Monday, August 29, 2016

Greek cheeses - unique taste


Award-winning Greek cheeses, with their unique taste, explain why in Greece the annual per capita consumption is higher than in any other European country. Soft, creamy and hard, white and yellow, fresh and mature, salty and sweet, each one a nobility, all produced with mastery and skill. Cook them, mix them, grate and sprinkle them, wine-tie them, fry them, stuff them, adore them…Follow us in a tour to each region that has developed its own special varieties of cheese.
 greek cheeseNothing conjures up the dreamy images of Greece better than the Aegean, home to countless islands big and small and to cooking traditions as old as Homer. Islanders have their unique existence, defined by the deepest bond to place and familial roots, in common with one another, regardless of whether they come from places as off-the-beaten track asIkaria or as cosmopolitan as Rhodes or Santorini.
Let’s take a tour in the Aegean, specifically in the Northeastern Aegean, where cheeses vary. Manoura from Sifnos is aged in wine dregs; Kalathaki from Limnos, a lovely basket-shaped, goat's milk white brine cheese, akin to feta, takes its name from the basket (=kalathaki) that is used to produce it.
Αποτέλεσμα εικόνας για manouriMoving further down, we meet theDodecanese cheeses, such as Krassotyri and Sitaka. Krassotyri is a specialty of Kos. A log-shaped, ribbed wine-soaked cheese that in recent years has begun its trip off the island. This similar wine-soaked cheeses are also produced in Nyssiros and Leros. Sitaka, one of the most unusual dairy products in Greece, is a tart, creamy spread, not unlike yogurt cheese, made from slightly fermented sheep's and/or goat's milk, which has been salted slightly and reduced over low, traditionally wood-burning fire. It is a specialty of Kassos and served with a delicious local pasta dish together with caramelized onions.
Now let’s move a little towards the Cyclades, to meet the Cyclades cheeses. . San Mihalisin Syros island, also a PDO cheese? Manoura of Sifnos’, with a pinkish hue and dark, winy aroma? Chloro from Santorini, to be eaten either fresh (and soft), or aged over pasta? You just name it!
If you find yourself in Crete, the Cretan cheeses you will find that are part of the wellness and long-life ratio causes of the islanders. All Cretan cheeses are made from either sheep's or goat's milk or a combination of both. Here's a short list: Graviera, perhaps the most famous of Crete's cheeses, ranges from sweet, when young, to nutty and resonant, when aged. Kefalograviera, harder and more piquant than graviera, is a table cheese that is often also used in baked dishes like pastitsio and moussaka. Myzithra, a fresh whey cheese, relatively low in fat, and similar to ricotta. Staka, a cholesterol-rich delicacy only found in western Crete, which is prepared from the cream skimmed off the top of sheep's milk.

The gorgeous Graviera cheese is by now a tradition. It is made as far north asMacedonia and as far south as Crete, in Corfuto the west, in Mytilini to the east, and just about everywhere in between.
Αποτέλεσμα εικόνας για graviera
In Epirus, you will find Feta, of course - the shepherd's cheese par excellence. Dodoni, the district around the ancient oracle and amphitheater, produces some of the country's best. You will also find Galotyri, literally 'milk cheese,' irresistibly creamy and tangy, but hard to find outside the shepherds' strongholds of Epirus, Thessaly and Roumeli. Hard, pungent Kefalotyri is made from goat and sheep milk, and is mainly used for grating. Sweet Manouri, a smooth whey cheese made from sheep's milk or a mixture of sheep’s and goat's milk to which cream has been added, comes in long, pure white cylinders. Delicious with fruit or on its own for dessert.
And, of course, last but not least, Feta: Greece’s cheese for all seasons.
Αποτέλεσμα εικόνας για cheese in greeceIn Greece the cheese course runs parallel to the meal. Feta, the national Greek cheese, is relentlessly nibbled at, be it with a winter salad of boiled bitter greens, or a main course of summer vegetables stewed in olive oil, or a midnight snack hand-in-hand with a slice of crisp, icy, sweet watermelon. As for the unusual storing of Feta, there is a perfectly logical explanation: Feta is a rindless wet cheese. It is aged and cured in brine, and will keep all its flavors if it remains submerged.Greeks (together with the cheese obsessed French) have the highest per capita cheese consumption in Europe.
Feta is the quintessential Greek table cheese, but it is also excellent in all sorts of other dishes. As a main ingredient, it finds its way into savory pies, made with Feta and eggs, or combinations of cheeses, or mixtures of greens and cheese. It is also a staple on the meze table, and can be grilled or baked in paper and even sautéed, sometimes with a crust of nuts or sesame seeds or a simple egg and flour wash.
It’s basically more of a meal in itself.
Over the years, as Greece became urbanized and agriculture increasingly mechanized, new technology reached the dairies and cheese making was no longer a simple local affair. The same happened all over Europe, eventually requiring the European Commission to enact “Protected Designation of Origin” (PDO) labelling regulations for distinctive, traditional foods.Twenty Greek cheeses have been accorded PDO status thus far under these regulations. 
source:visit greece


List of Greek Protected Designations of Origin cheeses
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Feta, the most popular of Greek cheeses, has PDO status since 2002
In 1996, 19 cheeses from Greece were awarded Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) status defining their areas of origin and methods of production. Feta received the same status in 2002 and Xigalo Sitias in 2008. The designated cheeses are made from fresh milk by traditional methods. They contain predominantly sheep or sheep and goat's milk.

The use of cow's milk is not traditional in Greece as the nature of much of the terrain favours the farming of sheep and goats. Such cow's milk as is produced is mainly destined for drinking or the production of processed cheese. Only two Greek cheeses containing cow's milk have PDO status: Graviera Naxos and San Michali Metsovone (which also contains sheep's milk).


Cow's milk cheeses

  • Graviera Naxou (Γραβιέρα Νάξου)
  • San Michali (Σαν Μιχάλη)

Sheep's milk cheeses

  • Graviera Kritis (Γραβιέρα Κρήτης) (may include some goat's milk)
  • Kalathaki Limnou (Καλαθάκι Λήμνου)
  • Kasseri (Κασέρι)
  • Formaella Arachovas Parnassou (Φορμαέλλα Αράχωβας Παρνασσού)

Mixed milk cheeses

Cow/Sheep

  • Metsovone (Μετσοβόνε)
  • Graviera Agrafon (Γραβιέρα Αγράφων)

Sheep/Goat

  • Anevato (Ανεβατό)
  • Feta (Φέτα) - the most popular of Greek cheeses
  • Galotyri (Γαλοτύρι)
  • Katiki Domokou (Κατίκι Δομοκού), a spreadable, moist, slightly spicy white cheese; from Domokos, Thessaly
  • Kefalograviera (Κεφαλογραβιέρα)
  • Kopanisti (Κοπανιστή), a pink, spicy cheese that owes its hotness to fungal growth; from Mykonos Island and the surrounding Cyclades
  • Ladotyri Mytilinis (Λαδοτύρι Μυτιλήνης), a sharp, salty cheese that matures immersed in jars of olive oil; from Mytilini Island
  • Manouri (Μανούρι), a semi-soft fresh whey cheese
  • Batzos (Μπάτζος)
  • Xynomyzithra Kritis (Ξυνομυζήθρα Κρήτης)
  • Pichtogalo Chanion (Πηχτόγαλο Χανίων)
  • Sfela (Σφέλα) - also referred to as "Fire Feta", a mildly spicy soft white cheese; from Messenia, Peloponnese
  • Xygalo Sitεias (Ξύγαλο Σητείας)

Goat's milk cheese


  • There are several types of cheese made solely from goat cheese in Greece, but no applications have been submitted for PDO status, yet.

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