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Janet Fletcher

180 Stonecrest Dr
Napa, CA, 94558
(707) 265-0404
{ Janet Fletcher / Food Writer }

{ Janet Fletcher / Food Writer }

Janet Fletcher

  • Home
  • About
    • About Janet
    • Media
    • Client List
    • Contact
  • Planet Cheese
    • Planet Cheese Blog
    • Planet Cheese Signup
    • Cheese Library
  • Store
    • All Items
    • World Cheese Tour
    • Books
  • Classes
    • World Cheese Tour Classes
    • Other Classes & Events
    • Cooking Classes
    • Custom Class/Event Request
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  • Recipes
    • Spring
    • Summer
    • Autumn
    • Winter
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Did You Smell That?

April 6, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
Stinks so good: Patacabra

Stinks so good: Patacabra

I was preparing dinner the other night and washing dishes at the sink when a foul odor seemed to come out of nowhere. “What is THAT?” I shrieked. “What is what?” responded my husband, who was in the kitchen but behind me. “That horrible smell. Where is it coming from?” I turned toward my husband, who was laughing. “I just took some cheese out,” he said. I spotted the cheese, a favorite of mine, and almost instantly the offensive aroma became appealing. How did that happen? I figured Harold McGee, author of Nose Dive: A Field Guide to the World’s Smells, would know.

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In From: U.S. Tags aroma, cheese aroma, Harold McGee, cheese smell, smell, understanding smell
12 Comments

Cheese Without Borders

March 30, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
Immigrant roots: San Joaquin Gold (left) and the Giacomini family’s Point Reyes Original Blue

Immigrant roots: San Joaquin Gold (left) and the Giacomini family’s Point Reyes Original Blue

American cheese without immigrants would be…well, it wouldn’t be. The richness and diversity of our current cheese scene owes everything to Italian, Swiss, Dutch, Portuguese and German immigrants who brought their cheese recipes and traditions to a country that didn’t have any. In Northern California, where I live, the list of Italian and Italian-Swiss names behind our greatest cheeses is lunghissima: Bianchi, DeBernardi, Fiscalini, Giacomini, Lafranchi, Rumiano, Vella, Viviani. The immigration debate rages in this country, but the contribution of immigrants to our cheese boards is indisputable.

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In From: U.S., Milk: Cow Tags immigration, San Joaquin Gold, Fiscalini cheese, Italian immigrants, immigration and cheese
22 Comments

Cheese Meets Matzo

March 22, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
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The matzo brei I grew up with did not have cheese in it. Just eggs, soaked matzo, salt and pepper. That was my mother’s way, and she wasn’t inclined to experiment. But I’m in charge now. At my house, matzo brei can have green onions and asparagus, and it most definitely can have cheese.

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In From: U.S., Milk: Cow Tags Passover, Passover recipes, matzo recipes, matzo brei, matzo brei with cheese, asparagus, asparagus recipes, tariffs, cheese tariffs, imported cheese
12 Comments

Petite Treat

March 16, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
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The oldest cheese in America also happens to be one of the youngest. The fresh little guy pictured here is only three to four days old when packaged, but the creamery has been making it since 1865. Correct me if you know better, but I don’t believe any domestic cheese has been in commercial production longer. More to the point, it’s delicious: moist, mild and milky, the perfect segue to spring.

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In Milk: Cow, From: U.S. Tags Marin French Cheese, California cheese, spring cheese, fresh cheese
14 Comments

Feta Dresses for Spring

March 9, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
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Nobody’s a bigger feta fan than I am, but I’m getting a little tired of that baked pasta/tomato/feta recipe that won’t go away. Especially because it’s not tomato season. Now’s the time to be pairing feta with artichokes, asparagus, leeks, beets, radishes, green garlic…all the tender spring crops that are at their peak right now. Although I can’t go back to my favorite Greek restaurant quite yet, I can make the restaurant’s sublime roasted asparagus with feta. And so can you.

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In Milk: Goat, Milk: Sheep, From: Greece Tags asparagus, roasted asparagus, feta cheese, Greek food, spring vegetables, Kokkari
7 Comments

Welcome Aboard

March 2, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
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When the pandemic picked up steam last spring, Ray Rumiano found a whole new gig. His family’s century-old business, Rumiano Cheese, was doing just fine, producing the mid-priced jack cheeses that supermarket shoppers were stockpiling. But Ray knew that some of his friends who made artisan cheese were in dire straits as their restaurant and catering sales plummeted. What could he do to help them through this crisis?

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In From: U.S. Tags Rumiano Cheese, Board at Home, cheese party, vitual tastings, California cheese
13 Comments

Whey Gets a New Look

February 23, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
Planet Cheese_DSC3315-3.jpg

Upcycling. It’s the word of the moment. Can we create something useful out of stuff we usually throw away? In the cheese business, whey is a headache. For every pound of cheese, a creamery has roughly nine pounds of whey to get rid of. Sometimes a neighboring farmer will feed it to livestock or spread it on fields. But solutions for whey fall far short of the need. What if, as one young entrepreneur proposed, you could distill it?

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In From: U.S. Tags whey, distilled spirits, Wheyward Spirits, whey disposal, upcycling
7 Comments

Double Your Pleasure

February 15, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
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A cheese debut from Jasper Hill Farm is always a news event, but when the debutante is a crowd-pleaser like this one, I can almost hear the stampede. If you love buttery, silky double- and triple-cream cheeses—and retailers say you do—this Vermont beauty should go on your bucket list. It launched only last November so shops are just getting their first shipment, but you can probably locate some Sherry Gray now, before its fame spreads. Peculiar name for a cheese but, as always with Jasper Hill, there’s a back story.

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In Milk: Cow, From: U.S. Tags Jasper Hill Farm, Sherry Gray, Vermont cheese, triple cream cheese, double cream cheese, ash on cheese, ash rind, cheese and sparkling wine
13 Comments

Fondue Champion Tells All

February 9, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
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I did not think I had much to learn about fondue until I spoke to Joe Salonia, a FonDuel champion. This friendly annual competition among people in the cheese business—mostly retailers and distributors—is the Olympics of melted cheese, with the public invited to taste and judge the entries. FonDuel took a pandemic pause last year, but Salonia has earned first and second place finishes in the past. (The latter result, he assures me, was “very close.”) With Valentine’s Day looming, it seemed like a good time to get some tips from a master on a dish that’s meant to be shared.

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In Milk: Cow, From: Switzerland Tags fondue, Valentine’s Day recipes, Swiss cheese, melted cheese, raclette, Gourmino, FonDuel, Gruyère
6 Comments

When a Cheese Dies

February 2, 2021 janet@janetfletcher.com
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“No more Landaff” is not a phrase I wanted to read this year, or ever. I loved this cheese. But New Hampshire’s Landaff Creamery is closing, and its signature cheese—Landaff—will soon live only in memory. It makes me sad to lose a farmstead producer and to realize how quickly and quietly a unique cheese like Landaff can essentially go extinct. You might want to snap up a wedge while you can; you’ll find a mail-order source in my post.

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In From: U.S., Milk: Cow Tags Landaff Creamery, New England cheese, New Hampshire cheese, raw-milk cheese, farmstead cheese, Cellars at Jasper Hill
2 Comments
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Welcome to my world: a fragrant, fascinating universe devoted to great cheese. In this and future Planet Cheese posts, you’ll find profiles of the world’s best cheeses plus insights into everything cheese: shops, recipes, interviews, pairing discoveries, classes, videos, travel. If you haven’t already done so, sign up here - it’s complimentary - and join me in learning something new about cheese every week.



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     Photographs: Douglas Fletcher, Ed Anderson, Megan Clouse, Faith Echtermeyer, Eva Kolenko,
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