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Brooklyn


Brooklynites are famously proud of their borough, a sprawling space that covers some 71 square miles and counts 2.6 million residents, making it the most populous borough of New York City. After all, they have trees, parking spaces, a beautiful bridge, famous authors (Gary Shteyngart, Paul Auster, and Colson Whitehead, among others) the Wonder Wheel—and plenty of cheese.
Press a local hard enough and he or she may admit to the occasional pilgrimage across the bridge to Murray’s or a dip into Saxelby Cheesemongers. But when it comes to cheese, there are few reasons to leave the borough. In fact, there are many reasons to stay. Here are 17 of them.

Cheese Shops

Bedford Cheese Shop

Cheese with flags stuck into them.

Cheese descriptions at Bedford Cheese Shop

Opened in 2003, Bedford Cheese Shop was one of the businesses that inspired others to make Williamsburg the foodie destination it’s become. The small corner storefront belies the riches inside—150-plus cheeses, curated by co-owner Charlotte Kamin, as well as an extensive selection of things to put on, around, or under them. Half the fun is reading the cheese tags, written by the irreverent, cheese-smitten mongers behind the counter; the other is being led by them to a perfect slice of Hoch Ybrig from Rolf Beeler, a gooey slice of Vermont’s Lazy Lady Buck Hill Sunrise, a goaty square of Stracchino di Capra, or other lesser-known surprises.

Bedford Cheese Shop 229 Bedford Avenue (at N. 4th Street) Williamsburg, NY 718.599.7588

Blue Apron Foods

A man offers cheese to the photographer

“J” at Blue Apron Foods

Like a Dean & DeLuca without the attitude or the tourists, this Park Slope shop has a top-notch selection of goods—from Stumptown coffee to Jacques Torres chocolates, and everything in between. The best part, however, is the friendly, knowledgeable staff. Owners Ted Matern and Alan Palmer each have 30- plus years of experience working with cheese and charcuterie at places such as D&D, Petrossian, Bloomingdale’s, and Balducci’s—shops that spawned a good number of their staff as well. So when you ask the difference between the “franks” and “wieners” in the charcuterie case, expect a detailed explanation; when you mull undecidedly around the cheese case, an intuitive monger will most likely start handing you tastes without even asking.

Blue Apron Foods 814 Union Street (between 7th & 8th Avenues) Park Slope, NY 718.230.3180

Brooklyn Larder

Sergio Hernandez is the man at this shiny, modern shop, a refuge from the chaos of Flatbush Avenue. He opened the place with Andrew Feinberg and Francine Stephens of Franny’s cafe, itself a destination since the day the duo fired up its brick oven in 2004. The Larder is stocked with a full array of takeaway food and gourmet goods, but cheese is Hernandez’s passion, as evidenced by the temperature- and humidity-controlled cheese room he helped design—a rarity in space- starved New York City. Ask about a cheese and be ready for a story, for Hernandez has visited nearly every cheesemaker whose product he stocks—and he’s schooled his staff about them, too.

Brooklyn Larder 228 Flatbush Avenue (between Bergen Street and 6th Avenue) Prospect Heights, NY 718.783.1250

D. Coluccio & Sons

Yes, it’s a hike from downtown Brooklyn. But inside this drab building, fronted by pallets of Lurisia Natural Mineral Water and San Pellegrino Chinotto is an Italianophile’s dream store, packed with hard-to-find items at bargain prices. The main attraction, however, may be the 24-month-old Parmigiano-Reggiano chisled from giant wheels for $11 a pound. Or perhaps the tangy Pecorino Romano for $9, the caciocavallo, the meltingly sweet Gorgonzola Dolce, or the Calabrian burrata. Whatever you go for, remember to grab a ball of fresh mozzarella and a roll on the way out to shorten the ride home.

D. Coluccio & Sons 1214-20 60th Street Borough Park, NY 718.436.6700

Grab Specialty Foods

Laura Nuter was a pioneer who brought high-quality food to the South Slope when she opened GRAB in 2007. In the years since, she’s become even more focused on unusual cheeses, stocking her store with some 120 kinds, from the kid-friendly Cypress Grove Lamb Chopper to Beemster Wasabi (don’t knock it ’til you’ve tried it on a burger) and Hirtenkäse from the Allgäu mountain region of Germany. All are labeled with a suggested beer pairing, a nod to the tightly edited selection of craft beers lining the wall—although if beer isn’t your thing, just stop in at Slope Cellars next door, where a savvy staff will be glad to help you find a suitable bottle of wine, or three.

Grab Specialty Foods 438 7th Avenue (between 14th & 15th Streets) Park Slope, NY 718.369.7595

Stinky Bklyn

A street corner with people waiting to cross

Outside Stinky Bklyn at the corner of Smith & Degraw

Burnt out on Manhattan restaurants, Patrick Watson and Michele Pravda fled to Brooklyn, where they opened Smith & Vine, a tiny wine store jam-packed with top-notch wines and spirits. But they soon missed the food world, and, over a strong, washed-rind cheese one evening, the couple decided to open a cheese store, Stinky Bklyn, in 2006. The shop is stocked to the gills with the borough’s best (Salvatore Bklyn ricotta and Aiello Brothers mozzarella, both made mere blocks away) and a range of international gems aged to perfect pungency in its own aging room.

Stinky Bklyn 261 Smith Street (between Douglass & Degraw) Cobble Hill, NY 718.522.7425

Fresh Mozzarella

One of Brooklyn’s great delights is mozzarella that’s never seen the inside of a refrigerator. As many delis and grocers make their own, a comprehensive list would take year to build; here are three worth the trip.

A ball of cheese held by tongs

Fresh Mozzarella

Caputo’s

The rule at Caputo’s, opened by Puglian expat Joe Caputo in 1976, is that the mozzarella never gets wrapped or refrigerated. This, of course, necessitates making the cheese many times over the course of the day, so when you get it— scooped from a metal pan of milky water and given a quick dip in salted water, if requested—it’s so tender that it oozes immediately into the shape of its container. All it needs is a splash of good olive oil and a loaf of crusty bread—available at the counter, or, if they’ve run out, down the block at Brooklyn Bread.

Caputo’s 460 Court Street (between 3rd & 4th Places.) Carroll Gardens, NY 718.855.8852

Lioni Latticini

The guys around the card table might be slow to serve you when a game is tense, but stand there long enough and they will sell you a ball (or 30). Don’t expect them to do anything with that ball, however; that’s what the sandwich shop at the other end of the block is for. With 139 sandwich selections—90 percent of them starring fresh mozzarella (there’s a separate menu for smoked)—there’s plenty to keep you amused until your turn. Or pick a roll from the bread bins and ask for straight mozzarella dressed only with a little olive oil, salt, and pepper. Heaven, to go.

Lioni Latticini 7819 15th Avenue Dyker Heights, NY 718.232.7852

Russo’s Mozzarella & Pasta

It might look like any other bodega in the nabe, but this tiny store—the Brooklyn branch of an East Village shop opened in 1908—is packed with Italian delicacies, from jars of Italian tuna and liters of olive oil to a wall of fresh, house-made pastas. The big draw, however, is kept up at the counter, next to the stuffed artichokes, fried eggplant slices, and sandwich fixings: baseball-sized rounds of mozzarella, a bit saltier and firmer than moStreet They may be tightly wrapped in cling-wrap, but it’s safe to assume from the high rate of turnover that they haven’t been that way for long.

Russo’s Mozzarella & Pasta 363 7th Avenue (between 10th & 11th Streets) Park Slope, NY 718.369.2874

Markets

Brooklyn Flea

The Flea draws great antiques; all sorts of cool, modern, artsy stuff; and crowds of cute hipsters, but the real reason to make repeated trips is the food. In the cooler months, Bedford Cheese Shop sets up a booth; sometimes Salvatore Bklyn sells their creamy ricotta, straight up or slightly sweetened and stuffed into crisp cannoli shells. Follow the sound of a roaring fire to PizzaMoto, a wood-fired oven on wheels, or stop by Milk Truck Grilled Cheese for a warming sandwich. Then there are the cheese accoutrements—Rick’s Picks and McClure’s Pickles; fat, chewy pretzels at Sigmund Pretzelshop; tantalizing loaves from SCRATCHbread. . .The selection is always in flux, but rest assured: you’ll never go hungry—or cheeseless.

Brooklyn Flea Saturdays and Sundays throughout winter at 1 Hanson Place (at Flatbush Avenue)

NYC Greenmarket

It’s easy to forget just how close New York City is to fertile farmland until you visit one of the city’s Greenmarkets. These outdoor farmers’ markets are devoted solely to the people who raise the vegetables or protein or artisanal products they are selling—including cheese. Some markets take a hiatus over winter, but the year-round markets at Grand Army Plaza and Fort Greene on Saturdays yield aged, raw cow’s milk cheeses from Cato Corner Farm in Colchester, Conn.; McCarren Park and Borough Hall offer goat cheese from Lynnhaven Dairy in Pine Bush, N.Y., and sheep’s milk cheese from Valley Shepherd Creamery in Long Valley, N.J.; and McCarren Park also features selections from Consider Bardwell Farm in Pawlet, Vt. (which also sells on Sundays at Cortelyou Road in Kensington).

FIND A MARKET:

Borough Hall Court Street & Montague Street Brooklyn, NY
Cortelyou Road (between Argyle & Rugby) Kensington, NY
Fort Greene Washington Park (between DeKalb & Willoughby) Fort Greene, NY
Grand Army Plaza Prospect Park West & Flatbush Avenue Park Slope, NY
McCarren Park Union Avenue (between Driggs & N. 12th Streets) Greenpoint, NY

Restaurants

Beer Table

This small, elegant space offers one of the borough’s best bangs for the buck: a $25 three-course menu that is anything but pub grub. It also boasts one of the most exciting beer lists in the city, a tightly edited selection highlighting micro-batch brews and obscure international offerings on draft, from cask, or by the bottle. Frequent special events, from hops seminars to cheese tastings, offer extra incentive to stop by often, as does the ever-changing cheese plate, a $15 selection of three local, beer-friendly cheeses.

Beer Table 427B 7th Avenue (between 14th & 15th Streets) Park Slope, NY 718.965.1196

Buttermilk Channel

Fried chicken on a plate

Buttermilk fried chicken

This two-year-old restaurant in Carroll Gardens may be most known for its fried chicken, but cheese lovers know the secret is really the cheddar waffle it sits on. Named for the channel that runs between Brooklyn and Governor’s Island, where a strong current used to threaten to turn the island’s milk to butter on its ferry ride to the mainland, the restaurant’s focus is decidedly local. Mozzarella comes from Caputo’s, just down the street; goat cheese from Lively Run in the Finger Lakes region upstate; and a stellar cheese plate from neighbor Anne Saxelby, who spends her days in Manhattan running the all-American Saxelby Cheesemongers. Who needs Époisses, anyway?

Buttermilk Channel 524 Court Street Carroll Gardens, NY 718.852.8490

The Counting Room

After stints in several Manhattan restaurants and Brooklyn wine stores, Doria Paci opened this sleek space on an industrial block of Williamsburg last spring. Her wine list attracts hardcore wine geeks with its selection of traditionally made, small-production wines. It’s perfectly pitched to the like-minded cheese and salumi plates, curated with the help of nearby Bedford Cheese Shop.

The Counting Room 44 Berry Street (at N. 11th Street) Williamsburg, NY 718.599.1860

The Jake Walk

Another venture from the Stinky Bklyn team this cozy space presents a menu that far outstrips any reasonable expectations of a wine bar. The beverage list runs 13 pages, with 80-some wines and a slew of brown spirits, plus a seasonally changing cocktail menu; the cheese menu includes at least 20 choices, and sometimes far more. There’s also a full menu that takes advantage of the bounty. Chalk the excess up to pure excitement: Jakewalk is the laboratory for both wine and cheese, a place to explore various combinations or to simply unwind after a long day over a bowl of silky fondue.

The Jake Walk 282 Smith Street (at Sackett Street) Carroll Gardens, NY 347.599.0294

Lucali

The pizzas are chewy and charry, topped with tender local mozzarella, but Mark Iacono’s five-cheese calzone is really the star here: a hot, melty, hedonistic blend of ricotta, Parmigiano Reggiano, buffalo mozzarella, cow’s milk mozzarella, and a secret cheese, all unfettered by tomato sauce (unless you dip into the container on the side) and cradled in a chewy, charry disk of bread. (Cash only)

Lucali 575 Henry Street (between Carroll Street & First Place) Carroll Gardens, NY 718.858.4086

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Tara Q. Thomas

Brooklyn, N.Y.-based Tara Q. Thomas is the Executive Editor of Wine & Spirits Magazine and the author of the second edition of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Wine Basics.

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