Subtitles section Play video
-
- Hi, guys. This is Claudia, and today I'm gonna
-
take you to see how Gorgonzola cheese is made in Italy.
-
I'm in Trecate in the Piedmont region,
-
which is one of the only two Italian regions
-
together with Lombardy where this cheese can be made,
-
and this is one of the only 29 dairies
-
in the world that can produce this cheese.
-
The Gorgonzola industry is worth over $800 million.
-
Almost 5 million wheels are produced each year,
-
and production is confined to this small area only.
-
Gorgonzola cheese has a centuries-old history,
-
and it is still done using the same
-
ingredients and techniques that it was decades ago.
-
Even machines like this one used to stir the curd are
-
designed to recreate human movements as gently as possible.
-
Its beautiful marbled interior is given
-
by Penicillium roqueforti, a fungus that
-
is used to ripen the cheese.
-
And this is why, in fact, blue cheese is called so.
-
- Claudia: Gorgonzola cheese is made with unskimmed
-
pasteurized cow's milk, and it can either be
-
mild and creamy or hard and pungent
-
depending on how long it is left to age.
-
The two kinds are easily distinguishable by
-
the color of their veins:
-
blue in the creamy and green in the pungent.
-
Claudia: Penicillium roqueforti, the fungus, is added
-
to milk at the very beginning of the production process
-
in a big cauldron together with enzymes, rennet, and yeasts.
-
In about 20 minutes, milk becomes curd
-
and can be transferred into molds.
-
Each wheel is marked with the dairy's identification number.
-
You can see number 60 here,
-
that's Caseificio Si Invernizzi we visited.
-
Here, between 450 and 500 Gorgonzola
-
wheels are made every day.
-
To help the curd settle, wheels are turned four times
-
then left to rest overnight.
-
Then, they are salted a couple of times.
-
At this stage, they weigh about 18 kilos,
-
that's 40 pounds, but this number will drop
-
to 12 kilos, 26 pounds, at the end
-
of the aging process as excess whey is released.
-
The salting rooms are warm and humid.
-
This is also to favor the activity
-
of yeasts inside the cheese.
-
Mild Gorgonzola wheels stay for three days
-
and hard Gorgonzola for five.
-
Then, they are moved again into a cold room
-
where they're punctured 100 times on each side.
-
This is to allow oxygen into the cheese
-
for it to grow its signature blue veins.
-
All Gorgonzolas at Caseificio Si Invernizzi are
-
punctured with a machine, but some other
-
in-house cheeses are still punctured by hand.
-
After this step, the cheese is left to age.
-
It takes two months for the blue creamy Gorgonzola
-
and three months for the green pungent one.
-
The color difference is pretty evident,
-
but do they really taste different?
-
The dairy set up a little cheese tasting
-
so that we could try them both.
-
That's amazing, my God. It almost doesn't feel
-
like you're biting
-
into cheese. It just melts in your mouth.
-
Oh, wow, they are so different. It's crazy. You know?
-
I mean, you can tell from the texture
-
that this is harder and this is creamier, but
-
this is much, much stronger. It has a stronger bite.
-
After trying Gorgonzola on its own,
-
in-house chef Gianpiero Cravero
-
wanted to show me how versatile the cheese is,
-
so he cooked some squid ink spaghetti with both cheeses.
-
- Your pasta.
-
- Mmmm. Wow. The cheese tastes very strong,
-
but I think the combination with the squid ink
-
is great. I mean, color-wise of course it's amazing
-
because black and white, they're like opposites, right?
-
So you can really see the cheese in there
-
and its sort of creamy texture on the pasta.
-
Gorgonzola cheese is protected by the European Union
-
by the Protected Designation of Origin Scheme.
-
This means that any cheese labeled "Gorgonzola"
-
must meet a particular set of standards
-
and is subject to quality checks.
-
It's also wrapped in a signature aluminum foil.