Ultimate Guide to British Cheese & UK Cheese Alternatives

Ultimate Guide to British Cheese. Buy British: alternatives to cheese from abroad. Search them out, and you will be handsomely rewarded!

Buy British: Alternatives to cheese from abroad

One of the (many) things that gets me so ruddy excited about British cheese, is the sheer variety of wonderful artisan cheese that is now being made in the UK. Making cheese is hard…and I mean hard in terms of effort required (4am starts, 8pm finishes, 365 days a year) but also hard in terms of degree of difficulty.

Milk is a diva, and it requires constant monitoring, care and attention to get it from cow to cheeseboard. In fact, it is quite mind-boggling to think that all cheese starts off from the same four ingredients; milk, starter culture, rennet and salt. The rest (sprinkled in with maybe some brandy or cider for a washed rind cheese) is purely down to the ‘make’ and how that cheese is then managed through maturity. So variety is amazing, and whilst us Brits are known for our stonking Stilton, and banging cheddars that can make grown men cry (and taste buds tingle) the real revelation is that we can master cheese from around the world. Gouda, Brie, Camembert, Vacherin, Epoisses, even Morbier. You name it, we almost certainly have an innovative version of it here in the UK. And not only that…it tastes bloomin’ marvellous!

So, let’s run through some of my personal favourite British alternatives to Continental superstars. Search them out, and you will be handsomely rewarded!

British Hard Cheeses

Like the Harlem Globetrotters of the cheese world, above you have some of the most famous cheeses in the world. Below, you have the British challengers taking them on:

Comte Cheese Substitute: Lincolnshire Poacher:

A great place to start for two reasons. Firstly, because Vintage Poacher is one of our favourite cheeses of all time at cheesegeek HQ, but also because Comte is possibly the greatest cheese in the world. A cheese that is impossible to replicate anywhere else in the world, Simon Jones at Lincolnshire Poacher has taken part of the Comte method, and intertwined it with a cheddar make. The result is a cheese that has the appearance of a cheddar, and that up front farmy twang, but then gives way to the most extraordinary buttery, nut smoothness, reminiscent of an 18-22mth Comte.

Gouda Cheese Substitute: Cornish Kern

With the first batches coming out around 2017, Kern didn’t keep Catherine Mead and her team at Lynher Dairies in Cornwall waiting long for success and won Supreme Champion at the World Cheese Awards 2017, making it officially the best cheese in the world. With the classic Gouda wax shell, inside is a dense, hard cheese that delivers on so many levels. Floral, sweet, toast, butter, it’s all in there. Aged for 18mths, it also carries that trademark aged gouda crunch. A gouda alpine/gruyere hybrid, this is a true testament to British ingenuity.

Gouda Cheese Substitute: Cornish Kern

Our first sheep’s milk cheese, and made in Ireland by the magicians that are Cashel Blue farmhouse, this is a 6mth aged cheese that is very reminiscent of an Ossau Iraty. It has a supple, fudgy texture, and an indulgent salted caramel savoury sweetness that just keeps you coming back for more.

Pecorino Cheese Substitute: Spenwood

Anne Wigmore actually conceived the idea for Spenwood after an extended break to Sardinia. Whilst out there, she fell in love with Pecorino, and rather than just bring a wedge back, she decided to make her own version of it. Whilst over the past decades the recipe has evolved into a totally unique cheese, those Pecorino roots are still very much evident when you taste Spenwood.

Ashcombe Cheese Substitute: Morbie

Made by David Jowett in Gloucestershire, this is a brand new cheese, only first released in 2020, and has everything you would expect from a classic Morbier. Of course the trademark ‘ash line’ through the centre, but also the same supple texture, slight farmy tang, but then smooth, delicate and elegantly refined.

Tomme Cheese Substitute: St Helena

Julie Cheyney at Fen Farm is probably most known for her delightful St Jude, made with raw milk from the herd of Montbeliarde cows on site. It is true, small scale artisan cheesemaking. But as if that wasn’t enough, now Blake Bowden from Fen Farm has released (again within the last 12mths) St Helena. It carries that slightly minerality on the rind, and unmistakable earthiness, whilst the centre is light, sweetly nutty and dangerously moreish. For so long I have waited for a Tomme-style cheese that hit the right mark, and now we have it.

Gouda/Parmesan Cheese Substitute: Old Winchester

Whilst Mike Smales makes Old Winchester in the style of a Gouda, I have included Parmesan here as so many people that have tasted this cheese remark on how much it reminds them of a Parmesan. Aged for at least 16mths, it is hard, dry, crumbly and delightfully crunchy. It carries the profile of a mature cheddar, a parmesan and a gouda (in that order for me!!) all at once. One of the most complex cheeses out there, all the more impressive because it is pasteurised. A real favourite of ours at CG.

British Soft Cheeses 

Baron Bigod in the style of a Brie de Meaux: There simply aren’t many cheeses as globally recognisable as Brie de Meaux, and so taking on such a famous cheese was hugely ambitious. But Jonny Crickmore, at Fen Farm in Suffolk, cut no corners in his quest for perfection and has taken steps to make this cheese the best it can be, such as importing a herd of Montbeliarde cows from France specifically to make the cheese! An absolute triumph of cheesemaking, and one that really makes you feel proud to be involved with the industry.

Tunworth in the style of a Camembert: Made by Stacey Hedges in Herriard, Hampshire, Tunworth was one of the cheeses that coaxed me down the cheese rabbit hole, and really affirmed my love of the yellow stuff. As with Bigod, it is perfectly balanced almost every time, so reliable, and yet with those little hints of variability across the year that remind you this is a handmade, small-scale, artisan cheese. Bake it, drizzle it with truffle honey, or just take bites out of it whole. However you enjoy it, enjoy it you will! An absolute masterpiece.

Winslade/Rollright in the style of a Vacherin/Reblochon: Another two British cheeses being made by Stacey Hedges (Winslade) and David Jowett (Rollright). Both wrapped in spruce, in the style of Vacherin, which give them that definite woody, forest-like damp sweetness, and encourage some fascinating furry moulds to grow around the rind that impart such incredible flavour. Winslade is not washed, whilst Rollright is, and hence the former is white, and the latter orange in colour. Both, at perfect ripeness, will try and escape off your cheeseboard, so approach with spoons, and revel in their immensity.

British Blue Cheeses 

Mrs Bell’s Blue in the style of a Roquefort: In an ode to Roquefort, in North Yorkshire, blue cheese specialists Shepherd’s Purse make Mrs Bell’s Blue, a sheep’s milk, blue cheese. If you are looking for the same lashing of saltiness to your palate, you will be disappointed, but that melt in the mouth creaminess is definitely there, and it really does have character. If Roquefort is your thing, then trying Mrs Bell’s Blue is a must.

Beauvale in the style of a Gorgonzola: In a country where Stilton is so revered, it is perhaps no surprise that continental blue cheeses are the least replicated in the UK. Brits know what they want from their blue, and it is Stilton. Probably at Christmas. Possibly out of a pot. Almost certainly with some port. We know what we like. So for this reason, Gorgonzola style cheeses are few and far between on our island but one we do have ready to go (in your stomach) is Beauvale, of Cropwell Bishop Creamery (the famous Stilton makers). In a nod to the appetite for a more creamy, mild blue cheese, Robin Skailes and Howard Lucas make Beauvale in the style of a Gorgonzola, but with slightly more of a (stilton) hit. It has that classic scoopable texture, but more body than a Gorgonzola Dolce.

So there, in a nutshell (a pretty big one) we have some absolute highlights of British cheeses being made in the style of more famous continental cousins. Do search them out (many are available on our Pick ‘N’ Mix store!) because they are way too good to miss out on. And it also just feels great to support British cheesemakers who are doing so much to revitalise our artisan cheese industry.

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June's seasonal cheese selection

For July we curated a really pungent selection with extra holes.

1 of ProductListDrop
cheesegeek A box per season A Year in Cheese
A Year in Cheese

1 total reviews

Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

A Year in Cheese will take you on a 12 month (4 boxes) journey through artisan cheese. You’ll experience the change that seasons bring - yes, cheese is seasonal! - the comfort cheeses that suit a winter’s evening through to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board. 

You’ll learn how even the same cheese can taste different depending on the time of year and even the most ardent goat-haters will be turned by how great a Golden Cross taste in Spring. Cheese will never be the same again.

cheesegeek A season at a time: A box for the next 3 months (3 boxes in total) A Season in Cheese - cheese for the next 3 months
A Season in Cheese

3 total reviews

Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

A Season in Cheese will showcase the very best a season has to offer. You'll receive 3 deliveries - 1 each month for 3 months - of exceptional artisan cheese that's truly at the peak of its life. From the comfort cheese that suits a winter's evening to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board, each box will be a window into the world of seasonal cheese.

     

    cheesegeek Cheese every month for a year: £30/box A Year in Cheese - cheese every month for a year
    A Year in Cheese - cheese every month for a year

    Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

    A Year in Cheese will take you on a full 12 month journey through artisan cheese. You’ll experience the change that seasons bring - yes, cheese is seasonal! - the comfort cheeses that suit a winter’s evening through to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board. 

    You’ll learn how even the same cheese can taste different depending on the time of year and even the most ardent goat-haters will be turned by how great a Golden Cross taste in Spring. Cheese will never be the same again.

    cheesegeek Cheese every other month for a year: £31.50/box A Year in Cheese - cheese every other month for a year
    A Year in Cheese - cheese every other month for a year

    1 total reviews

    Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

    A Year in Cheese will take you on a 12 month (6 box) journey through artisan cheese. You’ll experience the change that seasons bring - yes, cheese is seasonal! - the comfort cheeses that suit a winter’s evening through to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board. 

    You’ll learn how even the same cheese can taste different depending on the time of year and even the most ardent goat-haters will be turned by how great a Golden Cross taste in Spring. Cheese will never be the same again.

    cheesegeek Charcuterie
    Charcuterie

    July’s seasonal cheese selection

    For July we curated a really pungent selection with extra holes.

    1 of ProductListDrop
    cheesegeek A box per season A Year in Cheese
    A Year in Cheese

    1 total reviews

    Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

    A Year in Cheese will take you on a 12 month (4 boxes) journey through artisan cheese. You’ll experience the change that seasons bring - yes, cheese is seasonal! - the comfort cheeses that suit a winter’s evening through to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board. 

    You’ll learn how even the same cheese can taste different depending on the time of year and even the most ardent goat-haters will be turned by how great a Golden Cross taste in Spring. Cheese will never be the same again.

    cheesegeek A season at a time: A box for the next 3 months (3 boxes in total) A Season in Cheese - cheese for the next 3 months
    A Season in Cheese

    3 total reviews

    Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

    A Season in Cheese will showcase the very best a season has to offer. You'll receive 3 deliveries - 1 each month for 3 months - of exceptional artisan cheese that's truly at the peak of its life. From the comfort cheese that suits a winter's evening to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board, each box will be a window into the world of seasonal cheese.

       

      cheesegeek Cheese every month for a year: £30/box A Year in Cheese - cheese every month for a year
      A Year in Cheese - cheese every month for a year

      Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

      A Year in Cheese will take you on a full 12 month journey through artisan cheese. You’ll experience the change that seasons bring - yes, cheese is seasonal! - the comfort cheeses that suit a winter’s evening through to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board. 

      You’ll learn how even the same cheese can taste different depending on the time of year and even the most ardent goat-haters will be turned by how great a Golden Cross taste in Spring. Cheese will never be the same again.

      cheesegeek Cheese every other month for a year: £31.50/box A Year in Cheese - cheese every other month for a year
      A Year in Cheese - cheese every other month for a year

      1 total reviews

      Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

      A Year in Cheese will take you on a 12 month (6 box) journey through artisan cheese. You’ll experience the change that seasons bring - yes, cheese is seasonal! - the comfort cheeses that suit a winter’s evening through to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board. 

      You’ll learn how even the same cheese can taste different depending on the time of year and even the most ardent goat-haters will be turned by how great a Golden Cross taste in Spring. Cheese will never be the same again.

      cheesegeek Charcuterie
      Charcuterie

      August's seasonal cheese selection

      For July we curated a really pungent selection with extra holes.

      1 of ProductListDrop
      cheesegeek A box per season A Year in Cheese
      A Year in Cheese

      1 total reviews

      Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

      A Year in Cheese will take you on a 12 month (4 boxes) journey through artisan cheese. You’ll experience the change that seasons bring - yes, cheese is seasonal! - the comfort cheeses that suit a winter’s evening through to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board. 

      You’ll learn how even the same cheese can taste different depending on the time of year and even the most ardent goat-haters will be turned by how great a Golden Cross taste in Spring. Cheese will never be the same again.

      cheesegeek A season at a time: A box for the next 3 months (3 boxes in total) A Season in Cheese - cheese for the next 3 months
      A Season in Cheese

      3 total reviews

      Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

      A Season in Cheese will showcase the very best a season has to offer. You'll receive 3 deliveries - 1 each month for 3 months - of exceptional artisan cheese that's truly at the peak of its life. From the comfort cheese that suits a winter's evening to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board, each box will be a window into the world of seasonal cheese.

         

        cheesegeek Cheese every month for a year: £30/box A Year in Cheese - cheese every month for a year
        A Year in Cheese - cheese every month for a year

        Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

        A Year in Cheese will take you on a full 12 month journey through artisan cheese. You’ll experience the change that seasons bring - yes, cheese is seasonal! - the comfort cheeses that suit a winter’s evening through to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board. 

        You’ll learn how even the same cheese can taste different depending on the time of year and even the most ardent goat-haters will be turned by how great a Golden Cross taste in Spring. Cheese will never be the same again.

        cheesegeek Cheese every other month for a year: £31.50/box A Year in Cheese - cheese every other month for a year
        A Year in Cheese - cheese every other month for a year

        1 total reviews

        Take the cheese path less trodden. Everyone can enjoy a balanced board on Boxing Day but confining your cheese adventure to Christmas feels a little…unadventurous. 

        A Year in Cheese will take you on a 12 month (6 box) journey through artisan cheese. You’ll experience the change that seasons bring - yes, cheese is seasonal! - the comfort cheeses that suit a winter’s evening through to the fresher cheeses that suit a summer sharing board. 

        You’ll learn how even the same cheese can taste different depending on the time of year and even the most ardent goat-haters will be turned by how great a Golden Cross taste in Spring. Cheese will never be the same again.

        cheesegeek Charcuterie
        Charcuterie

        September'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 Ashcombe
        Ashcombe

        2 total reviews

        Semi hard

        Ashcombe was once described as "Smoother than Marvin Gaye" and we'd have to agree. There's a reason this handsome chap (and we're not just talking about the cheesemaker DJ), has won so many awards. An Alpine style cheese with a line of wood ash running through, giving you gentle milky flavours with a slightly smoky finish. 

        The Cheese Geek St Helena
        Stoney Cross

        4 total reviews

        Semi hard

        Loosely based on a Tomme de Savoie, Stoney Cross is a buttery, velvety cheese featuring a creamy centre with a bit of squidge encased in a rugged rind

        The Cheese Geek 250g Bath Soft
        Bath Soft

        2 total reviews

        SOFT

        This square-shaped cheese, made in the style of a Brie, is everything a good soft cheese should be. Softy, creamy, buttery and yielding, with a lovely bite from the rind. Whilst the centre of the Bath Soft cheese is very mild and buttery, the rind packs some more flavour, with mushroom, earthy damp vibes, and a teeny citrus/lemon tang hidden in there. It is a relatively mild cheese on the Brie-style spectrum, but beautifully complex, and not a cheese to be missed. (Their blue cheese won Best Cheese in World 2014!).

        The Cheese Geek Shropshire Blue
        Shropshire Blue

        3 total reviews

        BLUE

        For a flash of colour on your Christmas Cheese board, look no further than the stunning Shropshire Blue. Despite its name, Shropshire Blue is not made in Shropshire at all and is generally made in either Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire or Leicestershire. It is a pasteurised cow’s milk blue cheese with a semi-firm texture which is described as being a bit more mellow than a Stilton and edging towards qualities of a Cheshire! Over the course of maturation, this cheese develops a natural orange-brown rind and has a tangy aroma. The flavour is strong and sharp, with a metallic edge coming through from the starter cultures used.

        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.