Another sojourn to Quel Fromage in Fairhaven. This time to explore a different classification of cheese: Pecorino
In Italian, the word for sheep is pecora. Pecorino is a form of the word commonly used to designate a family of sheep’s milk artisan cheese.
During my childhood, Mom always kept a tall, green cylinder of powdered Romano cheese or Parmesan cheese in the frig, which I liberally shook out on my spaghetti or pizza or pasta … even cooked veggies, et cetera. I still have one of those in my own refrigerator.
So, I wanted to see how a real grated Romano would taste. This trip I bought a bit of Fulvi Pecorino Romano and Pecorino Ginepro.
In Italian, the word for sheep is pecora. Pecorino is a form of the word commonly used to designate a family of sheep’s milk artisan cheese.
During my childhood, Mom always kept a tall, green cylinder of powdered Romano cheese or Parmesan cheese in the frig, which I liberally shook out on my spaghetti or pizza or pasta … even cooked veggies, et cetera. I still have one of those in my own refrigerator.
So, I wanted to see how a real grated Romano would taste. This trip I bought a bit of Fulvi Pecorino Romano and Pecorino Ginepro.
I also bought some Salumi Salami, a dry salami made in Seattle.
Fulvi Pecorino Romano
Fulvi Pecorino Romano
Made with raw sheep’s milk—no additives, no hormones—in Rome, Italy and aged one year.
Although Pecorino Romano originated in the countryside outside of Rome, all are made in Sardinia today, except one: Fulvi. This is why it is referred to as "genuine" Pecorino Romano (see protected designation of origin—PDO). Sheep milk from the Lazio region goes to dairies in the village of Nepi, where, according to a traditional, time-honored recipe, it is handmade into giant, 65-pound wheels.
I found its strong, salty presence over-powering to eat by itself, but it is excellent and well matched grated on pasta with a hearty tomato sauce, or a rustic stew or soup. For my taste, a little goes a l-o-n-g way. When grated onto hot food, the slivers blend well, but don’t totally melt. It also had a crunchiness, like a crystallization to the texture. If you want to add an intense salty “kick” then this cheese is made for YOU!
The printed information on the Quel Fromage sales receipt suggested eating it with drizzled honey as a dessert. So, why not? This is an adventure, right? Sorry, drizzled honey didn’t work for me. BUT, I also tried a clover honey on the Pecorino Ginepro and I loved it! More about that later in this article.
Quel Fromage wine pairing: Merlot or Sangiovese.
Pecorino Ginepro
Made with raw sheep’s milk. Washed in balsamic and juniper seeds and aged 4-5 months in 6-lb wheels. I found this semi-hard cheese to have a woodsy, understated sweet taste rather than the sharp, salty finish of the Romano. Much more subtle than the Romano, but it also grated well and it was a tasty addition to my fresh greens salad with sliced tomato.
It was also recommended with crudités or with dry salami and sopressata.
I also had it with the Salumi Salami, and a Tuscany flatbread (sweet tomato with asiago and cheddar) I had picked up at Haggen’s just down the street from Quel Fromage. I didn’t drink it with wine, but with a cup of hot, black French roast coffee … where was my Italian roast when I needed it!
Suggested wine pairing: Nebbiolo, Fiano di Avellino, Piemontese red, or Malvirà Trinità.
A bit about PDO …
It’s my understanding that some Italian cheeses have a PDO status (Protected Designation of Origin) under European Union regulations. A cheese can only use the “Romano” in their name if made in Lazio, Sardinia, and Tuscany regions in the provinces of Rome, Grosetto, Cagliari, Nuoro, Oristano and Sassari. I think it was because so many cheeses claimed to be or called themselves a Romano, that the term lost its credibility or its definition. Hence, the PDO status. I think other designation cheeses have comparable protection, but I haven’t learned that much about the matter.
Oh, yes ... Honey. So, I tried drizzling honey on the Pecorino Ginepro and it was a pleasant surprise! The sweet and the salty complemented well. So, I pulled out some apricot preserves and some raspberry preserves and tried the Ginepro with both of them. Not bad! I liked it better with the apricot preserves perhaps because there were larger chunks of the fruit in that preserve. But, the honey was the best complement.
There are a great many other Pecorino cheeses, but this was a nice entry experience. I want to try Pecorino Toscano, which according to Max McCalman and David Gibbons in “The Cheese Plate,” has a “deep, warm, fruity flavor that pairs well with fruits such as plums and peaches.” It certainly sounds like an Italian sheep cheese of a different flavor!
Oh, and another thing I learned was to grate only what you need, leaving the rest of the cheese stored intact. Flavor is lost in grated form.
I’ll never look at my tall, green container of Romano and Parmesan cheese the same again!
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