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In Your Face Cheddar

Producer
Face Rock Creamery
Country
United States
Region
Oregon
Weight
40 lbs
Website
www.facerockcreamery.com
Milk
Cow
Treatment
Pasteurised
Classification
Firm
Rennet
Microbial
Rind
None
Style
Cheddar-like
Flavor
Flavor added to paste

Face Rock Creamery is located in Bandon, Oregon, in one of the oldest cheesemaking areas on the west coast. As early as the 1880s, cheese was being made in the many dairy farms in the Coquille Valley to the east of the town, and in 1936 the Bandon Cheese Factory was founded. The son of the factory’s founder, Brad Sinko, took over and ran it until 2003 when it was bought out by a larger competitor. Sinko then spent 10 years as the head cheesemaker Beecher’s Handmade Cheese in Seattle and New York. 

While Sinko was making cheddars in Seattle, the Bandon Cheese Factory was abandoned and torn down by the company that had purchased it. Locals in the town, including developers Greg Drobot and Daniel Graham, were disappointed to see a gravel pit where the Bandon Cheese Factory once stood. Working alongside the community and the City Council, Drobot and Graham decided to rebuild a structure that would host not only a 9,000 sq. foot creamery, but also a 2,000 sq. foot well retail space and cafe. Today cheese is being made in Bandon once again in this location, and Brad Sinko has returned as head cheesemaker. The name ‘Face Rock’ refers to a local monolithic formation on the Oregon coast that resembles a face looking up at the sky.

Face Rock sources all of its milk from Scolari’s Dairy Farm in Coquille, only 15 miles from Bandon. The farm has been owned by the same family since the early 1930s, and today has a herd of Holstein and Brown Swiss cows. Sinko oversees the production of 1,000 pounds of cheese at Face Rock Creamery each day using traditional techniques.

In production of In Your Face Cheddar, jalapeno, habanero and sweet red peppers are mixed in with the curd before the cheese is formed into 40-lb blocks. Aged in plastic coating for at least four months, In Your Face is named for its hit of spiciness. 

Tasting Notes

While its scent is reminiscent of a tame pepper jack, this cheddar, with its tri-colored spattering of hot peppers decorating the paste, is surprisingly spicy. Heat builds slowly amongst notes of smoke, acidity and the slight sharpness of the cheddar. 

Pairings

Pair it with a Burgundy or with a pale ale. 

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