It's Vacherin Season

Vacherin mont d'or - a winter cheese. The same cheese might taste completely different in the winter compared to spring, for a huge number of reasons and Vacherin is great...

Vacherin Mont d'Or - a winter cheese

Here at cheesegeek HQ, we talk a lot about the big ‘S’…Seasonality. One of the amazing quirks of artisan cheese is that, just like fruit and veg, it is seasonal. The same cheese might taste completely different in the winter compared to spring, for a huge number of reasons such as what the cows were up to, what they were eating, where they were eating and what the weather was like. It’s these variations that make artisan cheese so fascinating, and so romantic.

The rockstar of seasonal cheeses

But you simply cannot talk about Seasonality without mentioning the Rockstar of seasonal cheese. Not only does this cheese taste at its best during the autumn and winter months (September to March to be precise!)…it is ONLY available during this time. It’s Vacherin (aka Mont D’Or). Vacherin Mont d’Or and Vacherin du Haut Doubs are essentially the same cheese, one is simply from the french side of the Jura Mountains, the other from the Swiss side. Our soft cheese Vacherin beauty is super creamy and sweet with added woody flavour from the Spruce bark it is wrapped in. It has a luxurious silky texture when fully matured and can be spooned right out of it’s box. 

Just before I talk more about this Seasonal Stallion of a cheese, I want to whisk you away to the rolling mountains of the Alps…in the middle of summer. The sun is out, the alpine meadows are filled with lush grass, meadow flowers, the freshest of water, and the cows are having an absolute jolly. Whilst up at in the mountains, over 1k above sea level, these Montbeliarde cows produce the sweetest most delightful milk, that is then gathered by cheesemakers and taken to their summer chalets, where they turn the milk into the world famous Comte. Throughout spring and summer, when the weather is beautiful, and the mountains bountiful, this is where the cows hang out.

Come autumn though, before the weather turns, the cows are led back down into the valleys, and reside in their barns as the colder months approach. They get less exercise, and move to winter feed, which means their milk yields fall, but the milk they do produce is richer and higher in fat content. And this, is where Vacherin comes in. Whilst Comte is made in huge wheels as the milk yields are higher, Vacherin is made in smaller dainty wheels, and the cheeses are rich, unctuous and velvety. The cheeses are so unctuous in fact that they are squeezed into a spruce collar to ensure they don’t run away. Luckily for us, the spruce imparts the most wonderful sweet, floral woodiness into the cheese. Functional and delicious…the dream.

And so there we have it. Best matured around 7 weeks, the cheeses start getting made in August, meaning from September until the following March/April is your window to eat this wonderful, seasonal big hitter.

But when and how is best to eat Vacherin, I hear you crying out!?

Early in the season, the cheeses will still have a much lighter, floral, sweet vibe going on, with the flavours more subtle and submissive. This is because the milk is still making the transition from mountain grass to winter feed. If you catch the really early batches, they are likely to be a bit younger as well, so probably slightly less spoony in the centre, and a little more chalky resistance. This is no bad thing though, as I really like the contrast of textures, and there is a contrast in flavour profile as well.

As you get later into the season though, you will start seeing the cheese growing into it’s winter self, getting more funky, developing a slight tang to go alongside those earlier flavours, and there is certainly a deeper more earthy rustic feel to the cheese.

In terms of eating it, well if you get the dainty smaller 450g whole cheeses, it’s a spooner dipper, and most certainly the rind is edible as it carries a lot of the flavour profile that runs through the cheese (cheeses like Vacherin ripen from the outside, and so that is where much of the flavour is imparted from). Wedges of larger wheels can be liberally smeared over a crusty French baguette, perhaps with a tiny bit of honey, or dare it say it truffle honey.

The lovely versatility of the 450g whole minis is that you can also pierce them with a little rosemary and garlic, a drizzle of white wine and some honey, and bake in the oven whole (in the box – but make sure you wrap the box in foil!) for 20 mins at 200 degrees. It is then basically a mini fondue of epic proportions. Dip some charcuterie in there, or some cornichons. Divine.

Having said all that, for me personally (and I can also say for the French themselves!) a cheese like this is best eaten without baking, so it is in it’s truest possible form, and you will get far more access to all of those little complex intricacies that might get lost in the oven.

Whichever way you choose, you won’t be disappointed, unless you miss out entirely, because once April comes, Vacherin, like Kaiser Soze, will be gone without a trace.

How to get your Vacherin fix in summer?

(ps if you really cannot live without Vacherin between April and August, then thanks to Stacey Hedges in Hampshire, you can now get your hit with a cheese called Winslade…Vacherin in style, and made all year round…hurrah!).

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October's seasonal cheese selection

Each month we curate 5 of the finest cheeses the UK has to offer. They highlight quality craftmanship, complex flavour profiles and form the backbone of our gifts and subscriptions.

1 of ProductListDrop
cheesegeek Bibury
Bibury
Semi hard

A sheep's milk cheese made with milk from the flock at Sheaf House Farm just up the road in Gloucestershire. Made only seasonally from late March, Bibury comes to life in Autumn. Classic notes of meadow flowers and hay along with white chocolate and a fondant texture that is very appealing.

 

cheesegeek Swift Reserve
Swift Reserve

3 total reviews

HARD

A scintillating 9-month aged gouda style cheese. 

If there was ever a Goldilocks gouda, then this is it. Just young enough to be supple, buttery, nutty sweet and unbelievably moreish, yet old enough to have developed a slightly weathered earthiness and rich complexity. We reckon this tastes like liberally buttered jacket potato skins. Oh, and finish is a joy to behold, long, sweet and delightful.

To top it off Swift Reserve pairs perfectly with coffee (yes, coffee). Transport yourself to the Med and enjoy a wedge of cheese with your morning caffeine. Keeping you fuller for longer and tasting shockingly good, it'll soon become part of your breakfast routine. Exclusive to cheesegeek.

Look out for the Swift Black coming soon to one of London's most exciting coffee specialists!

cheesegeek Quicke's Mature Cheddar
Quicke's Mature Cheddar
HARD

Mature, and not in a dull, doesn't like to leave the house way. Quicke's Mature is just fully developed. Quicke's the makers date back to 1540s so they know how to make goooood cheese. Handcrafted using grass-fed cow milk, this well rounded cheddar is typically matured for 12-18 months (hence the name) and brings you a variety of flavours from brothy to buttery to freshly mown grass and baked potato flavours. Always with the characteristic cheddar tang.

cheesegeek Washington
Washington

2 total reviews

SOFT

British cider-washed soft cheese

An unforgettable soft cheese, washed in cider. 

A testament to British cheesemaking, and a nod to continental cheesemaking. Washington is a washed rind cheese destined for great things. When slightly younger, the flavours are fresher and crisper, with just a hint of fruitiness. Ripened on, it develops deep, savoury, meaty flavour, a bit like those famous continental pongers like Epoisses. However, the cider wash brings an astonishing fermented fruity funk, balancing the savoury flavours perfectly, all playing out amidst the most tantalising creamy, decadent, luxurious texture. A modern take on history, and a cheese for the ages.

cheesegeek Perl Las
Cornish Blue
BLUE

Designed to be eaten as a young cheese, Cornish Blue is a very different product from traditional English blue cheeses. Its flavour is mild and creamy, with a dense texture and buttery richness, instead of the ‘salty tang’ common of other traditional blue cheeses it has a gentle sweetness.

November's seasonal cheese selection

Each month we curate 5 of the finest cheeses the UK has to offer. They highlight quality craftsmanship, complex flavour profiles and form the backbone of our gifts and subscriptions.

1 of ProductListDrop
cheesegeek 200g Rutland Red
Rutland Red
HARD

The only pasteurised Red Leicester to be produced in Leicester, this beaut is buttery and flaky and a firm favourite and both cheesegeek and Long Clawson, the cheesemakers. We're not the only ones to think so as Rutland Red has won many an award, we think the finish is reminiscent of a Creme Brulee. Red Leicester is classic on any cheeseboard and is also one of our top picks to cook with, Cauliflower Cheese we're looking at you!!

cheesegeek Cornish Kern
Cornish Kern

6 total reviews

HARD

From Lynher Dairies, the makers of Cornish Yarg and Garlic Yarg, we welcome Cornish Kern—a stonker of a cheese. This beaut is off the chart with flavour. Encased in black wax, it is made in the style of a Gouda, however, the utilisation of Alpine starter cultures gives the cheese multiple dimensions. It has a real fruity twang, something like from an old sweet shop, except cheesy. Think exotic dried fruits, salted caramel, toasted hazelnuts and almonds, and although savoury, it simply tempts and teases you with a little bit of nutty buttery sweetness. All the flavours just linger beautifully in your mouth for the perfect amount of time. Its crumbly, crisp and slate-like texture simply arouses one's senses to another planet. An absolute worldy cheese....literally.

cheesegeek Burford
Burford
Semi hard

King Stone Dairy's longest aged, largest cheese. Originally conceived as a way to capture the sweet complexity of Summer pastures, Burford is now made year round and reflects the seasonality of the milk at Manor Farm. Flavours of charcuterie, hazelnut and hints of tropical fruit.

 

The Cheese Geek 250g Tunworth
Dozmary
SOFT

A bold soft cheese inspired by the wild beauty and legend of Bodmin Moor. Named after the mystical Dozmary Pool said to be the resting place of King Arthur’s Excalibur, it carries the same sense of drama and heritage.

It has been developed as a richer, more flavourful evolution of the Cornish Camembert, Dozmary is oozy, buttery, and bursting with character.

The Cheese Geek Cashel Blue
Crozier Blue
BLUE

Crozier Blue has a rich, full and well-rounded flavour. It is gently salty with a distinctly rich creamy texture, offset by a touch of spice.

December's seasonal cheese selection

Each month we curate 5 of the finest cheeses the UK has to offer. They highlight quality craftsmanship, complex flavour profiles and form the backbone of our gifts and subscriptions.

1 of ProductListDrop
The Cheese Geek Old Roan Wensleydale
Yoredale

4 total reviews

Made at Curlew Dairy by husband and wife Ben & Sam, Yoredale (formerly Old Roan) represents one of the only truly traditional, raw milk Wensleydale cheeses still made in the UK. As well as being a stonker of a Wensleydale, we were rather captured by the Yoredale's journey. The milk travels a whole 5 metres (or 500cm) from milking parlour to processing room. Then, having been matured for 3-4 months it makes its way to you...via us! Unlike block Wensleydale, the manual, handmade, small batch nature of this traditional clothbound Wensleydale results in so much more complexity. It has the tell tale bite in the centre, but carries an incredible stoney, mineral earthiness closer to the rind, where you also start getting the most wonderful breakdown in the cheese. There are more hidden themes here than The Matrix, and it is a great nod to traditional cheesemaking

cheesegeek Lincolnshire Red
Lincolnshire Red
This beaut gives you everything a great Cheddar should, but on top of that, another layer of deep burnt butter, nutty happiness. It has an intense moist yet creamy texture, with a delicate and elegant buttery flavour that matches with a lingering clean flavour. Theres no denying that this Lincolnshire Red is a promising winner on any cheese board.
The Cheese Geek Pitchfork Cheddar
Pitchfork Cheddar

7 total reviews

The newest of only 4 traditional, raw milk Somerset cheddars, Pitchfork joins great company alongside Keens, Montgomerys and Westcombe. In our view, it more than holds its own. It has incredible complexity and balance, one of the trademarks of a great cheddar. You'll find a farmy-like tang, a buttery undercoat with the hallmark of a proper, Clothbound cheddar- a crumbly, earthy breakdown in the mouth. There really is none of that supple rubbery chewiness you get with a supermarket cheddar. No wonder Pitchfork won 4th best cheese in the World in 2020, and Best British cheese!

The Cheese Geek 250g Rollright
Rollright

26 total reviews

Rollright - never ever ever Rollwrong. Simply put, it's a better, British alternative to Reblochon, yet so much more. It's luxurious, it's buttery, it's rich...but with an immensely satisfying crunch. Let's not forget the woodiness thanks to the spruce bark wrap. This guy comes as a 250g whole (it's a good whack of cheese but won't last more than a sitting). Whilst the guys at King Stone Dairy in Gloucestershire took inspiration from the washed rind soft cheeses of France and Switzerland, they have taken it to another level here. Keep on rollin.

n.b. our good friend Rollright is susceptible to seasonality and batches may vary, one thing is for sure though, he always tastes good!

cheesegeek Long Clawson Stilton
Long Clawson Stilton

5 total reviews

The heavyweight of all cheeses, Santa's favourite cheese, and Christmas on a plate... it's Stilton.

After months of blind-taste tests, we settled on Long Clawson as our Stilton of choice. But don't just take our word for it, Long Clawson won Super Gold at the 2021 World Cheese Awards, effectively crowning it the World's Best Stilton.
With it's beautiful blue veins (yes we're calling them beautiful) and bold flavour, we're so glad there's Stil-tons of this cheese in our fridge.