There’s a cheese that will stand alone. In proud fetidness, that’s.
Rory Stone, a 59-year-old cheesemaker at Highland Tremendous Cheeses in Scotland, has been overrun with orders for a washed-rind cheese known as the Minger, which he’s billing as probably the most putrid-smelling cheese on this planet.
“All people remains to be asking for samples, and it simply hasn’t stopped,” Mr. Stone mentioned in an interview. “And I discover it actually weird. I imply, it’s a smelly cheese, however it’s fairly a stunning taste. So the one downside now could be I’ve run out of cheese.”
Mr. Stone, whose mother and father had been additionally cheese makers, started promoting the Minger seven years in the past. (“Minger” is slang for somebody who’s ugly or smells dangerous. “There are some City Dictionary definitions that are a bit impolite,” Mr. Stone mentioned.)
Supermarkets initially rejected it, dismissing it as a gimmick. But it surely bought properly sufficient in impartial retailers, and it has received a number of awards, together with greatest specialty cheese on the Royal Highland Present in Edinburgh in 2019.
This week, nevertheless, Asda, a British grocery store chain, introduced that it might inventory the cheese in its shops, making it broadly obtainable for the primary time. The Asda information launch, which described the Minger as “pungent,” gave rise to a low-grade media frenzy, with Mr. Stone giving interviews to The Telegraph, Sky News and the BBC.
Mr. Stone mentioned he hadn’t got down to create the world’s smelliest cheese. However he mentioned he had encountered somebody who utilized that superlative to the Minger, and he embraced it.
Is it truly the stinkiest cheese? Who cares, Mr. Stone mentioned.
“I believe it was like a throwaway line, as a result of you possibly can’t show one thing like that,” he mentioned. “You may’t qualify it. We all know it smells, and we all know it’s not very good. However to say it’s the smelliest cheese on this planet is a little bit of a wrestle, however you possibly can’t disprove it. So I suppose we will get away with saying it, and that appears to be what has lit the firework.”
Smelly cheeses have been an object of culinary fascination for many years.
“I believe that there are a small group of individuals on the market that simply adore it,” mentioned Dr. Mark Johnson, a scientist on the Heart for Dairy Analysis on the College of Wisconsin. “It’s nearly like an ‘I dare you to eat it’ type of factor, like sizzling peppers.”
There isn’t a scarcity of smelly cheeses from all over the world, as prompt by the existence of varied smelly cheese festivals.
“I believe we’ve turn out to be extra adventuresome,” mentioned Marc Bates, a cheese knowledgeable who ran the Washington State College creamery for many years and judges a number of cheese contests a yr.
Different contenders for world’s most pungent cheese embody Époisses and reblochon, each from France. One other is Limburger, which was first made by Trappist monks in Belgium within the nineteenth century. In 2004, researchers at Cranfield College in Britain used what they described as an “digital nostril” to find out that the French cheese Vieux Boulogne was the smelliest.
“If you’re getting older cheese, you’ve the breakdown of the fat within the proteins initially, and the micro organism and the yeast and the molds and all of the microorganisms are creating taste compounds, and a few of them are actually unstable,” mentioned Dr. Tonya Schoenfuss, a professor of meals science on the College of Minnesota and a longtime dairy contest choose. “And that’s the place you’re getting the scent from.”
Mr. Stone described the Minger as having a clean texture and a “minty” taste. The “cabbagey” aroma, Mr. Stone insisted, is “not there within the style.”
“I didn’t know we might get the scent to be so very wealthy, so horrendous,” Mr. Stone mentioned. “I didn’t know we’d be good at that. I bear in mind strolling into the shop and considering, ‘Oh my God, we’ve hit it,’ and different individuals recoiling in horror. And I’m going, ‘Effectively, that’s what washed rind ought to scent like.’”