50 big cans of Sauerkraut? An old tradition hearken back to Kaiser Wilhelm II on the occasion of the Boxer Rebellion. He decreed that in his famous Hun Speech on 27.7.1900. But let us return to Cheese and Port.KillerB wrote:But but but... you're Danishac-fast wrote:No no no no..... i hate cheese.![]()
Other than bacon and herring what else have you got to eat?
Port is basically a red drink
That’s not old.
That’s not old.Michael M. wrote:An old tradition … 1900
- Michael M.
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That's right too. But whilst we can buy sausages on Monday, we are allowed to buy Sauerkraut from Monday to Saturday. Does that count for sausages as a self-contained meal?KillerB wrote:Oh but you have sausages as well. At least we have two meals: Fish and Chips and Roast Beef with Yorkshire Pudding.Michael M. wrote:That's right! In Germany, we are in the very comfortable position to have allways our Sauerkraut. BTW: Did you know that every flat, even the smallest must have a small room which holds at least 50 big cans of Sauerkraut? An old tradition hearken back to Kaiser Wilhelm II on the occasion of the Boxer Rebellion. He decreed that in his famous Hun Speech on 27.7.1900. But let us return to Cheese and Port.KillerB wrote:But but but... you're Danishac-fast wrote:No no no no..... i hate cheese.![]()
Other than bacon and herring what else have you got to eat?
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- Michael M.
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Re: That’s not old.
That's right. Sorry for the impreciseness, owing my enthousiasm. In future I will try to control these overwhelming sentiments when I write about german Sauerkraut culture.jdaw1 wrote:That’s not old.Michael M. wrote:An old tradition … 1900
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- KillerB
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Last time I was in Munich I went to a place that had a sausage meal. We were treated to five types of sausages in great abundance. I was particularly impressed by the little ones - I think they were Nurembergs but we were only given a dozen between two of us so they disappeared in seconds.Michael M. wrote:That's right too. But whilst we can buy sausages on Monday, we are allowed to buy Sauerkraut from Monday to Saturday. Does that count for sausages as a self-contained meal?KillerB wrote:Oh but you have sausages as well. At least we have two meals: Fish and Chips and Roast Beef with Yorkshire Pudding.Michael M. wrote:That's right! In Germany, we are in the very comfortable position to have allways our Sauerkraut. BTW: Did you know that every flat, even the smallest must have a small room which holds at least 50 big cans of Sauerkraut? An old tradition hearken back to Kaiser Wilhelm II on the occasion of the Boxer Rebellion. He decreed that in his famous Hun Speech on 27.7.1900. But let us return to Cheese and Port.KillerB wrote:But but but... you're Danishac-fast wrote:No no no no..... i hate cheese.![]()
Other than bacon and herring what else have you got to eat?
So yes, sausage counts as a meal.
Port is basically a red drink
- Michael M.
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So, I suppose you have become a victim of Nürnberger Rostbratwurst.KillerB wrote: Last time I was in Munich I went to a place that had a sausage meal. We were treated to five types of sausages in great abundance. I was particularly impressed by the little ones - I think they were Nurembergs but we were only given a dozen between two of us so they disappeared in seconds.
So yes, sausage counts as a meal.
klick
It's a kind of taking drugs, sometimes.
Shut Up 'N Drink Yer Port
- KillerB
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That's them, genuinely addictive.Michael M. wrote:So, I suppose you have become a victim of Nürnberger Rostbratwurst.KillerB wrote: Last time I was in Munich I went to a place that had a sausage meal. We were treated to five types of sausages in great abundance. I was particularly impressed by the little ones - I think they were Nurembergs but we were only given a dozen between two of us so they disappeared in seconds.
So yes, sausage counts as a meal.
klick
It's a kind of taking drugs, sometimes.
Port is basically a red drink
- Michael M.
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Yes. It is compulsory to be drinking while posting.g-man wrote:Does the forum have a policy on drinking and posting?ac-fast wrote:When i was in Portugal last time i tryied to taste cheese again, and no. I didnt like it.
But BACON Yeaaaaaaa... i love bacon, but not with port,
Denmark is a very big producer og cheese

"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
- RonnieRoots
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Not at all!! Cheese is compulsory when drinking port!!!Michael M. wrote:So most of us seem to have a combined Cheese and Port allergie.
I agree that Stilton is usually too powerful for VP, but it can work with a young unfiltered LBV or Crusted. Stilton is great with a powerful Douro red too.
With VP that has some age to it, I love runny cheeses, like Queijo da Estrela, Azeitao or comparable varieties from France and Spain. VP's that still have an edge to it (like, let's say Vargellas 1987) works really well with KillerB-brought Cheddar, old Gouda or Manchego.
With aged tawnies and Colheitas I like hard and spicy cheeses such as Parmesan and Pecorino. Old goat's cheese may work as well.
I like to put manchegos with my tawnies, and not necessarily with my VPs.RonnieRoots wrote:VP's that still have an edge to it (like, let's say Vargellas 1987) works really well with KillerB-brought Cheddar, old Gouda or Manchego.Michael M. wrote:So most of us seem to have a combined Cheese and Port allergie.
With aged tawnies and Colheitas I like hard and spicy cheeses such as Parmesan and Pecorino. Old goat's cheese may work as well.
young creamy goat's cheese goes great with a young VP.
- SushiNorth
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I agree, tho like Ronnie I don't recommend a stilton or blue with Port. Rather, I'd say go for the nuttier flavors (aged goudas in particular), sheep milk cheeses (which are sharp but not as much as goat), or the medium soft "pucks." The best thing about the pucks is that they tend to be sharp and tangy on the outside, but mellower and nuttier on the inside. This gives your tongue a pause from the port, a balanced flavor to reconsider the port against, and a little fat to hold back any heat, thereby amplifying some of the more nuanced flavors in the wine.RonnieRoots wrote:Not at all!! Cheese is compulsory when drinking port!!!Michael M. wrote:So most of us seem to have a combined Cheese and Port allergie.
Personal fav: Constant Bliss, a raw cow's milk puck from Vermont and available at Murrays in NYC. The rind is a little sharp for port, but the cheese is so good that it magnifies any eating experience.
- Michael M.
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Ronnie, I knew you are someone to rely on.RonnieRoots wrote:Not at all!! Cheese is compulsory when drinking port!!!Michael M. wrote:So most of us seem to have a combined Cheese and Port allergie.

I like Manchego as well although it is not one of my favored ones. Recently I had a dutch sheep cheese from Rooijackers, called Romerokaas. To my taste it was better than the Manchego we usally have because it was more spicy. There are other cheeses from Rooijackers I really like- a cow cheese with nettle and another one with caraway. Pretty special and not for every day consuption, but sometimes I like them a lot with a basic Tawny or a young LBV. For some perhaps too much. A french chesse which matches IMO good with Tawnies and aged Rubies is the frensch Comté. Fruity with a little acerbity- yummy. Apropos goat cheeses: In Beaujolais one can find handcrafted goat cheeses of exceptional quality. I think it would match very well with a chilled White Port. I will try this next summer.
Cheers
Michael
Shut Up 'N Drink Yer Port