South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Follow the trail to cheese

Wisconsin creameries are featured in new book by Milwaukee writer

- By Kate Silver Chicago Tribune

No matter how you slice it — or spread it, shred it or cube it — Wisconsin cheese is worth a road trip.

Whether goat, sheep or cow, whether swathed in wax, riddled with holes or dotted with cranberrie­s, the Dairy State takes its wheels and bricks seriously. As it should.

Wisconsin produces around 26 percent of the nation’s cheese, according to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e.

In 2018, Milwaukee resident and journalist Kristine Hansen set out to explore Wisconsin’s cheese culture, compiling recipes and profiling creamery owners for the “Wisconsin Cheese Cookbook: Creamy, Cheesy, Sweet, and Savory Recipes from the State’s Best Creameries” (Globe Pequot, $24.95), which published March 1.

In her visits to 28 creameries, Hansen encountere­d goat yoga, toured an urban creamery and talked with dozens of cheesemake­rs inspired by the generation­s before them.

“What’s interestin­g about Wisconsin cheesemake­rs is that most of them learned from their ancestors, and those can be traced back three or four generation­s to Italy, France and Switzerlan­d,” says Hansen. “So some of these cheesemake­rs grew up watching their parents or their grandparen­ts make cheese, either here or in Europe, and now they’ve continued the tradition.”

While not all of the creameries included in the cookbook are open to the public, a handful of them — and other cheese-centric businesses — are ripe for visiting. Hansen shared her picks for a lactose lover’s road trip through America’s Dairyland.

LaClare Family Creamery Malone, W2994 County Road HH

Larry and Clara Hedrich launched this artisan goat milk creamery, which is about a 20-minute drive from Fond du Lac, as a hobby farm in 1978. Now it’s run by four out of their five children.

“The only reason the fifth isn’t involved is the child’s too young,” says Hansen. “When I visited there, the joke was that she’s on speed dial and is going to be ready to join.”

Visitors can stop by the shop to pick up some cheese, milk, yogurt, ice cream, wine or beer, or settle in at the cafe for farm-to-table cheese curds, beer cheese pretzels, beerbatter­ed cheese curds, cheesecake and more (including lighter options, like salads and wraps). Kristine Hansen’s book about Wisconsin cheese was published March 1.

If you’re out to try just one cheese, make it the Cave-Aged Chandoka, a New Zealand-style cheddar made from cow and goat milk.

It earned Best of Class at the 2018 World Cheese Championsh­ip Contest.

To see where it all begins, stop by the farm to watch the goat-milking process. When the weather’s nice, you can even feed and pet the goats — and, if you’re lucky, get a peek at the newborn kids.

Door County Creamery

Sister Bay, 10653 N. Bay Shore Drive

A creamery that offers goat yoga sessions? Better start planning that trip to this creamery in downtown Sister Bay on the Door County peninsula.

The creamery, which reopens for the season in May, is the brainchild of husband-and-wife team Jesse and Rachael Johnson. In warmer months, you can book that yoga session and do downward dog beside baby goats on a peaceful farm (check online for dates; availabili­ty is limited).

The farm also offers lunchtime tours (check online for those dates, too), so you can gaze at the goats, savor cheese and gelato, and learn about what goes on behind the scenes when it comes to making goat cheese.

You can stock up on all the delicious wares, like chevre, French feta, marinated feta, goat cheddar, curds and goat milk gelato, in flavors such as goat cheese and honey, gingerbrea­d cookie, olive oil and sea salt. Door County Creamery also sells an array of gifts and gadgets with a Wisconsin connection.

“Jesse and Rachael are really big champions of Wisconsin food and farm life,” Hansen says.

Clock Shadow Creamery Milwaukee, 138 W. Bruce St.

One of the country’s few Marieke Penterman missed the Gouda she grew up eating in the Netherland­s, so she began making her own, called Marieke Gouda, available at Holland’s Family Cheese in Thorp, Wis. Anna Landmark, left, and Anna Thomas Bates fill Landmark Creamery in Paoli, Wis., with personalit­y. They also serve out-of-this-world grilled cheese sandwiches.

urban creameries, you’ll find this one tucked away in Walker’s Point, an industrial-chic neighborho­od known for its food and bar scene.

Small but mighty, the team makes cheddar cheese curds, ricotta, chevre, quark (spreadable cheese), Mexican-style cheeses and more, all in an eco-friendly building. Tours, which take place in an observatio­n room, are available every half-hour between 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.

If the Clock Shadow name is familiar, it’s probably because it’s a local favorite appearing on menus around the city. Pro tip: If you’re thirsty after your visit, Central Standard Craft Distillery and Milwaukee Brewing Co. are across the street.

“Anna Landmark is really interestin­g; she used to run political campaigns and then found her calling as a cheesemake­r,” she adds.

In addition to selling all things cheese — from their award-winning pecorinost­yle sheep milk cheese to super-fancy grilled cheeses — the creamery is stocked with great gifts, like chocolates, preserves, soaps and more.

Hansen recommends visiting Paoli not just for a taste of Landmark Creamery’s cheese but also for an adventure.

“It’s a really cute arts town and community,” she says. There’s a brewery, cafes, a bicycle shop and even a shop dedicated to backyard chicken enthusiast­s, called Cluck the Chicken Store.

Holland’s Family Cheese

to as “champions of Wisconsin cheese,” including chefs and restaurant­s that incorporat­e locally made cheese into their menus. Some of these cheese champs: former Chicago chef Heather Terhune, executive chef at Tre Rivali at the Kimpton Journeyman hotel in Milwaukee; Lake Villa native Dave Swanson, chef/owner at Braise in Milwaukee; Hunt Club Steakhouse at Geneva National Resort & Club in Lake Geneva; and Tory Miller, chef with Deja Food Restaurant Group, which includes L’Etoile, Graze, Sujeo and Estrellon in Madison.

She also spotlights shops that sell some of the state’s best artisanal cheeses: Fromaginat­ion in Madison and Wisconsin Cheese Masters in Door County.

One of her favorite parts of writing the book, Hansen says, was exploring the nooks and crannies of Wisconsin while driving by pasturelan­d home to Wisconsin’s Amish communitie­s, chatting with farmers and discoverin­g art galleries.

“I really felt knit with the landscape in a way that I never had before,” she says.

She shared a common bond with the people too.

“They all love to talk about cheese,” she says.

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