07 May 2020

What is Comté cheese?

One of the staples of our diet... our existence... is Comté cheese. That especially true right now, during our confinement (lockdown). It's always available in supermarkets. Comté, made in the eastern French province of Franche-Comté, is what Americans call "Swiss cheese." In reality, there are many varieties of "Swiss" cheese — Comté, Emmental, Abondance, Beaufort, etc. — which should more correctly called Alpine cheeses. The iconic Swiss cheese is Gruyère. Gruyère can also be made in France, and even Comté can legally be labeled as Gruyère de Comté. As you can see, it doesn't have holes.

Comté is a cheese described in French as un fromage à pâte pressée cuite — in English, that means a cheese that is cooked and then pressed so that it holds together. When they say the cheese is "cooked" they mean that the milk is gently warmed up in copper vats to a temperature of about 50ºC (around 120 to 125ºF), which is nowhere close to the boiling point. So it's not really cooked, but heating up the milk give the cheese the familiar Swiss cheese texture.

Other French cheeses we use a lot — Cantal from the Auvergne region, for example, or Ossau-Iraty from Basque country — are in the pâte pressée non-cuite category. The milk the cheese is made from is not heated up at all during the cheese-making process. Comté and Cantal are, respectively, the equivalents of Swiss cheese and cheddar cheese in the U.S. Ossau-Iraty, which is more like Comté in texture but slightly stronger in taste, is made with ewe's milk, not cow's milk.

Comté is designated as both an AOC (a French quality standard) and an AOP (a European standard), meaning that it must be made following a well-defined process in order to carry the Comté name. If the label says Comté AOC or AOP, you can be sure it's the real thing. Another requirement is that he milk has to come from specific breeds of cows raised in a specific geographical region and fed according to imposed standards. Comté is the French AOC cheese that is produced in the largest quantities compared to all 45 or so French AOC/AOP cheeses.

We use Comté a lot, especially in our cooking. It makes great cheese sauces and great gratins like scalloped potatoes or macaroni and cheese. The Comté cheese I buy at the supermarket (ordering it on line these days) is consistently good. It's an AOC cheese that has been "aged" or ripened for at least six months. It's fairly inexpensive as cheeses go — it costs anywhere from 12 to 22 euros a kilo. That's $5 to $12 per pound in American terms. I buy the less expensive Comté for cooking, and the more expensive (usually aged longer) for eating as is (not melted). Comté made from unpasteurized (raw) milk, but since it's "cooked" during the cheese-making process, I'm not sure what difference that makes. It's a requirement, though.


Yesterday we made "burritos" using slow-cooked beef, Portuguese "butter beans" (similar to pinto beans), brown rice (riz complet), and Red Russian kale from the garden made into a filling for wheat tortillas and seasoned with a pumpkin enchilada sauce. What else went inside? Grated Comté cheese, of course.


The large wheat tortillas contain the filling and some grated cheese. They're rolled up and then wrapped in aluminum foil before being baked in the oven until heated through.

9 comments:

  1. I'm sure I sound repetitive, but, man, that looks good!
    Judy

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    1. It was very good. Yesterday CHM and I had a discussion about "butter beans" (haricots beurre) in our blog comments. It turns out that the term is translated directly from Portuguese. When I was growing up in North Carolina, "butter beans" were what later became known as baby lima beans. In England, butter beans are something different, I think, but I don't know exactly what. In French, haricots beurre are usually what we call "wax beans" in the U.S. Anyway, the beans I cooked the other day are similar to pinto beans but when raw they don't have the characteristic mottling of pintos. I think they could be called pink beans (but they turn brown when cooked).

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    2. From my distant memory of schooldays, butterbeans in a UK school dinner were boiled to a beigey mush, but the hard skins remained mixed in the mush. Not the most palatable experience, and I don't think I was alone: the late comedienne Victoria Wood had a character who made a remark about making "butterbean whip" (="It's over there, in that bucket"), which always got a laugh.

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  2. Your burrito looks tasty. Where do you get tortillas these look pretty good?

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    1. They come from Intermarché, a national supermarket chain. They might not be the best, but they do the job and they're a bargain. We get both wheat and corn tortillas. And those "butter beans" from Portugal (or Brazil) are really good.

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  3. I too love Comté. I'm probably biased since part of my family comes from Franche-Comté.

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  4. Great looking burrito. We celebrated Sixo de Mayo yesterday with tacos because we couldn’t do it on the cinco. Thanks for the invitation to come on over, we’ll take you up on it next year. ;)

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  5. And thanks for the information on the cheeses. I know the names, from reading your blog, but wasn’t sure about the American equivalents.

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  6. This is very useful information, many thanks. I like Comté but didn't know all those details about it.

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