Showing posts with label Superlatticini Lo Conte. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Superlatticini Lo Conte. Show all posts

Monday, 5 August 2013

Fresh cheese for a fresh lunch!


If you like to eat natural and light, choose the right taste:



FRESH CHEESE SUPERLATTICINI LO CONTE!







This is a cow's milk fresh cheese, called Primosale too (“first salt”) because it is salted just one time .

Fresh Cheese Superlatticini Lo Conte is a young cheese with a bright white texture and a milky flavor.
 It is a rindless cheese, fresh and light!






Use it in your summer salads or as a second course with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil!! 





Thursday, 25 July 2013

Tuesday, 9 July 2013

Ricotta

Ricotta Superlatticini & pear cake with 


hazelnuts and chocolate










                                                               Click here for the recipe!



Friday, 14 June 2013

Spinach and Ricotta half-moon pasta with

 sage and Burrino with ham








Click here for the recipe!















Tuesday, 4 June 2013

Caciocavallo Superlatticini Lo Conte




Making Caciocavallo


The Italian name of these cheese means "Cheese on horseback" and it is thought that the name derives from the fact that two cheese forms are always bound together with rope and then left to mature by placing them 'a cavallo', i.e. straddling, upon a horizontal stick or branch*.






Fresh pasteurized milk is heated to between 30˚C and 40˚C and rennet (an extract from stomachs of young, milk-fed calves that helps form curds) is added, allowing the curds to separate from the liquid (whey). 

Our Cheesemakers then transfer the solids to a stainless steel vat where they pour reheated whey over the curds and leave them for several hours.


When the curds are ready, they are separated from the whey. 
The curds get worked for several minutes in hot water until pliable, and then the stretching process begins.
After stretching the curds are handmade to get the characteristic shape with a prominent ball on top, tied with a string, and are submerged in cold water to set. Next, the Caciocavalli shapes go into a saltwater brine called salamoia for 12 to 24 hours, depending on their size. The salt penetrates the cheese, which helps reduce the risk of bad bacteria and adds flavor.



The final stage: the cheese is straddled over a stick to age. The inspiration for the name caciocavallo, which means “cheese on horseback,” comes from the fact that  they resemble saddlebags. 





After sixty days, the slightly aged caciocavallo, known as semi-stagionato (medium-aged caciocavallo), has a sweet flavor redolent of the pastures the cattle graze on, and a creamy texture. 
A small percentage of the this streched-curd cheese will be moved into another room for an additional 60 to 120 days, and then brought to market as the stagionato version.
Caciocavallo Superlatticini Lo Conte has a deep gold yellow color and an intense aroma.  
Its distinctive fine mild flavor goes well with all your favorite dishes. 

A very feast for the senses!





Wine to drink with Caciocavallo: Aglianico rosé with the Medium-Aged, Taurasi DOCG with the Stagionato















*From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caciocavallo