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It's a ripe French cheese, at it's utmost best when covered in breadcrumbs and baked...
I would certainly eat it! But I bet it's not as smelly as a good ripe Chaumes. This is real postman's feet territory.
Oooh I love cheese....but have never heard of it...I must try and find some.....It sounds good and I do tend to like stronger cheeses!
Unfortunately for American consumers, true Camembert (always made with raw milk) is simply unavailable in the U.S. Why? It must be made with raw (unpasteurized) milk, and any cheese made with raw milk must be aged at least sixty days before it can be sold in the U.S. The difficulty here is that raw milk Camembert won’t last that long. It’s aged for just two or three weeks and is at its best thirty or thirty-five days after it’s made; this stage of perfect ripeness and ideal eating quality is called “a point” (pronounced ah PWAHN) in France. Sixty-day-old Camembert would look and smell like something a chemical company was trying to hide. There are pasteurized Camemberts sold in the U.S., however. They are tasty; they just lack the range of complexity of the raw milk cheese. (Read a discussion of raw milk cheese.)
Quote from: Karen W. on 22/01/2009 11:49:41Oooh I love cheese....but have never heard of it...I must try and find some.....It sounds good and I do tend to like stronger cheeses!It has a similar texture to Brie, but a very much stronger flavour. Best eaten at room temperature.
But the 'smell' of natural gas is an added in compound, so that we can better identify it. I don't think the gas itself has any odour.