The Big Lies You've Been Believing About Cheese

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 2 май 2024
  • The cheese landscape is punctuated by myths and legends, only some of which hold any water. Want to know which stories have as many holes in them as Swiss cheese? These are some of the top contenders for cheesiest myth.
    #Cheese #Myths #Lies
    Myth: Some cheeses are naturally orange | 0:00
    Myth: Soft cheeses are higher in fat than hard cheeses | 1:47
    Myth: Parmesan and Parmigiano Reggiano are the same | 2:44
    Myth: Cheddar is flecked with salt crystals | 4:05
    Myth: You should cut the rind off your Brie | 5:41
    Myth: You can't eat moldy cheese | 7:05
    Myth: Cheese gives you nightmares | 8:36
    Myth: Cheese is vegetarian | 9:46
    Myth: Raw milk cheeses are dangerous | 10:56
    Myth: American cheese isn't real cheese | 12:12‌
    Read Full Article: www.mashed.com/1521955/false-...
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 422

  • @MashedFood
    @MashedFood  15 дней назад +14

    What's your favorite kind of cheese?

  • @SFNightOwl
    @SFNightOwl 11 дней назад +49

    Blessed are the cheesemakers...

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 10 дней назад +4

      I was under the impression that it covered any manufacturers of dairy products.

    • @vorpalblades
      @vorpalblades 9 дней назад +1

      Venezuelan beaver cheese?

    • @rithikuja7299
      @rithikuja7299 7 дней назад

      Merci beaucoup

    • @BlazinRiver1
      @BlazinRiver1 6 дней назад

      Blessed are the cheesemakers? What the bloody hell did they ever do? Shhhhhhhhhhhhhh......we cant hear what he is saying. Ohhh blessed are the big noses.......shut up!!

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 6 дней назад

      literal animal abusers

  • @utGort
    @utGort 15 дней назад +90

    They do not use cellulose to "bulk out" grated Parmesan. They use it to prevent the cheese from clumping.

    • @telebubba5527
      @telebubba5527 12 дней назад +12

      Just don't buy it and grate it yourself. It's thousand times better.

    • @lancekirkwood7922
      @lancekirkwood7922 12 дней назад +8

      Right, but who really wants sawdust in their parm???

    • @hoboonwheels9289
      @hoboonwheels9289 12 дней назад +5

      Apparently according to testers it works better in recipes to make cheese bites in fryer, fresh doesn't crisp or hold its shape they say.

    • @hoboonwheels9289
      @hoboonwheels9289 12 дней назад +7

      @@lancekirkwood7922 apparently dried plant is cellulose.

    • @ALX112358
      @ALX112358 11 дней назад +4

      ​@@hoboonwheels9289Cheese bites are typically made from mozzarella or cheddar, not Parmesan. What kind of dumb test was that?

  • @b6983832
    @b6983832 12 дней назад +66

    What you are saying about "Parmesan", is true for the United States. In European Union, selling cheese which is not Parmigiano Reggiano as Parmesan is illegal.

    • @persnikitty3570
      @persnikitty3570 12 дней назад +4

      It's called Parmesan Style, which is allowed by the Italian trade union for production. That said, California, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania all rank in the top 20 for illicit Reggiano, a billion USD industry. This has led to the use of microchips to track the true Parmesans, as the micro-print was easily broken.

    • @b6983832
      @b6983832 11 дней назад

      @@persnikitty3570 Not really, because Ireland and Malta are the only EU nations having English as an official language. That said, all kinds of names, such as Parmissimo, are used for these products. The use of the word Parmesan for a non-Parmigianio Reggiano is although banned in the EU.

    • @Dano12345100
      @Dano12345100 11 дней назад

      Yea, they are a bunch of food fascists in the EU.🤔😏

    • @sonyafox3271
      @sonyafox3271 11 дней назад +3

      You can buy the real stuff in the American Grocery Store, in the cheese section of the deli, where you can buy it freshly grated or a chunk, along with other real authentic cheeses, the big difference is be ready to pay because, it will cost you a lot more!

    • @MorpheousXO
      @MorpheousXO 11 дней назад +1

      @@sonyafox3271 I buy my Parmigiano Reggiano from Costco. You get a way better deal on it there.

  • @mm-yt8sf
    @mm-yt8sf 15 дней назад +33

    cheesemaker: "hehe...i'll make more money by coloring my cheese orange with saffron! i'll be rich!" 🙂

    • @PhantomFilmAustralia
      @PhantomFilmAustralia 13 дней назад +4

      Ended up making as much sense as a silver dollar.

    • @Somebody509-ot4kk
      @Somebody509-ot4kk 12 дней назад +7

      Saffron is expensive , use Annatto seed much cheaper and used widely! 😂

    • @originaldcjensen
      @originaldcjensen 11 дней назад +1

      @@PhantomFilmAustraliaNot sure what you are saying here. When silver dollars came out, they were close to a dollar of silver at the time.

    • @williwass6837
      @williwass6837 11 дней назад

      @@originaldcjensen Yepp,wehn they came out!Not anymore!

  • @gerryboudreaultboudreault2608
    @gerryboudreaultboudreault2608 12 дней назад +43

    If your old cheese has green mould on it, do not throw it away. Just cut the green off. The rest is still totally edible.
    That green is what made the cheese in the beginning ( and gives 'old' its stronger flavor).

    • @sonyafox3271
      @sonyafox3271 11 дней назад +1

      It’s mold not mould!

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 10 дней назад

      @@sonyafox3271 Either way. Look it up.

    • @davecoop9579
      @davecoop9579 10 дней назад +21

      ​@sonyafox3271 There is a whole world outside the USA. A world where we spell it "mould".

    • @wintersprite
      @wintersprite 9 дней назад +10

      @@sonyafox3271In the US, we don’t spell mold with a “u”. In other countries such as Canada and the UK, they do spell mould with a “u”. There are other words that also differ between the US and other countries in spelling (harbor/harbour, color/colour, etc.).
      I live in the US and love books written by Canadian author L. M. Montgomery, who wrote Anne of Green Gables, Emily of New Moon, and many other novels. Being from Canada, she spells the above words appropriately with a “u” in them. Neither spellings are the only correct ones. For awhile I started adding “u” to them myself. A handful of words do have alternate spellings.

    • @-danR
      @-danR 6 дней назад +3

      Never mind the spelling.
      Unless we're talking blue cheeses (Stilton, Gorgonzola, etc.), the green or blue has nothing to do with the making of the cheese; the microbes in question are rather the colorless Lactobacilli and other dairy bacteria. If your cheddar is going blue-green moldy, it came from imperfect packaging, your kitchen, or your hands.

  • @thaisstone5192
    @thaisstone5192 15 дней назад +22

    NO artificial coloring is allowed in New Zealand cheese. At least that was the way it was when I was living there.

    • @georgetteparsons4474
      @georgetteparsons4474 10 дней назад +2

      Still is.

    • @thaisstone5192
      @thaisstone5192 9 дней назад +2

      @@georgetteparsons4474 Delighted to hear that. I lived there for nearly 30 years.

    • @georgetteparsons4474
      @georgetteparsons4474 9 дней назад

      ​@@thaisstone5192You should come back.cheers.

    • @mikemondano3624
      @mikemondano3624 5 дней назад

      None of the coloring she mentioned is "artificial".

    • @thaisstone5192
      @thaisstone5192 5 дней назад

      @@mikemondano3624 It will still change the way the cheese looks.

  • @jamesmansion2572
    @jamesmansion2572 14 дней назад +22

    Orange cheddar is not a thing in the land where Cheddar Gorge is. I think its because our American friends can't say Leicester. Which I admit is an acquired knowledge, almost as bad as Cholmondeley (which is, of course, chumley).

    • @aj9675
      @aj9675 12 дней назад +2

      Aged in the caves there is only one true Cheddar Cheese in my book, and that is from just down the road, coming from Somerset you can call me bias but it's the genuine stuff just like the true Stilton Cheese.

    • @justmyopinion3450
      @justmyopinion3450 12 дней назад +3

      As a shepherd with a flock of Leicester Longwools, I can attest that some Americans do in fact know how to pronounce the word. Brits just don't know how to spell Lester.

    • @rosameryrojas-delcerro1059
      @rosameryrojas-delcerro1059 12 дней назад +1

      @@aj9675 Stilton cheese isn't even from Stilton.

    • @aj9675
      @aj9675 11 дней назад

      @@rosameryrojas-delcerro1059 I know it isn't it just uses the name and can only be called so if made in one of the 3 bordering counties.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC 11 дней назад

      I know how to pronounce "Leicester". I was living in Luton at the time, and one night at St. Pancras I saw a train on my usual track and hopped aboard just as it was about to leave. It pulled out instantly, at which point I discovered it was the non-stop to Leicester. I caught a mail train back to Luton, arriving around 5 a.m.

  • @user-nc2kz2mn5v
    @user-nc2kz2mn5v 11 дней назад +37

    Lucky to live in the UK as we have great cheeses. butter, cream and dairy.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC 11 дней назад

      I recollect from my life there in the '80s that Brits are very proud of their cheeses. By far the best ice cream I ever tasted was at a dairy festival there.

    • @sobizzr
      @sobizzr 9 дней назад

      Try Australia. We got the Best
      Organics. 😊

    • @rhohonggi2577
      @rhohonggi2577 8 дней назад

      Courtesy of abo land... 😂​@@sobizzr

    • @donaldallison
      @donaldallison 5 дней назад

      Luckily we can get UK cheeses at Costco in Canada

  • @antimatterserpent
    @antimatterserpent 11 дней назад +15

    I love it when gorgonzola is so moldy that a cloud of spores is coming out of my nose as I chew it

  • @Jagermonsta
    @Jagermonsta 7 дней назад +2

    after 40+ years... for some reason I'm still surprised that people think that orange cheese is normal

    • @e.gadd.1
      @e.gadd.1 2 дня назад

      orange oranges aren't real either. The supermarket ones are painted with eye pleasing dye

  • @kristideeley
    @kristideeley 9 дней назад +12

    K, yeah, no. I used a block of cheese with white stuff on it to make a casserole once and I ended up in the ER with horrible food poisoning that night. I'll stick to only eating the mold that's *supposed* to be on/in the cheese from now on, thx.

  • @evasitton8352
    @evasitton8352 15 дней назад +12

    Thank you for all the information about the cheese we love to eat. Interesting facts!

  • @patrickdegenaar9495
    @patrickdegenaar9495 10 дней назад +5

    Hmm.. without pasteurisation, tuberculosis bacteria can remain in the milk. Unfortunately, vaccinations don't cover all forms of TB these days... and the effects of non pulmonary tuberculosis in kids is horrific.

    • @truthmatters8241
      @truthmatters8241 5 дней назад

      The infIux of over TEN MILLI0n peopie iIIegaIIy has brought a resurgence of MANY diseases incIuding TB, measIes and many other chiIdhood diseases. One of the best things for kids is raw miIk, rich in probiotics for heaIthy immune systems.

  • @GeraldM_inNC
    @GeraldM_inNC 14 дней назад +171

    It doesn't matter how much cheaper "American cheese" is. It's far far inferior and arguably not even cheese.

    • @wisecoconut5
      @wisecoconut5 14 дней назад +17

      True. Legally, American cheese must be sold as "processed cheese food." Which is just a clever way to hide it's artificially. Yay marketing 😒

    • @aaronjade3972
      @aaronjade3972 12 дней назад +12

      That is not cheese 100 percent agree and will not eat this ..

    • @faiththrower7951
      @faiththrower7951 12 дней назад +18

      Chemically closer to plastic than cheese

    • @Somebody509-ot4kk
      @Somebody509-ot4kk 12 дней назад +10

      Ya it’s cheese food. It is what people feed their pet cheese. But ya know it’s fricken awesome on a burger.

    • @jeaniebird999
      @jeaniebird999 12 дней назад +10

      It's not that bad, it's basically just cheese sauce that was allowed to cool.
      You can make your own by making a typical cheese sauce (butter, flour, milk, cheese) and pouring it into a shallow dish so it's basically one "slice" thick, then let it cool. Afterwards you can cut it into squares.

  • @tusker4954
    @tusker4954 11 дней назад +3

    As a Brit, we dont eat much "orange" cheese. - mostly white natural for me.

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 10 дней назад

      In the US, some brands make both orange and natural-colored cheese, to cover their bases. There is even "white" American cheese. Apparently the practice in the US was initially mainly to hide the seasonal variation in the color of many cheeses. In the summer, cows often eat more fresh grass and the cheese would have more color. In the winter, it looked different and that apparently bothered some people.

    • @SkyeBjS
      @SkyeBjS 9 дней назад

      The possible exception being Red Leicester? Red Fox and Sparkenhoe are both made in the UK.

  • @maryhairy1
    @maryhairy1 10 дней назад +6

    Although convenient to have the sliced cheese, I’m thinking it’s one molecule away from being plastic. It doesn’t even taste of cheese.

    • @jackporter2334
      @jackporter2334 9 дней назад

      That’s margarine, not cheese

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 6 дней назад

      maybe less cows had to suffer for it then

    • @truthmatters8241
      @truthmatters8241 5 дней назад

      @@jackporter2334 That was just ONE of the g0v scams!! So is viIifying raw miIk.

  • @IcemanReturns
    @IcemanReturns 15 дней назад +11

    Since Mashed gets it wrong many times, I still enjoy this video!

    • @evolancer211
      @evolancer211 15 дней назад +1

      Yeah they don't care about facts, they just want the views

  • @Dingdong3696oyvey
    @Dingdong3696oyvey 14 дней назад +13

    Cutting the cheese doesn’t mean what you think it does.

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 10 дней назад

      When I was working on other countries, some of my fellow Americans would directly translate "cutting the cheese" into the local language and continue to use the phrase....and commonly see puzzled looks from the locals.

    • @Dingdong3696oyvey
      @Dingdong3696oyvey 10 дней назад

      @@jfess1911 I do that all the time with idiomatic expressions. 😄

  • @ChucklesMcGurk
    @ChucklesMcGurk 10 дней назад +3

    lack of cheese gives me nightmares

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 6 дней назад

      rip cows

    • @mikemondano3624
      @mikemondano3624 5 дней назад

      The tyramine in cheese kills some people.

    • @truthmatters8241
      @truthmatters8241 5 дней назад

      Cheese is wonderfuI. So is nutrient dense raw miIk, the probiotics are very heaIthy.

  • @tenniabrown9865
    @tenniabrown9865 15 дней назад +2

    Thanks for sharing

  • @TaylerMade
    @TaylerMade 9 часов назад

    as a young man i made cheese for two seasons here in new zealand. hardest work i have ever done, converting 3000 gallons of milk into 3000lbs of cheddar by hand. all dairy is grass fed and the quality of our cheese and butter is matchless. but as much a s i love a good strong cheddar, my all time favourite is a good stilton.

  • @mikemondano3624
    @mikemondano3624 5 дней назад +2

    Shaker cheeses are not "bulked out" by cellulose. It is added (around 2%) to prevent the grated cheese from reforming into one, solid block.
    This video has a lot of misinformation.

  • @BlazinRiver1
    @BlazinRiver1 6 дней назад

    I was a cheesemaker back in the day. We produced Colby and Colby Jack.
    Ingredients: Milk....the culture(turns the milk)....#7dye....salt....(peppers if Colby Jack)
    It wasnt until I started working there did I even realize all cheese is actually white...lol
    No added preservatives or any other BS.

  • @housepianist
    @housepianist 10 дней назад +2

    This so much reminds me of the classic Monty Python sketch ‘Cheese Shop’. It’s how I learned about the different kinds of available cheeses in the world.

  • @bucc5207
    @bucc5207 12 дней назад +14

    I just can't look at bleu cheese without thinking it must have been awesomely tasty before it went bad.

    • @rithikuja7299
      @rithikuja7299 11 дней назад +1

      Actually, before the blue mould grows it is pretty bland, as are most baby cheeses. They need the maturation time to develop their flavour. Unfortunately I have yet to find a blue cheese that I like.

    • @wintersprite
      @wintersprite 9 дней назад +1

      I hate bleu cheese. My mom hates it too. My dad likes it.
      I also don’t like brie (I occasionally eat it in the Barber brie and Apple stuffed chicken where it’s melted and mixed with at least one other type of cheese, I think. I think it’s the rind that tastes gross to me.

  • @Crayfish-
    @Crayfish- 9 дней назад +7

    In the section on Raw & Pasteurized Cheeses, In Europe They (?) Pasteurize by Electrification ( i.e. electric shock ).
    In the United States they " Unfortunately " use " heat " !
    " Heat Kills around 75% of the Beneficial Nutrients " While " High Voltage " ruins little if any.

    • @mikemondano3624
      @mikemondano3624 5 дней назад +1

      High voltage works through the heat it delivers to the mixture.
      Nutrients are not alive and cannot therefore be "killed".
      There is no such thing as a non-beneficial nutrient.

    • @truthmatters8241
      @truthmatters8241 5 дней назад

      I think you meant to reference Probiotics and not nutrients. Probiotics are microorganisms that line your gut and support nutrient absorption. They also help protect you from foreign invaders like E. coli and parasites. The best way to include probiotics in your diet is to get them in their most natural state, which includes raw milk products, such as cheese, kefir and yogurt.

    • @mikemondano3624
      @mikemondano3624 5 дней назад

      @@truthmatters8241 Most probiotics die almost immediately after swallowing. That is what the extreme acidity of the stomach is for. And even if they didn't, bacteria requiring milk don't do well in intestines.
      And FYI: Around 80% of the dry weight of human feces is E. Coli, They are found naturally in the intestines of almost all animals.

    • @Bob_Adkins
      @Bob_Adkins 4 часа назад +1

      They just call it "electric current" because it sounds safe, and when no one is looking they irradiate it. :)

    • @mikemondano3624
      @mikemondano3624 2 часа назад

      @@truthmatters8241 The extreme acidity of the stomach kills the vast majority of microbes that enter it. E. Coli, found naturally in the intestines of most animals, make up 80% of the dry weight of human feces. Life would be quite difficult without them. Many yogurts and cheeses are made from pasteurized milk and organisms are no longer alive. The Ig-A system in the intestines is the main defense against parasites. Bacteria found in dairy products are not suited to living in human guts and cannot survive there for long, if at all.

  • @DeepblueskyDeepbluesky
    @DeepblueskyDeepbluesky 9 дней назад +1

    The mould that grows on the cheese is actually the most important part of the cheese. It is high in B vitamins. I certainly will eat it if you do not want to.

  • @markhaseley3304
    @markhaseley3304 9 дней назад

    Sometimes I cut off the moldy part if I don't identify it. Cheese is food, sometimes beneficial cultures grow on it because of that fact. Love me that cheese!

  • @kowalski3769
    @kowalski3769 12 дней назад

    Epoisses is my absolute favorite. It has a massive stink to it but man..soo smooth and creamy. Absolutely delicious.

  • @goodbarbenie5477
    @goodbarbenie5477 10 дней назад +1

    To stop your cheese from running away from U....😅. Just rub a little butter all over it It will help the spread of mould Or lift your cheese up from the bottom of the cheese dish.With bottle caps. Which also should also have a lid on the dish... Viola. Problemo solved..😅...

  • @svenmagnus3326
    @svenmagnus3326 11 дней назад +3

    Don't F with cheese! My simple cheese tip. When making a pizza at home add a bit of Muenster cheese, about a 1/4 to 1/3 the amount of mozzarella, depending on preference. It adds a flavor and the awesome "cheese stretch " cheese effect we see in commercials.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC 11 дней назад

      If you buy a pizza and the "cheese" doesn't stretch, they used a soy substitute for cheese.

  • @evangelinewandering9547
    @evangelinewandering9547 11 дней назад +6

    The US Parmesan which won the “2016 global cheese award.”
    Is that the usual American interpretation of “global/ world”, meaning only the US, or was it actually a global competition?

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 10 дней назад +1

      International competition, in Frome, England.

  • @dinadee9837
    @dinadee9837 10 дней назад +8

    Background music is so distracting and annoying

  • @KRYMauL
    @KRYMauL 9 часов назад

    The current form of Craft Singles is different from the original American Cheese, a Cheddar that had added Whey. It has too much whey to curd to accurately be described as cheese, which is called a milk product.

  • @anikettripathi7991
    @anikettripathi7991 2 дня назад

    Temperatures below zero degree are automatically a food preservatives. So food products specially meat and cheese can be consumed for many years continuously but similar temperature facilities aren't there In Bharat and warmer nation. So probabilities of contamination are maximum.

  • @wintersprite
    @wintersprite 9 дней назад +1

    “The power of cheese.”
    I hate brie and bleu cheese. It’s partly because of the mold in them.
    I love cheddar, swiss, provolone, goat (usually crandberry and/or blueberry varieties), mozzarella, ricotta, cream cheese, cottage cheese, etc. I also love the port wine cheese spread (only the version in the jars; not the ball with nuts).

    • @CP-od7tr
      @CP-od7tr 2 дня назад

      Why? Brie, Blue and Feta are my favorites. Moldafobic. LOL. I hear ya, you are not alone. My sister is disgusted that me and my mom will cut off the mold and eat the rest. 😂 Been on the planet 65 years and it hasn't killed me yet.

  • @Bad_Wolf788
    @Bad_Wolf788 10 дней назад

    Used to eat English Stilton before bed.
    Never gave me nightmares but did give me very vivided dreams in a god way.

    • @smkh2890
      @smkh2890 4 дня назад

      Stilton: the veritable King of cheeses.

  • @erikschiegg68
    @erikschiegg68 10 дней назад +1

    _Swallow it down (what a unpasturized cheese)_
    _It feels so good (swimming in your stomach)_
    _Wait until the dust settles_
    _You eat you learn, you love you learn_
    _You cry you learn, you lose you learn_
    _You bleed you learn, you puke you lean..._

    • @steffurness
      @steffurness 9 дней назад

      Alrighty there, calm down, Adonis...

  • @happymonk4206
    @happymonk4206 11 дней назад

    I once cut off the mold that was on a bit of cheddar after it had been in a fridge for a while. I suffered no I'll effects other that a bit of constipation.

    • @jfess1911
      @jfess1911 10 дней назад

      It depends somewhat to a person's tolerance to different molds. I can eat many cheeses, but bleu cheese, for example, will make me very ill. I know that I didn't trim far enough pretty quickly because my hands will swell and I feel unwell. I am too cheap to throw away a large chunk of cheese with a little mold, though. "Live life dangerously: Eat Cheese" is my motto. (Well, ...not really).

  • @chrisbiz2
    @chrisbiz2 12 дней назад +9

    Uh, James Kraft was a Canadian-American entrepreneur and inventor and the founder of Kraft Foods Inc. Kraft immigrated to the United States from Canada in 1902. He developed a patented pasteurization process for cheese, allowing it to be shipped long distances, making him the first to patent processed cheese.

    • @user-it7lf7kk8m
      @user-it7lf7kk8m 11 дней назад +1

      Been damaging cheese ever since

    • @antimatterserpent
      @antimatterserpent 11 дней назад +1

      I believe he also made it a legal requirement for macaroni & cheese to be called "Kraft dinner" and be served with ketchup in Canada.

  • @christinehorsley
    @christinehorsley 8 дней назад

    Never heard that cheese gives you nightmares!
    I love cheeses.
    My favorites are Brie, Camembert and other soft white rind cheeses. Chaumes, St Albray, 🤤
    But I like others too, hard cheeses like Emmentaler, Leerdamer, Maasdamer, Bergkaese, smoked cheese, cream cheeses with herbs.
    I’m not that fond of Italian cheeses, though a good Provolone every once in a while …
    Parmigiano Reggiano I mostly grind & put on top of spaghetti or linguine with my homemade tomato sauce or just some good olive oil on the pasta.
    Some Swiss, Dutch and Danish cheeses round up my selection every once in a while.
    I use cheddar (English cheddar, sometimes white, sometimes orange coloured) mostly in ham & cheese omelettes, or sometimes cubed as snacks.
    I don’t like the sliced processed cheeses (American cheese) which some people put on US style bread (Toastbrot), but it does make an edible grilled cheese toast. Every once in a while.
    What I missed most during nearly 12 years in the USA was real cheeses and real bread.
    I’m sooo happy living in Germany again, with a good selection of various cheeses pre-packaged in every supermarket, in discounters like Lidl and Aldi and on the “cheese counters” of upscale supermarkets.

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 6 дней назад

      it gives cows horrible nightmares, well, more like a horrible life

    • @christinehorsley
      @christinehorsley 6 дней назад

      @@BenjoCovers
      I try to buy organic cheeses as much as possible, in Germany organic is called „Bio“ and those cows lead a much better life, spending a lot of time outside grazing, being able to roam and eating mostly grass and hay.
      Of course their milk output is less than that from the cows in conventional milkfarms, which makes the cheeses more expensive, but it’s worth it.
      Or cheese from smaller, local “Käsereien” like Bergader in Bavaria.
      On their website you can find links to the milkfarmers who supply the milk to Bergader, with details on each farm, how many or how few cows they have, if they’re mostly inside or allowed to roam, if the particular farm offers “farm vacations” etc.
      Being a smaller “Kaeserei” they offer less variety than the big companies, but then I can choose a different cheese from a different “Kaeserei”.
      My favorite cheese, I eat about 1 wedge every week, is the 200 grams Bio Camembert from Edeka.
      Maybe I gave the wrong impression, I don’t eat lots of cheeses all the time, it’s the variety I like.

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 6 дней назад

      ​@@christinehorsley Hi, im from Austria so ik what it is. It still involves a cow getting artificially inseminated against her will and then her child gets taken away after birth. This happens every year, until the cow is "used up" and then she get send to the slaughter house at a fraction of her life time. Thats Bio and small farms for you. Not that nice after all, isnt it?
      I eat cheese thats made from cashew nuts, it tastes great, is healthier and also ethical. You vote with your money, make sure to align that with your morals my friend.

  • @jeil5676
    @jeil5676 7 дней назад +1

    Talks about moldy cheese...
    Shows pic of moldy squash 8:24

  • @eva-mariacoughlin9456
    @eva-mariacoughlin9456 7 дней назад

    Also dandelion color has been used. I have a tin from the 1800‘s from Vermont saying dandelion color on it for butter and cheese.

  • @sueelliott4793
    @sueelliott4793 2 дня назад

    I eat moldy cheddar cheese, it has never made me sick. My dad used to eat it too. I love cheese but can't eat the over-salty, yuk plastic cheese slices.

  • @GetToTheFarm
    @GetToTheFarm 6 дней назад

    the episode about unpasuterized Stilton is THE best episdoe of the BBC comedy "CHEF!"

  • @pynn1000
    @pynn1000 9 дней назад +1

    Do people really remove the outside of Camembert?

  • @6Fiona6_P_6
    @6Fiona6_P_6 7 дней назад

    As for processed cheese if eating hard cheese like cheddar all the way to pecorino gives you migraines but you still need a non medicated way of getting calcium, processed cheese maybe the way to go for you ( although as I found out recently when I had to go on an elimination diet, cheese wasn’t a trigger for what’s going on with me). And as for the flavour in processed cheese it’s improved slightly in recent years ( It’s not as plastic flavoured as I once remembered it)…🧀…… ⚛️☮️🌏

  • @karinavandamme804
    @karinavandamme804 15 дней назад +15

    can anything be done about the voice....thank you

    • @johnpowell5433
      @johnpowell5433 10 дней назад +2

      You could grate orange cheese on that voice. 😖Turn on subtitles, turn off sound.

    • @chrisricker8036
      @chrisricker8036 10 дней назад

      Yup plug your ears Karen

  • @robinburn4974
    @robinburn4974 11 дней назад +19

    If the Americans believe that orange cheese is natural, it says a lot about the state of American cheese

    • @RootlessNZ
      @RootlessNZ 11 дней назад +2

      And American "food." Do Americans eat real food?

    • @luga718
      @luga718 6 дней назад

      ​@@RootlessNZ😂😂😂😂😂True!

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 6 дней назад +1

      They also think that cows dont suffer in the milk industries

  • @alexandralovesgoats3360
    @alexandralovesgoats3360 15 дней назад +2

    Colbyjack and blue cheese

  • @winstonelston5743
    @winstonelston5743 14 дней назад

    3:09 I have a grater like that one.

  • @DSAK55
    @DSAK55 День назад

    Blessed are the cheese makers

  • @keithnaylor1981
    @keithnaylor1981 11 дней назад +11

    I could only take 10 seconds of that voice!

  • @stevemichael8458
    @stevemichael8458 6 дней назад

    So sodium in cheddar is measured in milligrams per ounce? That is a mashup worthy of British measurements :))

  • @mikiscruf
    @mikiscruf 11 дней назад

    You seem to be unaware that Kosher cheese does not contain rennet - milk+meat products are a big no no in a Kosher diet - much easier to fine than non-rennet cheeses and usually taste better too.

  • @lmay1466
    @lmay1466 11 дней назад

    Much imported Parmesan is imported from Argentina.

  • @HelloMyFavoriteVids
    @HelloMyFavoriteVids День назад

    No wonder why I ate a wheelworth of cheese in a year at my job lol

  • @reavenwildfire7146
    @reavenwildfire7146 10 дней назад +1

    The cheese that you're talking about the people buy and sometimes put on sandwiches the Kraft cheese it has been proven to have plastic particles on it.

    • @neplatnyudaj110
      @neplatnyudaj110 8 дней назад +2

      These days, you can find plastic particles everywhere.

  • @AudriannaB-World-Peace
    @AudriannaB-World-Peace 5 дней назад

    I get real Parmesan and grate it myself...now THAT is healthy. Anything by Kraft like their fake cheeses are very salty snd does not taste good at all.

  • @StooFras-TheFiresofHell.
    @StooFras-TheFiresofHell. 10 дней назад +1

    You say the rind of brie is delicious I beg to differ,the first time I tasted brie I found the rind tasted strongly of Ammonia,put me right off the cheese and I have never eaten it since.

    • @SkyeBjS
      @SkyeBjS 9 дней назад +1

      If it tasted/smelled of ammonia, it was old. It should have been thrown out.

    • @wintersprite
      @wintersprite 9 дней назад +1

      I think the rind of brie is disgusting. I also hate bleu cheese.

    • @StooFras-TheFiresofHell.
      @StooFras-TheFiresofHell. 9 дней назад

      @@SkyeBjS The actual cheese itself inside the rind was creamy and quite nice,too mild to my way of thinking I like a strong cheese myself,but as I say the rind tasted weird.

  • @carlbeeblebronx9061
    @carlbeeblebronx9061 11 дней назад +4

    NZ Chedder is not coloured , the yellow is from lycopene and carotene from the pasture .

    • @user-zk8ed4kd2b
      @user-zk8ed4kd2b 10 дней назад

      True. There are cheeses that are naturally yellow due to the diet of the cows.

  • @dougaltolan3017
    @dougaltolan3017 12 дней назад +6

    Grams per ounce?
    Seriously??

    • @toker6664
      @toker6664 12 дней назад +1

      Imperial has grams too, 28 grams to the ounce

    • @oo0Spyder0oo
      @oo0Spyder0oo 10 дней назад +1

      @@toker6664Grams are metric only.

    • @davecoop9579
      @davecoop9579 10 дней назад

      I spotted that too! Highlighting the bizarre relationship that the US has with the metric system 😅

    • @dougaltolan3017
      @dougaltolan3017 10 дней назад

      @@davecoop9579 psst, don't tell them, but fundamentally US is 100% metric. All thier weights and measures reference standards are metric. Shhhh!

    • @davecoop9579
      @davecoop9579 10 дней назад

      @dougaltolan3017 Yes it's obvious from all the 6 footers talking about the miles-per-gallon figures of their 350 cubic inch Chevies 🙄

  • @bigskunk801
    @bigskunk801 9 дней назад

    Oh man. I’ve been thinking my whole life that cows have colored milk.

  • @vladimirputindreadlockrast812
    @vladimirputindreadlockrast812 10 дней назад +1

    I did not know orange cheese was artificially colored.

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 6 дней назад

      did you know the cow is artificially inseminated every year and then separated from their child so humans can steal it.
      And after a few years the cow is used up and will be slaughtered at a fraction if their life span

    • @truthmatters8241
      @truthmatters8241 5 дней назад

      Yep, and aged white cheddar is GREAT !! The MORE CHEESE the merrier!! NaturaI food is nutritious.

  • @Lostboy811
    @Lostboy811 13 дней назад +1

    False the quality chesse was orange originally but to make more money they skimmed it then added carrot juice

  • @rheel6747
    @rheel6747 12 дней назад +2

    Brie and Camembert are the same thing.
    Change my mind
    *sips on coffee mug

    • @FordHallam
      @FordHallam 11 дней назад +4

      I suppose it'd be hard to discern much difference between these cheeses while drinking coffee ;-) But I'd suggest there is quite a difference, more than that between coke and Pepsi, which seems to get an awful lot of non-foodie types worked up. Ultimately it's down to your palette and what you enjoy, so if your distinction relies on taste alone, that's on you :-)

    • @jameslovelady7751
      @jameslovelady7751 11 дней назад +1

      Don't be so snarky about other people's taste. I find brie to be as slimy and tasteless as Velveeta so I go for the Manchega. Each to their own.

    • @eileenmcdonald1599
      @eileenmcdonald1599 11 дней назад

      Is Velveeta even cheese?

  • @harrybarrow6222
    @harrybarrow6222 11 дней назад +4

    So, basically, American cheese is a mixture of left-over pieces, plus various synthetic chemicals to enhance profits. 🤣

    • @komocka
      @komocka 9 дней назад

      The sodium salt of citric acid is no synthetic chemical

  • @michaelotto8696
    @michaelotto8696 14 дней назад +5

    8:24 Cheese? Looks like spoiled roasted butternut squash to me.

  • @robotparadise
    @robotparadise 15 дней назад +4

    As a immunocompromised individual It makes me feel good to know unpasteurized cheese is cleanly and responsibly produced (because marketing never lies and the government really cares), so I can cleanly and responsibly die from infection.

    • @SkyeBjS
      @SkyeBjS 9 дней назад

      It is, but raw cheese is also discouraged for pregnant people, very young children, and immuno-comprimised people. Choose a pasteurized variety, there are many.

  • @constitutionalrepublic1966
    @constitutionalrepublic1966 6 дней назад

    Make your own cheese.🧀 It’s so easy and you just need 2-3 ingredients. Milk, salt, and an acid base like vinegar/lemons/citric acid to curdle the milk and separate the cheese and whey.

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 6 дней назад

      main ingredient: Animal cruelty

    • @truthmatters8241
      @truthmatters8241 5 дней назад

      constitutionaI repubIic....love your name!!! And I've been Iooking into making homemade cheese, I didn't reaIize how easy it was.

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 5 дней назад

      @@truthmatters8241 is it really that easy to cause harm to animals for your taste pleasure? Damn, the disconnect

  • @JeffSherlock
    @JeffSherlock 10 дней назад

    You have absolutely no idea what I have or do believe.

  • @1Pureblood606
    @1Pureblood606 10 дней назад

    Used to get this stuff from England, "old nippy" the name says it all . Amazing for Mac and cheese

  • @larrysorenson4789
    @larrysorenson4789 6 дней назад

    I once read the ingredients on a well known grated Parmesan brand. The first two were dehydrated whey and the second was CELLULOSE!!!!!!!!
    THAT’s WOOD. Read the labels.

    • @BenjoCovers
      @BenjoCovers 6 дней назад

      Its contains animal abuse, read the supply chain

  • @normmarino7914
    @normmarino7914 8 дней назад

    How come bric and other cheeses get softer as they age ?😊

  • @JCO2002
    @JCO2002 5 дней назад

    Milligrams per ounce? Only in Amurica.

  • @AlexanderWright1
    @AlexanderWright1 День назад

    milligrams per ounce??
    Pick consistent units and stick to them!!

  • @josiecapps2555
    @josiecapps2555 10 дней назад

    Love my cheese, by Canadian from Quebec….love cheese, yeah🎉

  • @tillybobs2
    @tillybobs2 12 дней назад +2

    I prefer white chedder

  • @gregzeigler3850
    @gregzeigler3850 4 дня назад

    One can make cheese with vinegar, too...

  • @lesjones5684
    @lesjones5684 10 дней назад +1

    Fomuga cheese 🧀

  • @FangOfLight
    @FangOfLight 10 дней назад

    So I pay more for white cheddar despite it being cheaper to produce?

  • @nigelfreeman6192
    @nigelfreeman6192 11 дней назад +1

    I do love the way Americans pronounce Parmesan

  • @matthewwilson9749
    @matthewwilson9749 12 дней назад +3

    I haven't cringed so hard when she pronounced 'chèvre". Hoo Boy!

  • @AbsoluteNut1
    @AbsoluteNut1 12 дней назад +5

    Why would anyone care about the fat content of cheese. It's phocking CHEESE! It's not good for you! Eat more cheddar.

    • @bruceelliott3518
      @bruceelliott3518 10 дней назад

      Absofuckinglutely with raw onion and cider.

  • @joeschmo622
    @joeschmo622 11 дней назад +1

    Awww, you didn't do a spot on maggot-cheese, _casu martzu_ .
    You couldn't even make me eat that shiite at ghunpoint.

    • @looloo4029
      @looloo4029 8 дней назад

      I think it’s been outlawed.

    • @joeschmo622
      @joeschmo622 8 дней назад

      @@looloo4029 It definitely has been outlawed, but they still make it on their own regardless. (Why oh why oh why??)

  • @ErikBongers
    @ErikBongers 11 дней назад +2

    I don't like the cheap commercial voice (it's so over the top, it sounds like an SNL commercial mockery), but the facts were really interesting.

  • @jobond3317
    @jobond3317 10 дней назад

    Changing practices and equipment in cowsheds have made milk less likely to have unwanted pathogens. This was not the case on my dairy farm when I was little milk would have many extras in it for some of its joinery to the non-refrigerated holding vat the milk was exposed to the atmosphere I would see cow hair as well as other cow by-products cobwebs and other little bits and pieces. That said I don't think I was made sick using milk. I never liked milk but what I had I was fine. Now days might have dairy sensitivities. Today the milk from cows never is exposed and vats are temperature-controlled There is now lots of paperwork to maintain hygiene health etc standards

    • @truthmatters8241
      @truthmatters8241 5 дней назад

      Raw miIk is so beneficiaI, aII of the HAT3 comes from g0vernment disinformation.

  • @sjkr141
    @sjkr141 12 дней назад +12

    For Gods sake, please find a less annoying AI voice to read your script...

    • @SophieBird07
      @SophieBird07 11 дней назад +1

      My car directions have better options!

  • @kleokleopatra3536
    @kleokleopatra3536 14 дней назад +2

    i alwayts cu the rind off !!right ot wrong: brie is great,but cannot stomach that nasty rind.

    • @gerryboudreaultboudreault2608
      @gerryboudreaultboudreault2608 12 дней назад

      It's edible, but made from wax..

    • @nansen1678
      @nansen1678 10 дней назад +2

      @@gerryboudreaultboudreault2608 what you say is true for Gouda and other semi-hard cheeses like swiss (Emmenthaler), but brie rind actually grows on the cheese loaf from special edible mould

  • @e.gadd.1
    @e.gadd.1 2 дня назад

    4:32 is that m-m-m-m-m-old?? 😬

  • @ohmyarceus087
    @ohmyarceus087 2 дня назад

    10:12 and kids? 😳

  • @joangalt6270
    @joangalt6270 6 дней назад

    Saffron?? Isn't that a bit expensive for something like American cheese, lol??

    • @pltatman1
      @pltatman1 2 дня назад

      Some ingredients are more or less accessible depending on the decade or century. Salt used to be outrageously expensive, now it is on every kitchen table.

  • @Ming_LeeNatashaSurge
    @Ming_LeeNatashaSurge 10 дней назад

    0:53 🗣️🎙️i prefer white cheese 🥴

  • @davidcatanach2620
    @davidcatanach2620 День назад

    ‘190mg per ounce’. Seriously? 3/16 of a kilometre, 1/4 lb per kilogram, 0,3 decilitres per hogshead. Whatever goes

  • @Drefar
    @Drefar 8 дней назад

    Get a Pop Filter Your S sounds crack my head in two.

  • @Duurti
    @Duurti 15 дней назад +11

    The issue with raw milk isn't about disease or cows, it's about profit. If they can profit more by bypassing safety standards every other country follows during the production and feeding and housing of the animals, and simply pasteurize the milk instead, they'll do it. This is why the US and Canada pasteurizes almost every ounce of milk and makes it illegal in most cases to sell raw milk. Similar issue with eggs. Profit is king. It's disgusting.

    • @cbbohn8107
      @cbbohn8107 12 дней назад

      You are uneducated

    • @SkyeBjS
      @SkyeBjS 9 дней назад

      Artisan cheesemakers have very stringent safety standards. The prevalence of pasteurization has more to do with liability and the US FDA seeming to think all food must be completely inert than it does straight profit.

    • @Duurti
      @Duurti 9 дней назад +1

      @@SkyeBjS Respectfully disagree. Pasteurization allows corners to be cut in other areas of hygiene that would be more costly to farmers. It's always about money first in North America.

  • @pchabanowich
    @pchabanowich 9 дней назад

    So much perkiness...

  • @reavenwildfire7146
    @reavenwildfire7146 10 дней назад

    Did you know that we designed runic that you're talking about is a pharmaceutical runic it was made by a pharmaceutical company and it's a pharmaceutical compound it's not suitable for eating by anyone I hate to tell you that, it's a pharmaceutical product it's not meant to be eaten.

  • @6sixty1gixxer80
    @6sixty1gixxer80 4 дня назад

    Woahhhhh. Orange cheese ain't real