Muenster

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Name Variations

 * Munster
 * Münster

About Muenster
Wikipedia Article About Muenster on Wikipedia

Munster Fermier is a cheese that comes from the Alsace region in France dating back to approximately the seventh century. This cheese is protected by an Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée. It is made from unpasteurized cow's milk and is matured in damp caves for five weeks for the smaller formats (300g) and up to 2 to 3 months for the larger ones (1500g). During this period the rind is periodically washed with brine. The added moisture helps the development of bacteria that gives this cheese its particular taste and color. The cheese is at its best in the summer and the autumn, when it is made from milk from the haute chaumes ("high stubble") of pastures that have already been mown for midsummer hay in the Vosges mountains. The best cheeses come from the haute vallée de Munster itself, but this cheese is also made in Lapoutroie, Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, Villé, and other villages. It's called munster géromé when it comes from the Gérardmer Valley, in western Vosges, in Lorraine.

This round cheese with a fat content of 45% in dry matter, has a diameter between 12 and 20 cm, and a thickness between 3 and 5 cm. Normally it is sold unwrapped on a straw bed, but for export it may be wrapped in cellophane or clear plastic. The cheese should have a slick and shiny brick-coloured rind, a semi-soft body, a very strong and penetrating odour, and a really strong taste. Defects: unripend body (crumbly), broken rind, too salty or too old and overdone.