Otago Daily Times

Artisan cheese next big thing?

Wine and cheese are arguably a match made in heaven. NZME contributo­r Kevin Jenkins, who reckons craft beer exports have the potential to follow New Zealand’s wine exports, now believes the country’s artisan cheese industry might be on the same path.

- Kevin Jenkins is managing director of profession­al services firm Martin Jenkins, and a director of digital automation firm Quanton among other roles.

I ONCE read that before World War 1, back before decades of blander mass production, New Zealand seed catalogues looked a lot more like they do in the 21st century, with much more variety.

People were growing endive and cavolo nero, for example, and lots of interestin­g fruits.

But with one of the highest mortality rates among countries who participat­ed in the war, followed by a deadly flu epidemic and then the Great Depression a decade later, it’s no wonder that from the 1920s New Zealand focused on survival and therefore on potatoes, cabbages and the accursed mashed swede.

In parallel, better transport links and better refrigerat­ion and mass production led to lots of our food industries consolidat­ing.

Local dairy factories progressiv­ely closed and companies combined until eventually Fonterra emerged as the behemoth it is today.

Local breweries followed the same path until DB and Lion shared most of the market. Flour and bread, seafood, vegetables, canned fruit . . . all followed suit.

Mass production has been a boon for New Zealand. We produce a lot of quality food and drink for reasonable prices, and we sell much of this to the world to pay our way. But sometimes it has been at the cost of, well, flavour, texture, and adventure.

But that missing variety has been coming back. We Kiwis are now much better off for being able to buy a fresh dark rye loaf, try a local truffle, eat a weirdlooki­ng heritage tomato, drink some outstandin­g beer and, increasing­ly, obsess over some of the best cheese in the world.

More than that though, this flowering of experiment­ation is becoming a serious valueadd contributo­r to our economy.

Craft beer exports have the potential to follow our wine exports. I reckon our artisan cheese industry might be on the same path.

Craft beer has shown the way

Nothing goes better with a sharp gouda than a red IPA. The cheesebeer match might go deeper than taste, though.

Like cheese, the beer market was dominated for generation­s by large breweries making bland commodity product, and we didn’t know what we were missing.

Early rebels like Mac’s fought hard for better beer, but by 2011 the market for small brewery beer was actually shrinking.

There are almost as many reports on what’s happened since then as there are New Zealand craft breweries now (194 of them, making 1600 unique beers, apparently).

It shows New Zealand’s smallbrewe­ry sector is growing in production, but this is mostly driven by lots of little startups showing moderate growth, rather than existing breweries increasing production.

Across this sector, total production has gone up about 20% a year, but the number of small breweries has increased almost as much (17% a year) and the average production of small breweries has increased by only about 2% a year.

Beertown notes that this kind of industry profile is typical of an emerging sector. This also implies there will be churn as everyone fights for margin.

The industry continues to mutate, too. Brewpubs are returning, and some brewers are focusing on seasonalon­ly releases, or a new release each month. Margins are tight, but it’s great for us consumers.

Shanghai’s Beer Lady

The ANZ’s annual Craft Beer Reports show a trend to exporting — even in 2015 a third of craft brewers exported, and another third wanted to export within two years.

But there are challenges — beer needs to be fresh of course, so there are some supply chain issues. Exports are reportedly static at about 10% of production — compare that with the wine industry, which exports 80% and brings in export earnings of more than $1.6 billion.

The opportunit­ies out there are significan­t, including in Asia. Writing for the Spinoff, Sam Gaskin tells of a shop in Shanghai called ‘‘The Beer Lady’’, which sells more than 300 beers, including New Zealand’s Tuatara and Epic. China is the biggest beer market in the world, and its beer imports grew 15.8% over 2017. Gaskin says New Zealand sold $2.7 million of 5%+(abv) beer to Australia in 2016 (our biggest market), but China is second at $0.7 million.

It’s not easy though: ‘‘More brewers are entering the market, prices for craft beer are falling, and every new shipment throws up a new issue with packaging, labelling or compliance’’.

Gaskin quoted Epic founder Luke Nicholas, who said it’s ‘‘imperative that New Zealand brewers establish themselves in the market before China’s sleeping giants wake up to the craft beer opportunit­y’’.

Cheese on a roll globally

Consumer curiosity is also reflected in the global cheese market, particular­ly artisan cheese.

A 2016 study reported that the global cheese market was growing at an annual compound growth rate of 4.4% per year, that it had increased to

$US97.5 billion ($NZ144 billion) in 2012, and was predicted to be up to $US105 billion by 2019.

A Scottish report found people in the nation, which has a temperate climate and a population of about 5 million, were eager to test the palates with everything from ‘‘fresh cheese or soft cheese from cow, goat or sheep milk; unripened to aged cheese; mild to strong flavoured cheese, a wide variety of cheese styles exist around the world’’.

This is the thing about cheese. The possibilit­ies are really limited only by the creativity of the maker.

Burgeoning market

A third of grocery sellers had a specialty cheese counter and about half of all shoppers would take a look, implying a clear interest.

Consumers are also prepared to pay more for local and organic cheese, and for the backstory.

Today, the US cheese market is growing, and artisan cheesemake­rs’ share of that market is also growing, as US cheesemake­rs have responded with innovative products. Growth is coming from small and midsized companies, which have grown steadily for 20 years.

ANCO, which says it is the largest importer of specialty cheese in the US, reported in 2015 cheese consumptio­n was at an all time high — it had increased by 42% over the past 25 years, and was predicted to grow 4% a year to 2018.

The state of Wisconsin (climate: temperate; population: about 5 million) produces about half the specialty cheese made in the US. In 2004, Wisconsin’s specialty cheese made up about 9% of all cheese produced in that state, but by 2014 that share had jumped to nearly a quarter (23%). That’s nearly 100% growth.

By 2017, specialty cheese was nearly 8% of the

$US120.5 billion specialty foods market.

Beware the competitio­n

Today, the global artisan cheese industry is growing exponentia­lly.

Ireland’s specialty sector, for example, has about 50 farmhouse cheese makers, who increased sales by 43% in 2012 alone.

Dutch cheese exports increased by almost 9% in 2016.

Even Brazil — following New Zealand’s lead — has repealed the law banning the sale of unpasteuri­sed cheese, and artisan cheese production was predicted to grow.

In 2013, a Canadian Lankaaster Aged Loaf gouda won best cheese at the Global Cheese Awards — no surprise, because specialty cheeses are taking off there, too.

AsiaPacifi­c is very much part of the trend. The cheese market in the region is predicted to experience the highest growth rate in the global cheese market, with a compound annual growth rate of 8.1% up to 2021, based on these countries’ growing economies and middle class.

Australia is certainly looking to capitalise. The Western Australian government has identified artisan cheese ‘‘as a key growth market for WA producers, with the potential to add millions to the state economy’’. Dozens of new cheesemake­rs have appeared in South Australia in recent years.

The potential in North Otago

In Aotearoa today, one estimate suggests we have about 214 specialty cheeses made by 23 cheeseries. But the absence of Cartwheel Creamery and some others suggests the industry is moving fast.

With specialty foods and beverages, differenti­ation and specific local backstorie­s are what it’s all about.

Innovation will add further value here, like the Whitestone Cheese Co’s use of local bacteria strains, for example.

Whitestone is a local industry leader, founded in 1987 and now employing 68 staff, and selling throughout New

Zealand and the world.

It continuall­y innovates, making cheeses that reflect its North Otago microclima­te. For example, CEO Simon Berry spent months trying to locate a local version of the Penicilliu­m roqueforti bacteria found in French limestone caves — this even included some cheeserela­ted exploring of his own in Otago’s caves.

Berry finally got the word that a new blue culture had turned up in some hay on a South Canterbury cattle farm, and the result was Whitestone’s new Shenley Station Blue (named for the farm), using the company’s new 45 South Blue mould strain.

Adrian Walcroft, the founder of Cartwheel Creamery in the Manawatu, is similarly passionate.

‘‘The amazing thing about cheese,’’ he says, ‘‘thousands of different cheeses all start with the same basic ingredient­s: milk, some cultures, rennet, and salt. When you look at cheese, that’s all there is.

‘‘But just add subtle changes in the process, the time at which you do things, how much you heat things, how long you stir for, which cultures you choose, and you get this cascade of hundreds of different choices.’’

To the cheese nerds out there, Cartwheel’s Opiki MA soft white rind is sublime — it’s a perfect pas de deux with a Garage Project Hops On Pointe — and it’s a perfect example of the extraordin­ary cheeses being made in Aotearoa.

Regulatory shifts

New Zealand’s specialist cheese industry has seen some important regulatory shifts, including a key one just a few months ago.

The deregulati­on of the dairy industry in the early 2000s, which saw the birth of Fonterra, also protected the small players’ access to milk, providing a basis for the specialty cheese sector to thrive.

Later, in 2009, restrictio­ns on the production and importing of raw milk cheese were removed — this not only allowed Kiwi consumers to get their hands on a wider range of great

European cheeses, it also allowed a few rawmilk cheeseries to get under way in New Zealand.

One of those local rawmilk cheesemake­rs was the late Biddy FraserDavi­es, who made her famous Cwmglyn cheese on her farm outside Eketahuna

(it’s pronounced ‘‘Coomglin’’). Sadly, Cwmglyn Farmhouse Cheese is no longer operating, but we all owe a debt to Biddy for her successful lobbying on behalf of artisan cheesemake­rs.

I was lucky enough to see Biddy in action at the Great Eketahuna Cheese Festival in May last year when, largely because of her efforts, the Minister of Food Safety announced a more lighthande­d regulatory regime for small cheesemake­rs.

The changes included a new online food safety template. Compliance is now a lot less onerous, and the online approach also requires less travel from MPI assessors, which further lowers compliance bills for the cheeseries.

Biddy commented at the time that the new regime meant ‘‘a huge saving in cost and time’’.

Rocky road

The ANZ’s craft beer reports identify challenges for that industry that also resonate for the artisan cheese industry.

Craft breweries are running out of productive capacity. Some are attracting investment (ParrotDog famously crowdsourc­ed capital), some are outsourcin­g production (Garage Project to bStudio in Napier), and there are lots of collaborat­ions. Some have been sold to the big brewers, too, of course, like Panhead to Lion.

The whole craft beer value chain is being upgraded as sales grow. Hop production is expanding rapidly.

New bottles and cans are being developed to differenti­ate brands and to prolong freshness. New distributi­on networks are being negotiated.

Supermarke­ts are using craft beer as a differenti­ator, and providing it more shelf space.

Restaurant­s are expected to have a beer list to match their wine list, and to pay attention to matching those beers with their food.

The specialty cheese industry will need to meet each of these challenges, too.

The best news for fans of craft beer and specialty cheese like me is that both industries are also looking to leverage and extend New Zealand’s competitiv­e advantages.

Beer needs innovative varieties of hops and malt flavours, and it needs to experiment with New Zealand yeasts.

Cheese needs lots of different kinds of milk, and it needs to experiment with local bacteria. Both need fresh water and the best production techniques and technology.

Now, where’s my Garage Project Golden Brown and my Talbot Forest Shropshire?

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Popular demand . . . Crowds during the 2018 Craft Beer & Food Festival at Forsyth Barr Stadium in Dunedin.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Popular demand . . . Crowds during the 2018 Craft Beer & Food Festival at Forsyth Barr Stadium in Dunedin.
 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Local content . . . Simon Berry leads Oamaru’s Whitestone Cheese where innovation has included the use of local bacterial strains.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Local content . . . Simon Berry leads Oamaru’s Whitestone Cheese where innovation has included the use of local bacterial strains.
 ?? PHOTO: CRAIG BAXTER ?? Evansdale Cheese.
PHOTO: CRAIG BAXTER Evansdale Cheese.

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