Taleggio + Capitaine Vouvray

Why we love the cheese 

Taleggio is an iconic washed rind cheese made from creamy, sweet cow's milk in northern Italy. It is rich, decadent, and has an undeniable funk that is so savory and enticing. While delicious on its own, Taleggio is wonderful to cook with and can be melted on pizza, over vegetables and bread, or into pasta sauces.  

Why we love the wine 

Domaine le Capitaine Vouvray is one of the most food-friendly wines we sell. The balance of acidity and body are perfect for enjoying with just about anything. Ripe peach, melon, apricot, and a hint of refreshing pink grapefruit come through with a kiss of fruity sweetness.  

Why we love the pairing 

The savory, earthy notes of the cheese mellow with the touch of sweetness in the Capitaine Vouvray. The acidity in the wine balances the decadent texture of the cheese and the notes of stone fruits and melons play perfectly with Taleggio's funk.  

What else you should do with it  

Taleggio makes an incredible sweet treat. Think sundae vibes: add Taleggio and a little bit of cream to a blender until smooth and airy. Add to a bowl, drizzle with lots of candied sour cherries and their syrup, top with some flakey salt, and enjoy on bread, Effie’s Oatcakes, or even potato chips!  

Hand-Pulled Mozzarella: Your Weekly Cheese Lesson

by Austin Coe Butler

Mozzarella season is my favorite season, and for those of you who have enjoyed our fresh mozzarella, I bet it’s your favorite season, too. Its return to the shop is a sign that Spring has arrived—no matter how dazed.

Mozzarella is a pasta filata style of cheese, meaning “stretched curd” or “spun paste.” This name is demonstrative of how cheeses in this style are made: starting with curd, boiling water is added until the curd begins to melt or stretch into an elastic “paste,” at which point it is pulled into strands and formed into a variety of shapes. At the scientific level, the boiling water loosens the (casein) protein structure, aligning them into strands with pockets of fat and whey in between. Burrata, provolone, scamorza, caciocavallo, string cheese, and many other cheeses from around the world are made following this technique.

Mozzarella takes its name from mozzare meaning “to cut, chop” and that’s exactly how this cheese is made. Those long “threads” are bundled into a ball and then “cut” by hand. Mozzarella as we know it originated in southern Italy, with written records dating from the 16th, but undoubtedly it and other pasta filata cheeses have been around for much longer. The Italians would call our mozzarella fior di latte as it is made from cow’s milk. The title of mozzarella in Italy is reserved for water buffalo’s milk.

Because of its elastic nature, mozzarella can be formed into a variety of shapes, from simple ciliegene (small, cherry sized balls), tied in knots (nodini), or woven into braids (treccia). Master casaros can sculpt the cheese into little pigs, pacifiers, even the divinely inspired Treccia di Santa Croce di Magliano, a shawl woven from mozzarella. Among the most impressive are maybe Georgian tenili cheeses. Then there are the stuffed cheese like the suggestively shaped, milk filled zizzone, or la filiata, a “pregnant” mozzarella filled with smaller balls of mozzarella.

Without divulging my secrets, here is how I make fresh mozzarella at France 44. On Friday and Saturday mornings I break up the cold blocks of firm curd by hand in a large bowl. Then, I pour over boiling brine and cover the bowl with a lid, waiting a few minutes for the curd to temper. Once the curd is warm, I pour off most of the brine and add new brine to the bowl. At this point, the magic of mozzarella begins. Working quickly with a large paddle, I start to twirl the curd, plying it onto the paddle and lifting it into the air, high above my head. Thin, thread-like strands begin to form immediately and draw out as a beautiful waterfall-like sheet of curd unfurls. I do this only about twice to work most of the lumps out. It’s important to not overwork the curd as this can lead to squeaky, tough mozzarella. Just as perilous is melting the curd with too much boiling water.

Then I plunge my (clean!) bare hands into the boiling brine and quickly pull the threads into a tight ball before cutting it free from the rest of the mozzarella by pinching my thumb and forefinger closed. I wrap the hot mozzarella in plastic wrap and let it sit while I continue to pull the rest of the batch. As it cools, the mozzarella retains its spherical shape. (The traditional way to reserve fresh mozzarella is to leave it in brine—but this isn’t practical for us.) The actual process of making mozzarella takes less than a minute. Of course, I have to sample the mozzarella to make sure the seasoning is right, and as it’s often the first thing I eat in the morning along with my coffee, I’ve found that mozzarella and black coffee is quite a nice pairing, almost like having a bit of cream.

I’ll typically make a few burrata as well, adding truffles, nuts, herbs, or seasonal fruit to the stracciatella filling that goes inside burrata. Sometimes I’ll make a sfoglia for the staff to eat, a popular snack at caseificios wherein mozzarella is stretched into a sheet covered in prosciutto, arugula, balsamic vinegar, or whatever filling you like, then rolled tightly and cut into slices to be eaten by hand.

Fresh mozzarella is best enjoyed on the day it was made and at room temperature, preferably the same day it was made. If I don’t devour it immediately, I leave it out on my cool kitchen counter away from the sun for 24-48 hours. Refrigeration prolongs the life of fresh mozzarella for about a week, but at the cost of the cheese’s texture and flavor—that supple, buoyant spring tightens up and the milky brine is soaked back into the cheese. Of course, fresh mozzarella is great in all the traditional applications: in a sandwich, on a pizza, in a caprese salad with ripe tomatoes, basil, and balsamic vinegar. But consider trying it in something new this year, like supplì al telefono, or garnished with chili crisp or a smoky, spicy salsa macha. It’s delicate, milky flavor makes it highly versatile. 

If you haven’t made fresh mozzarella before, I encourage you to take a mozzarella making class with me this summer! Without a doubt these classes are the most fun I have at France 44. We dunk our hands into scalding hot water, stretching and spinning the cheese, screaming with laughter, all while Italian retro hits from the 70s blare in the background. At the end, we eat the fruits of our labor. Everyone, no matter how filled with trepidation or self-doubt, always leaves having made fresh mozzarella they share with their friends and family. I have to say, to this day my best student has been an eleven year old girl! You know who you are! 

We frequently sell out of fresh mozzarella and burrata, so I’d encourage you to stop by the shop as early as you can to pick up one of these soft, still warm, balls of mozzarella.

Cook Like a Meatmonger: Lamb T-Bones with Blackberry Pan Sauce

by Matt Gruber

Lamb. Now, I'm not talking about The Treaty of Versailles, I'm talking about the delicious Ovis aries, or as we humble meatmongers refer to it: lamb. Mutton was a staple in the early 1900's but declined after WW2. Some time around 2010 the younger version (lamb as we know it today) began to gain popularity.

I was by no means raised on this variety of meat and never looked beyond the widely-consumed gyro meat. While that is a whole different scrumptious beast in and of itself (I have an adventurous at home recipe that the world isn't ready for yet... at least in writing) our cuts of lamb are the sleeper hit of the meat case. Compared to beef or pork, lamb has an earthy, rich, and sometimes gamey flavor, however all this is balanced with a slight sweetness. From a simple gremolata on a sirloin roast to a mustard and pistachio-crusted rack of lamb, we love to experiment with all kinds of preparations. In the spirit of Easter and spring, I created a wonderful blackberry pan sauce for some lamb t-bones. Paired with some roasted carrots, radishes, and mashed potatoes, I think this dish is perfect for any date night or holiday meal.

Ingredients:

2 Lamb T-bones per person

1 splash heavy cream

1 spoonful sour cream

1 sprig Fresh rosemary

1 tbsp ground thyme

2 tbsp dried oregano

15 blackberries cut in half (I used quite a bit due to my love of blackberries)

1 knob of butter

1/4 cup full body red wine, I used Leese-Fitch

1 cup chicken stock

2 russet potatoes

1 bag rainbow carrots

Directions:

  1. Season t-bones liberally with salt and pepper up to 48 hours in advance.

  2. Preheat oven to 450 degrees.

  3. Soak potatoes in cold water for up to 4 hours to remove starch. Once soaked, cut into 2" cubes.

  4. Toss carrots and radishes in olive oil, seasoning with thyme and oregano, plus salt and pepper. Lay on a sheet tray and roast for 25-30 minutes until browned.

  5. Boil potatoes in salted water until soft, 15-20 minutes, then mash with sour and heavy cream. Season to taste.

  6. When carrots are 10 minutes out from being done, preheat your favorite cast iron or heavy-bottomed skillet on medium, sear t-bones for 3.5 - 4 minutes per side for medium rare.

  7. Remove t-bones from the pan, setting them aside to rest. Add a knob of butter, wine, stock, blackberries, and rosemary sprig. Reduce until a spoon dragged across the pan leaves a streak in the liquid that stays a moment before vanishing.

  8. Plate lamb and veggies, drizzling with pan sauce. Enjoy!

Meet Your Monger: Azeria

What drew you to working at France 44? 

I was teaching cooking classes before coming to France 44, and while I loved it, I needed something with more stable hours as my family grew. I had worked in production at a co-op and wanted to find something similar, so I applied to cook at France 44!

What is your background in cooking?  

I studied at the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, NY. After cooking on the East Coast for a few years, I moved back to Wisconsin, where I am from, and made pizza for about 4 years before making my way to Minneapolis where I’ve cooked in restaurants and co-ops. I love to make simple, quality food; the kind of food that people really want to eat. 

What is one thing we do not know about you?  

I self-published a book of poetry!  

What do you like to do when you are not cooking at France 44? 

I love to play video games, Dungeons and Dragons, and I used to be in roller Derby! I also love to spend time with and play with my two kids.  

Do you have a dream meal?  

I actually cooked my dream meal when I catered my own wedding. It was a North-African/Mediterranean inspired meal. I cooked leg of lamb, couscous, and lots of veggies, and cooked it all in my wedding dress.   

What is your favorite thing about working at France 44?  

I like that every day is different – we produce so many different products, I’m never bored.  

Chicken Cacciatore

by Austin Coe Butler

While many regions of Italy claim ownership over this humble dish, which literally means “hunter’s style chicken,” it originated in Tuscany. Every family has their own “classic” version of this dish. It is also a dish that found popularity in America, where bell peppers, mushrooms, sage, and basil found their way in. Over the years I’ve found I prefer this simple, rustic version of chicken thighs simmered in a rich tomato sauce with briny capers, kalamata olives, and fragrant rosemary.

A curious culinary aside: This is one of the few “authentic” Italian recipes that features chicken. Most of the Italian chicken recipes that spring to mind are usually Italian-American in origin, when immigrants modified vegetable dishes for the abundant and cheap meat they found in the United States, for example substituting chicken for eggplant in “chicken parmesan.” In the cucina povera of Italian cookery, the poor coveted their chickens for their free supply of eggs, which could be cooked in an endless number of ways like frittata or uova in Purgatorio, and, of course, used to create pasta.

Ingredients:

4 chicken legs (You could substitute a whole chicken broken down or your cut of choice)

1 carrot, diced

1 onion, diced

1 rib celery, diced

2 sprigs of rosemary, plucked and chopped

1 cup dry white or red wine

2 tbsp tomato paste

1 500 g can Bianco di Napoli whole, peeled tomatoes, pureed

2 tbsp Les Moulin Mahjoub Wild Mountain Capers, rinsed and chopped

Twenty kalamata olives, pitted and chopped

  1. Make the sofrito. In a large pan over medium-high heat, add a generous amount of olive oil (about 5 tablespoons) and a clove of garlic. Add the carrot, celery, and onion and simmer for about five minutes. 

  2. Add the chicken skin side down, nestling it among the sofrito, and sear it for two minutes. Flip and cook for another few minutes. 

  3. Add the rosemary and chili while continuing to flip the chicken and stir the sofrito every few minutes until the chicken is nicely browned and the sofrito begins to caramelize. In this way, the sofrito will fry in the rendered chicken fat. 

  4. Deglaze with the wine and simmer for a few minutes (2-3) until you no longer smell the alcohol.

  5. Add the capers, olives, and tomatoes.

  6. Dissolve the tomato paste in about a ¼ C. of water and add it to the pan.

  7. Bring the sauce to a boil then cover the pan and drop the heat to low. Let it simmer for 15 minutes.

  8. Uncover the chicken, check for seasoning and adjust as necessary. Simmer for another 15 minutes, adjusting the lid as necessary to thicken the sauce.

Garnish with parsley and serve with a little bread to wipe up all that sauce and fa la scarpetta!

The Pairing: Apricity

Why we love the cheese

Small and mighty Apricity is the newest specialty from Alemar Cheese Co, a creamery making incredible artisan cheese right here in Minneapolis. Fluffy, tangy, and rich, Apricity is the perfect bite to satisfy your decadent cheese cravings, while still offering enough freshness to ease into spring.  

Why we love the wine

Okay, it’s a little early to say it’s truly rosé season. But honestly, it’s always rosé season and we’d rather look ahead than look back. This wine is a classic example of crisp, clean, Mediterranean rosé from Provence, with subtle notes of just ripe white peaches, honey, and stone.  

Why we love the pairing

The Peyrassol rosé is acidic enough to handle the Apricity, balancing the tang and brightness of the cheese. The body of the wine holds up to the rich texture of the cheese, without wiping it away. Aromas of honey in the wine highlight the sweeter, creamier qualities of the cheese, creating an easy, comforting, and delicious experience.

What else you should do with it

Apricity is a lovely cheese for baking! Bake the Apricity and a drizzle of honey in some puff pastry. If you want to go savory, try mushrooms, leeks, and onions. Both styles are super easy to make with a high-quality store-bought puff pastry and go perfectly with the Peyrassol rosé

Minnesota Cheeses

By Austin Coe Butler

When it comes to cheese, Minnesota is often outshined by the bright, milky star of its neighbor, Wisconsin. There’s a reason Wisconsin is called “America’s Dairyland” after all, with its storied history of dairying and cheesemaking powered by the “Wisconsin Idea,” massively influential milk and cheese lobbies, and a rigorous Master Cheesemaker program. It’s one of the few states you can make a decent living making cheese. But Minnesota has its own remarkable history of cheesemaking, and today many incredible local cheesemakers are producing some of the best and most innovative cheeses in the country.

For instance, did you know that America’s first blue cheese was made here in Minnesota nearly two-hundred years ago? The greater St. Paul area was once known as the Blue Cheese Capital of America. When the St. Peter’s Sandstone was glaciated thousands of years ago, intricate limestone caves were formed. Being porous, limestone is ideal for aging cheeses, and there’s a reason why the legendary ewe’s milk blue cheese Roquefort originated in the ancient limestone caverns of Roquefort-sur-Soulzon. These caves are stilled used today by the Caves of Faribault.

Joe Sherman cut his cheesemaking teeth in those very same caves when he was 19 back in the 1980s. In 2005, he founded Northern Lights in Plato, Minn., about 50 miles west of the Twin Cities. Joe only makes 100 wheel batches of his Northern Lights Blue from fresh, unpasteurized milk from a local herd of cows that grazes on pasture year round. Its bright, peppery, and salty flavor and crumbly yet creamy texture are the hallmarks of a classic American blue cheese that is right at home in blue cheese dressing, on a steak, or by itself.

Redhead Creamery in Brooten makes the petite American brie Little Lucy and spicy Red Temper Cheddar, which you may have see at the State Fair with a ribbon pinned to it. The Little Lucys are perfect for a twosome or a picnic with their creamy, lemony brightness that’s a bit more mellow than your French bries. Redhead Creamery just won an award from the Dairy Business Innovation Alliance (DBIA) for their venture to get artisan cheesemakers into the artisan alcohol market by making fermented whey beverages more accessible to smaller producers.

Alemar Cheese, founded by Kieth Adams here in Minneapolis in 2008, immediately gained acclaim for their first cheese, the Camembert-style Bent River (which you’ll find in our case as the smaller Boom Island.) Their washed-rind Good Thunder is funky, fudgy, and barn-yardy in all the right ways. Alemar Cheese now operates out of the Food Building in NE Minneapolis. Apricity, their newest cheese, is a bright, lactic-set cheese that immediately became a staff favorite with its tangy flavor and mousse-like texture. Charlotte Serino, the head cheesemaker, has been making some big waves on the national stage with her cheeses!

And of course there’s Shepherd’s Way in Nerstrand, run by Stephen and Jodi Ohlsen Read. We currently have their aged sheep’s milk tomme Friesago, which will transport you to the Tuscan countryside, the decadent, brie-like Hidden Falls, and Big Woods Blue.

We’ll be celebrating Minnesota cheese and cheesemakers all weekend long, so stop by the shop to try some home-state heroes!

Cook Like a Meatmonger: Turkey 'n' Biscuits

by Matt Gruber

Have you ever gone into a grocery store, covered your eyes and just started picking out random items from each aisle? Yeah, neither have I - but sometimes I look in my fridge and feel that way. How am I gonna be resourceful and use all this leftover produce and why do I have this meat I didn't really have a plan for? I have a soft spot in my life for ground turkey. Many moons ago when I lived in the wonderful (up for debate) home of the Buffalo Bills, Buffalo NY, I tried to kick red meat and switch mainly to chicken and turkey. I have had wonderful success subbing turkey for so many of my red meat recipes and just exploring and inventing new recipes with it. I have always had a soft spot for chicken pot pie, but my partner in thyme didn't share this love. However, she did love biscuits. This is when I started cooking up something that is Space Odyssey 2023. This time around I am going to try something new and do a spin on chicken pot pie.. except no chicken, and no pie. Turkey pot pie? Turkey hot dish? Turkey biscuit bake? I haven't trademarked the name yet but we will get there. A fairly easy comfort dish that you can do all in your cast iron. Going a bit out of the norm I am adding baby sweet peppers, red pepper flake, and rosemary to my recipe..

Feeds 2-4 people (2 people with leftovers)

1 package of your favorite premade biscuits (make your own to elevate, some things call for shortcuts in my book)

1# ground turkey

1/2 onion

4 baby sweet peppers

2 carrots - diced

2 celery stalks - diced

1/3 cup flour

1 cup chicken stock

1 cup water

1 tbsp lemon pepper

1 tbsp rosemary

1 tbsp umami seasoning

1 tbsp lemon pepper

1 shake red pepper flakes

2 cloves garlic - minced

4 sprigs of thyme, taken off stem

1 tbsp cream cheese

1 knob of butter, melted

salt and pepper to taste

Directions

  1. Heat a cast iron pan over medium flame. Add a drizzle of oil.

  2. Add ground turkey and spices. Cook until browned. Set aside.

  3. Add more oil if pan appears dry. Add your diced veggies and cook until softened.

  4. Add minced garlic and thyme and cook until aromatic.

  5. Add 1 cup stock to the pan, bring to a simmer.

  6. Whisk together 1/3 cup flour and 1 cup water. Slowly whisk into stock mixture.

  7. Preheat oven to 425

  8. Add browned turkey back into mixture along with the 1 tbsp of cream cheese.

  9. Place biscuits on top of mix and brush with melted butter

  10. Bake in oven for 13-14 minutes until biscuits are golden brown

  11. Serve and enjoy!

Cook like a Cheesemonger: Dublin Coddle

 

by Austin Coe Butler

1 lb. Bacon, cut into 1 inch pieces

1 lb. France 44 OG Brats, cut into 1 inch rounds

2 cups Stock (Beef, Pork, or Chicken)

2 lbs. Russet potatoes, peeled and cut into 1/8s

2 large yellow onions, sliced thin

1 14.9 oz can of Guinness

1 tbsp AP Flour

3 cloves of garlic, minced

2 Bay Leaves

3 tbsp Parsley, chopped

If you’ve ever been to Ireland, and especially Dublin, you’ve probably encountered Coddle. Coddle is more often called Dublin Coddle because of the city’s fondness for the dish; it was a favorite of many of the city’s preeminent writers: James Joyce, Sean O’Casey, and Jonathan Swift. It’s fundamentally a city-dwelling, working class dish with the substitution of bacon and sausages in place of mutton.

Like most traditional dishes, there’s no real recipe. Everyone has their own version, and coddle originated as a way to use up leftovers: typically made on a Thursday to use up all the rashers (bacon) and sausage before Friday—when Catholics abstain from meat. But what every recipe has in common is bacon, sausages, onions, and potatoes stewed for several hours in a low oven. (The dish’s name is derived from the French caudle “to boil gently or stew.”)

This is a rich, rib-sticking stew, and (if you’re not already laying into a few pints while you stew it) the intoxicating smell will rile your appetite. Mop it all up with some soda bread from the shop for a hearty stew that will be enough of a buffer for a few more pints, or as a late night meal to come stumbling home to.

  1. Preheat your oven to 300º.

  2. Render the fat from the bacon and sear the sausages. Place the bacon in a cold, heavy bottomed pot like a Dutch oven and turn the heat up to medium. Render until crisp. Remove from the pot, then sear off the sausages. Our sausages are already fully cooked sous vide, so you don’t have to worry about cooking them, just get some nice color on them.

  3. Pour off most of the fat, leaving about two or three tablespoons in the pot. Over low heat, add the flour and whisk for a minute or two to cook off the raw flavor. Add the beer while whisking to create a thick brown gravy. Turn off the heat.

  4. Layer half of each of the following ingredients in this order: potatoes, onions, garlic, bacon, sausage, bay leaf, parsley, then repeat once more.

  5. Pour over the two cups of stock over and top with a well fitting lid. Place it in the oven to “caudle” for 2 hours or up to 5. 

  6. Serve with a soda bread to mop it up and a pint of Guinness to wash it down. It ain’t pretty, but it’s pretty good!

 

La Carbonara di Luciano Monosilio

 

by Austin Butler

At Luciano Cucina Italiana in Rome, each bowl of Carbonara comes with a small card clipped to it by a clothespin and is accompanied by a golden fork. Inside the bowl is a high bird’s nest of pasta glistening with silky sauce and crisp cubes of guanciale, cured pork cheek. The presentation, while a little ostentatious, proudly centers Carbonara as the king not just of Roman cuisine, and of Luciano’s as well. The brilliance of Luciano’s recipe is in the technique. He uses a bain-marie or double boiler method to temper the eggs and cook the sauce. Then, he drizzles in guanciale fat to essentially make hollandaise with the rendered fat, cheese, and eggs, resulting in an airy, silky sauce that is really remarkable. If this all seems too fussy, feel free to proceed as you usually would with your preferred technique and with the same ingredients and measurements, but the reward is in the technique and thought Luciano has put into this quintessentially Roman dish. There’s a reason Romans call Luciano Il Re della Carbonara, the Carbonara King.

Guanciale is cured pork cheek or jowel (guancia) essential to Carbonara. Pancetta would be the best substitute. I would not recommend bacon, as it is heavily cured in sugar and lacks the pepperiness and gaminess of guanciale.

Ingredients:

280 g Morelli Pici or Makaira Chitarra Spaghetti 

200 g Smoking Goose Guanciale diced into ½ inch cubes

30 g Cravero Parmigiano Reggiano grated

20 g Locateli Pecorino Romano grated

4 egg yolks from Locally Laid Eggs

2 g Mill Pepper Co. Ltd Black or Red Kampot Peppercorns

  1. In a dry pan, toast the peppercorns until fragrant and then crush coarsely, preferably in a mortar and pestle.

  2. In the same pan over medium heat, sear the guanciale before dropping the heat to low and letting it heat through so that it is crisp outside yet soft inside. Reserve the guanciale on a paper towel and about half the rendered fat.

  3. In a pot of boiling salted water, cook the pasta to about 2 minutes short of its prescribed time. I like to use Pici or Spaghettoni (thick spaghetti).

  4. In a bowl large enough to sit over your pot of boiling water, combine the Parmigiano Reggiano, Pecorino Romano, pepper, and egg yolks together and whip into a thick paste. Place this bowl over your boiling water as the pasta cooks and beat, monitoring the heat and removing it if need be so that the egg doesn’t curdle. On for a few seconds and then off for a few seconds should work. You’ll notice the mixture begin to lighten in color and become glossy, creamy. Then slowly whisk in the reserved guanciale fat, as you would with clarified butter in a hollandaise sauce.

  5. Off the heat, add the spaghetti with a little pasta water to the bowl with the sauce. Add the reserved guanciale. Toss to combine. Add more pasta water as needed to reach your desired consistency—I like to have the sauce look a little loose, knowing that it will tighten up as it cools.


Take a tongful of the Carbona and twist it inside the ladle to create a bird’s nest of pasta. Serve it in a warm bowl or plate before finishing with a dusting of Parmigiano Reggiano, pepper, and any guanciale that’s left in the pan. Buonissimo!

 
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