Lancaster House Head Chef, Damien Ng and Food and Beverage Manager, Gary Tennant, decided to get out on the Cheese Trail in search of the perfect local cheeses to incorporate in Lancaster House menus.
There are three different types of Lancashire cheeses, each sounding a little bit like a character from a Grimm’s fairy tale – Tasty, Creamy and Crumbly.
Cheese makes life better – not the widely available, mass produced variety that’s hard to distinguish from its plastic wrapping. No, cheese with identity and character that is worth lingering over, comparing, pairing and loosening your belt a notch to accommodate.
In days past, it fell the task of the dairy farmer’s wife to make cheese from the day’s surplus milk. Usually there was not enough spare each day for a whole cheese, so they allowed the milk to curdle and accumulate and after two or three days the curd was blended together which created a deep and distinctive flavour. Pressed by large ‘cheese stones’, the method was standardised in the 1890s by Mr Gornell, a county council employee who regularly visited many of the Lancashire farms, and who patented a cheese-maker which brought uniformity to the process. It is still referred to as the Gornell Method, and remains part of Lancashire’s rich cheese heritage.
Gary Tennant, Lancaster House Food and Beverage Manager says,
One of our priorities at Lancaster House is to support local suppliers and that is reflected on all our menus. Getting more familiar with the Lancashire dairies and seeing first-hand the traditional cheese-making methods which can produce new innovative flavours has been a fantastic experience. Lancashire cheese is definitely here to stay!