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The New Coffee Room

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  3. What to do with a pound of Swiss cheese?

What to do with a pound of Swiss cheese?

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  • B brenda
    15 Dec 2020, 20:44

    Normally we use gruyere, appenzeller, Emmentaler for fondue, but swiss should work, too. Our favorite liquid to add is champagne. It doesn't take much liquid.

    N Offline
    N Offline
    Nunatax
    wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 07:42 last edited by
    #14

    @brenda Never tried it with champagne before. Is that replacing the white wine and/or the Kirsch?

    The one we usually eat is the so-called “moitié-moitié”, with equal amounts of gruyere and emmentaler, white wine and Kirsch. Also tried one with a dark beer, but I prefer the one with white wine.

    B 1 Reply Last reply 16 Dec 2020, 10:05
    • K Offline
      K Offline
      Klaus
      wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 07:57 last edited by
      #15

      "Swiss cheese"?

      Switzerland makes hundreds of quite different cheeses. Which one is it?

      1 Reply Last reply
      • B Offline
        B Offline
        bachophile
        wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 08:53 last edited by bachophile
        #16

        The ones with holes that the moon is made out of.

        But that’s what American provincials call emmental cheese

        K 1 Reply Last reply 16 Dec 2020, 10:35
        • N Nunatax
          16 Dec 2020, 07:42

          @brenda Never tried it with champagne before. Is that replacing the white wine and/or the Kirsch?

          The one we usually eat is the so-called “moitié-moitié”, with equal amounts of gruyere and emmentaler, white wine and Kirsch. Also tried one with a dark beer, but I prefer the one with white wine.

          B Offline
          B Offline
          brenda
          wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 10:05 last edited by brenda
          #17

          @nunatax
          It replaces the wine.

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          • B bachophile
            16 Dec 2020, 08:53

            The ones with holes that the moon is made out of.

            But that’s what American provincials call emmental cheese

            K Offline
            K Offline
            Klaus
            wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 10:35 last edited by
            #18

            @bachophile said in What to do with a pound of Swiss cheese?:

            The ones with holes that the moon is made out of.

            But that’s what American provincials call emmental cheese

            Oh I see.

            In many parts of the English-speaking world the terms "Emmentaler" and "Swiss cheese" are both used to refer to any cheese of the Emmenthal type, whether produced in Switzerland or elsewhere.

            Cultural appropriation at its worst!

            B 1 Reply Last reply 16 Dec 2020, 11:15
            • K Klaus
              16 Dec 2020, 10:35

              @bachophile said in What to do with a pound of Swiss cheese?:

              The ones with holes that the moon is made out of.

              But that’s what American provincials call emmental cheese

              Oh I see.

              In many parts of the English-speaking world the terms "Emmentaler" and "Swiss cheese" are both used to refer to any cheese of the Emmenthal type, whether produced in Switzerland or elsewhere.

              Cultural appropriation at its worst!

              B Offline
              B Offline
              bachophile
              wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 11:15 last edited by
              #19

              @klaus there is also this horrible pseudo yellowish doormat consistency thing called American cheese, the thing Macdonald throws on its cheeseburgers, which I’m told is also in the cheese family.

              K 1 Reply Last reply 16 Dec 2020, 11:26
              • B bachophile
                16 Dec 2020, 11:15

                @klaus there is also this horrible pseudo yellowish doormat consistency thing called American cheese, the thing Macdonald throws on its cheeseburgers, which I’m told is also in the cheese family.

                K Offline
                K Offline
                Klaus
                wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 11:26 last edited by
                #20

                @bachophile said in What to do with a pound of Swiss cheese?:

                @klaus there is also this horrible pseudo yellowish doormat consistency thing called American cheese, the thing Macdonald throws on its cheeseburgers, which I’m told is also in the cheese family.

                Well, there the name “American” cheese is at least a clear warning that it’s not real cheese.

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                • J Offline
                  J Offline
                  Jolly
                  wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 12:03 last edited by
                  #21

                  Doesn't America still own the patent on cheeseburgers?

                  I'm sure you ingrates owe us some royalties.

                  “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                  Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • D Offline
                    D Offline
                    Doctor Phibes
                    wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 12:26 last edited by
                    #22

                    Just as hamburger has no ham in it, a cheeseburger typically has no actual cheese in it.

                    It's a mysterie.

                    I was only joking

                    G 1 Reply Last reply 16 Dec 2020, 13:30
                    • D Doctor Phibes
                      16 Dec 2020, 12:26

                      Just as hamburger has no ham in it, a cheeseburger typically has no actual cheese in it.

                      It's a mysterie.

                      G Offline
                      G Offline
                      George K
                      wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 13:30 last edited by
                      #23

                      @doctor-phibes said in What to do with a pound of Swiss cheese?:

                      Just as hamburger has no ham in it,

                      Ahem: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_hamburger

                      Minced meat was a delicacy in medieval cuisine, red meat usually being restricted to the higher classes.[16] Very little mincing was done by medieval butchers or recorded in the cookbooks of the time, perhaps because it was not part of the sausage-making process that preserves meat.

                      During the first half of the 19th century, most European emigrants to the New World embarked from Hamburg, and New York City was their most common destination. Restaurants in New York offered Hamburg-style American fillet,[17][18] or even beefsteak à la Hambourgeoise. Early American preparations of minced beef were therefore made to fit the tastes of European immigrants, evoking memories of the port of Hamburg and the world they left behind.

                      In the late 19th century, the Hamburg steak became popular on the menus of many restaurants in the port of New York. This might consist of a fried patty of chopped beef, eggs, onions, and seasoning,[20] or it might be lightly salted and often smoked, and served raw in a dish along with onions and bread crumbs.[21][page needed] The oldest document that refers to the Hamburg steak is a Delmonico's Restaurant menu from 1873 which offered customers an 11-cent plate of Hamburg steak that had been developed by American chef Charles Ranhofer (1836–1899).

                      "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                      The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

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                      • H Horace
                        15 Dec 2020, 22:25

                        Swiss is my favorite, I just eat it plain.

                        C Offline
                        C Offline
                        Catseye3
                        wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 14:44 last edited by
                        #24

                        @horace said in What to do with a pound of Swiss cheese?:

                        Swiss is my favorite, I just eat it plain.

                        Horace, try that with apple quarters.

                        Success is measured by your discipline and inner peace. – Mike Ditka

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        • L Offline
                          L Offline
                          LuFins Dad
                          wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 20:13 last edited by
                          #25

                          So I decided on making reubens... Could taste it all day while going about my business. It was what I was looking forward to all day... Stop at the store to pick up some rye, pastrami, and sauerkraut. Come home to start preparing everything and find out somebody threw the Swiss cheese away thinking we wouldn’t use it...

                          The Brad

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                          • F Offline
                            F Offline
                            Friday
                            wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 20:35 last edited by
                            #26

                            Oh no! Too bad LFD.

                            5555

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                            • J Offline
                              J Offline
                              Jolly
                              wrote on 16 Dec 2020, 21:16 last edited by
                              #27

                              Threw it away?

                              I'd raise Hell and prop a chunk under it.😠😠😠

                              “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                              Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

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