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As always, my Christmas Cheeseboard is both a snapshot of my cheese year, and cheeses I love during the festive season. Here's a sneak peak:
Yoredale Wensleydale
First up it’s Yoredale Wensleydale.
If there is a cheese that encapsulates why I launched cheesegeek, it is Yoredale. A husband and wife team, Ben and Sam make this cheese at home. Literally! Their make room and maturing rooms are attached to their house!
Yoredale is also of historical significance, as it is a traditional, raw milk, clothbound Wensleydale made in the Dales – something that is incredibly rare nowadays. The milk is all local, and collected daily before being represented wonderfully in the end product.
Forget about super tangy, sharp, crumbly Wensleydale, this is the proper stuff. An amazing creamy, squidgy texture (dare I say like a hybrid of Babybel and cookie dough mix) but packing the most incredible complexity in flavour. Crème fraiche, sour cream, richness, subtle sweet-fermented fruitiness, and from the rind a stoney, earthy minerality.
Many of us associate Christmas with Wensleydale and Cranberries. Try Yoredale this Christmas, it will be one of the best decisions you make!
Lincolnshire Red
The second cheese on my board is Lincolnshire Red. I always love to have some colour on my Christmas Board and having eaten my body weight in Rutland Red during November, Lincolnshire Red comes in for December. The colour is so striking, like a rich passionate winter sunrise.
With some big bold cheeses to follow, I love the delicate, nutty and generous nature of Lincolnshire Red, made by the Jones’ using raw farmhouse milk from their own herd of cows. I’m also happy to admit that any leftovers get melted over pretty much everything from boxing day onwards, from turkey sandwiches to roast potato hash. It’s dense, alpine style profile lends itself so well to melting both in terms of flavour and consistency. An absolute winner.
Keens Cheddar
Third, and the backbone of our board, it’s Keens Mature Cheddar, aged for 14mths. Over the years, I have showcased all of the Big Cheddars from Somerset – those few cheddars that are still made in a traditional way, clothbound, using farmhouse raw milk. This year, is the year of Keens. Sharp, tangy, almost spicy on the palate it has the most extravagant farmhouse kick to it, a finish as long as it is delicious and all held together by the richness of the paste. From the rind, we get hints of mustard and horseradish, and there is a definite theme of pickled onions (Monster Munch!) throughout. It is like an entire ploughmans in one, and what a wonderful showstopper for my Christmas Day board. Just wait until you try it with our house red this year. Divine!
Rollright
Next in line we have Rollright. Oh boy, what a cheese this is. David Jowett, Gloucestershire, heroic cheesemaker. Rollright has always been a favourite cheese of mine, this oozing, soft paste desperate to escape its sprucy wrap. The peachy blush of the rind is the visual icing on the cake.

And then the taste. Absolute indulgence from the creamy paste, balanced with a hammy/bacon umaminess from the rind and then layered even further with the woody, smokey sweetness from the spruce encasement. It’s as close to poetry as cheese can get.
But what is even more special about Rollright this Christmas is that there is unlikely to be any Vacherin coming in from France this year – serious news for most cheese lovers. What an opportunity then to give Rollright a chance. Word of warning, you might not go back to Vacherin in 2026.
Long Clawson Stilton
Finally, it’s the ultimate Christmas cheese, Stilton. Probably the most famous cheese made in the UK after cheddar, and one of our greatest contributions to world gastronomy.
Made only in the counties of Notts, Derbs and Leics by only 4 remaining Stilton makers, it is history on a plate. Long Clawson Stilton regularly wins our blind taste tests, and it comes down to flavour and texture. The flavour is not all saltiness and sharpness, there is plenty being offered up by the delectable paste – from butter digestive biscuit base through to a malty molasses like taste experience. You might pick up some roasted coffee, peanut skins and hazelnuts. I hope you do! Because it’s bliss. A symphony of salivation. But you also avoid dry crumbly hard work. There is a soft moisture to the cheese, that balances the strength of flavour so nicely, reminding you that what you’re doing is meant to be fun, not hard work. Success. Absolute success, and what an exclamation point to my Christmas cheeseboard. Just wait until the plot twist where you find out it pairs so much better with our house white win than red – that’s from me and our wine geek Nico – so it must be true? Decide for yourself!
An Extra...
It is possible that’s not the end though, because this year to celebrate like any proud parent would, I am also going to include not my favourite child, but my child of 2025, Washington. Winner of a Gold at the 2024/25 World Cheese Awards and then 3* at the Great Taste Awards 2025 (top 2% of all food and drink entries!!!) I just have to spend Christmas with it.
A soft cheese washed in organic cider, it has everything. And then a little bit more. Add it to your Christmas Day, and it will make it better. You have my word.
These cheeses are featured in our December selection - choose any box (except The Genesis) and these cheeses will be included!
Merry Christmas!!
Edward


