Mozzarella (Fiore di Nonno) Cheese | culture: the word on cheese
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Mozzarella (Fiore di Nonno)

Producer
Fiore di Nonno
Country
United States
Region
Massachusetts
Weight
4.6 oz
Website
www.fioredinonno.com
Milk
Cow
Treatment
Pasteurised
Classification
Soft
Rennet
Vegetable
Rind
None
Style
Pasta Filata (mozzarella-type)
Mozzarella (Fiore di Nonno) Cheese

Lourdes Smith comes from a long line of Italian cheesemakers; her great-grandfather Alphonso Fiore made cheese in Italy and then in Hoboken, New Jersey after immigrating to the US. She was inspired early on by watching her grandfather Joe, who had taken over Alphonso’s shop, making mozzarella, ricotta and basket cheese. Her business in Somerville, Massachusetts, whose name translates into “my grandfather’s flower,” is a salute to him.

 Lourdes sources mozzarella curd from partner farms. She recently worked with Shy Brothers Farm in Westport, MA, which is run by two sets of fraternal twins, to develop a curd recipe using their antibiotic and hormone-free cow’s milk. Shy Brothers’ cows graze on pasture in a peninsula that juts out into the Westport River. After Lourdes receives the curd, she transforms it by hand each morning in her Somerville, MA kitchen.

 The cheesemaking process begins by breaking the curd into even pieces using a tool called a guitar. Lourdes then adds hot water to the curd, which slowly brings it up to melting temperature so that it can be stretched using a wooden paddle, then shaped. 

Tasting Notes

The resulting cheese is moist and refreshing, soft in texture, milky and buttery with a hint of salt. It’s best eaten at room temperature on the day that it’s made. 

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