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Running the Numbers
Emailed on July 30, 2014
Red Hawk
  Cowgirl Creamery Red Hawk, 2003 ACS Best of Show
Which cheese will take Best of Show in the American Cheese Society’s annual competition this week? We’ll know soon enough (award ceremony is July 31 in Sacramento), but in the interim, I gathered some stats on prior winners. Could the judges’ past preferences help us predict who might get the gold?

I’ve judged several times (including this year) so thought I had some inkling about what the critics liked. But some of the data surprised me.

The competition began in the mid 1980s but record-keeping was spotty in the early days, so the archives confirm only 25 Best of Shows to date.

Among those winners, here are some stats to ponder.
Goat’s milk cheeses: 6 (more than I thought)
Sheep’s milk cheeses: 4
Blue cheeses: 5 (another surprise)
State tally: California (6); Wisconsin (6); Vermont (5)
Repeat winners: 4


Those over-achieving repeaters were Westfield Farm’s Hubbardston Blue, Yerba Santa Shepherd’s Wheel, Upland Cheese Company’s Pleasant Ridge Reserve (three times!) and Rogue Creamery’s Rogue River Blue.

Certainly winning becomes more prestigious and meaningful every year, as the competition swells—from fewer than 90 entries initially to 1,800 last year. The Best of Show, selected from all the blue-ribbon winners, tends to be an aged cheese—probably because judges want to honor the skill that goes into bringing a wheel to maturity. But Franklin Peluso’s supple Teleme, a relatively young, semisoft cow’s milk cheese, took the top medal once, so we can’t rule out a winner from the fresh ranks.

Once the Best of Show is announced, practically every cheese shop in the country wants some. I’ll be lining up, too, because I hope to secure some for my World Cheese Tour class on October 7. I’ll definitely be serving other blue-ribbon category winners, so you can get an overview of the best American cheese making today.
What Happened Here?
Greek Island
If you’re going to buy cheese on a warm day, take an insulated cooler with you. Do I need to repeat that? I basically trashed two expensive selections recently when I didn’t get them home promptly.
No CPR possible for these crime victims. Hard aged cheeses might have been fine—not happy about the heat, but not destroyed by it. But these delicate lovelies—Haystack Mountain Snowdrop (left) and a Portuguese sheep’s milk cheese called Zimbro—couldn’t handle my neglect. Give me ten lashes with a breadstick.
Janet Fletcher
Welcome to my world: a fragrant, fascinating universe devoted to great cheese. In this and future issues of Planet Cheese, you’ll find profiles of the world’s best cheeses plus insights into everything cheese: shops, recipes, interviews, pairing discoveries, classes, videos, travel. If you haven’t already done so, sign up here - it’s complimentary - and join me in learning something new about cheese every week.
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World Cheese
Tour Resumes
Cheese Class
Join me
at Napa Valley’s newest showplace—HALL Wines in St. Helena—for four evenings of themed cheese exploration. You’ll sample exceptional cheeses from around the world, accompanied by fine wine from the HALL collection. Come once…or sign on for the Grand Tour. The evening begins with a wine reception, followed by a sit-down guided tasting.

All classes are from
5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

Reservations required at www.janetfletcher.com
Or call: 707-265-0404.

August 5:
Seven Styles of Cheese

September 2:
What’s Up With That Rind?

October 7:
American Cheese Society Blue Ribbon Winners

November 4:
Italy Off the Beaten Path
Find my books:
Cheese & Wine
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Cheese Photo: Victoria Pearson   |   Janet's Photo: Douglas Fletcher
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