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U.S. Championship Cheese Contest Awards the Masters of Curd

By Lorrie Baumann

Guggisberg Cheese took home the grand prize from the United States Championship Cheese Contest this year for its Baby Swiss Wheel, while Marieke Gouda took home the awards for both the first and second runner-ups with Marieke Gouda Premium, the first runner up, and Marieke Gouda Overjarige, the second runner up. The contest is sponsored by the Wisconsin Cheese Makers Association and was held March 5-7 at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Cheese, butters and yogurt competed in 107 classes this year, with dried milk and whey products added for the first time in the contest’s history. Eligibility is limited to products made in the U.S., and winners received their awards at an awards banquet held April 18 in Madison, Wisconsin.

The competition includes seven different categories for cheddar cheeses. Lynn Dairy, Inc. of Granton, Wisconsin, won the class for mild cheddars, Cabot Creamery Cooperative of Cabot, Vermont, won for medium cheddars and Agropur won for sharp cheddars. Cabot Creamery Cooperative of Middlebury, Vermont, won in the class for cheddars aged one to two years for its Extra Sharp Cheddar, and Tillamook, of Tillamook, Oregon, won for cheddars aged two years or longer with Tillamook Cheddar. Maple Leaf Cheesemakers, Inc., of Monroe, Wisconsin, won the category for a mild to medium traditional waxed cheddar with English Hollow Cheddar, while Henning Cheese of Kiel, Wisconsin, won the category for sharp to aged traditional waxed cheddars with Deer Creek The King. Finally, Door Artisan Cheese Company of Egg Harbor, Wisconsin, won the class for natural rinded cheddars with its Top Hat English Truckle Cheddar.

The best Colby came from Southwest Cheese, LLC of Clovis, New Mexico, while Glanbia Nutritionals from Twin Falls, Idaho, submitted the best Monterey Jack, and Shullsburg Creamery II LLC from Shullsburg, Wisconsin, won the award for marbled curd cheeses with its Colby Jack Longhorn. Guggisberg Cheese reminded Wisconsin that the best Swiss cheese made in the U.S. comes from Ohio by sweeping the category for Swiss cheese with 200-pound Swiss blocks and a 75-pound Swiss wheel as well as taking home the grand prize for its Baby Swiss Wheel.

Upstate Farms Cheese of Campbell, New York won the mozzarella category with its Whole Milk Mozzarella Cheese Balls, while Crave Brothers Farmstead of Waterloo, Wisconsin, won the classes for part-skim Mozzarella and fresh mozzarella. Di Stefano Cheese of Pomona, California, won the Burrata class.

The contest offered classes for mild, aged and smoked Provolone. Agropur, of Luxemburg, Wisconsin, won the award for a mild Provolone, BelGioioso Cheese, Inc. of Green Bay, Wisconsin, won the aged category with BelGioioso Aged Provolone Mandarini, and Empire Cheese, Inc. of Cuba, New York, won the category for a smoked Provolone.

BelGioioso Cheese, Inc. won the Parmesan class for its BelGioioso Parmesan, and Eau Galle Cheese Factory, Inc. of Durand, Wisconsin won the classes for both Asiago and aged Asiago cheeses. Klondike Cheese Company of Monroe, Wisconsin, demonstrated mastery of feta by sweeping the category, while Agropur of Weyauwega, Wisconsin, won the class for a flavored feta.

Matt Hinze’s team at Decatur Dairy Inc. of Brodhead, Wisconsin, won the category for Brick and Muenster cheeses with their Muenster, and Decatur Dairy Inc. also won the award for the best unflavored Havarti. Edelweiss Creamery of Monticello, Wisconsin, won the category for a flavored Havarti with Sun Dried Tomato & Basil Havarti. Decatur Dairy Inc. took second and third places in the category for Havarti with Dill.

Cesar’s Cheese LLC of Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin, won the award for unflavored string cheese with its Whole Milk, Hand Stretched String Cheese, while Ponderosa Dairy won the award for a flavored string cheese with Fiesta String Cheese. Baker Cheese Factory of St. Cloud, Wisconsin, took second and third place in the flavored string cheese category for Jalapeno Peppers String Cheese.
Westby Co-op Creamery of Westby, Wisconsin, submitted the best cottage cheese in the contest with its 4% Large Curd Cottage Cheese, and Caputo Cheese of Melrose Park, Illinois, won the ricotta category with Ricotta Red.

Emmi Roth USA of Seymour, Wisconsin, took home both the first- and second-place awards in the Gorgonzola category; Cellars at Jasper Hill of Greensboro, Vermont, won the category for a blue-veined cheese with exterior molding with Bayley Hazen Blue; and Point Reyes Farmstead Cheese won the category for blue-veined cheeses with Point Reyes Original Blue.
Lactalis of Belmont, Wisconsin, won the award for Brie and Camembert cheeses with 8-ounce Triple Cream, and Savencia Cheese USA of New Holland, Pennsylvania, won the award in the open class for soft-ripened cheeses with Dorothy’s Comeback Cow.

In the category for Edam and Gouda cheeses, Arethusa Farm Dairy of Bantam, Connecticut, won the open class with Europa, while Holland’s Family Cheese of Thorp, Wisconsin, won the category for aged Gouda with Marieke Gouda Overjarige. Oakdale Cheese of Oakdale, California, won the category for flavored Gouda with Cumin Gouda, while Maple Leaf Cheesemakers, Inc. won the category for smoked Gouda with Smoked Traditional Gouda.

The first-place award for a Latin American-style fresh cheese went to Mexican Cheese Producers, Inc. of Darlington, Wisconsin, for Queso Panela Basket 4-pound, while the first-place award for a Latin American-style melting cheese went to V& V Supremo Foods/Chula Vista of Browntown, Wisconsin for its Oaxaca Cheese Ball, and the first-place award for a Latin American-style hard cheese went to Rizo Lopez Foods, Inc. for Cotija.

There were three classes for washed-rind, smear-ripened cheeses. Cellars at Jasper Hill won the category for the soft cheeses in the category with Winnimere; Jacobs and Brichford Farmstead Cheese of Connersville, Indiana, won the semi-hard category for Everton; and Emmi Roth won the category for the hard cheeses in the category with Roth Pavino Cheese.

Categories for pepper-flavored Monterey Jack cheeses included separate classes for mild, medium and high heat. In the mild heat class, Southwest Cheese took first place with Pepper Jack. Glanbia Nutritional’s Pepper Jack took first place in the medium heat class, and Southwest Cheese took first place in the high heat class with Ghost Pepper Jack. The contest also included three classes for other cheeses with pepper flavor. Arla Foods won the open class for mild heat with 10-pound Chipotle Gouda Wheel; Glanbia Nutritionals won in the medium heat class with White Cheddar/Peppers, and Mill Creek Cheese of Arena, Wisconsin, won in the high heat class with Habanero Ghost Pepper Quesadilla.
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In the open class for soft cheeses, BelGioioso Cheese won first place for BelGioioso Crema di Mascarpone. The Farm at Doe Run in Centerville, Pennsylvania, won the open class for semi-soft cheeses with Seven Sisters, and Marieke Gouda won the open class for hard cheeses with Marieke Gouda Premium. Emmi Roth’s team at Platteville, Wisconsin’s Roth Grand Cru Reserve Block won first place in the open class for hard cheeses with a natural rind.

In the open class for flavored soft cheeses, Lactalis American Group of Nampa, Idaho, took first place with Galbani Fresh Mozzarella Marinated. In the open class for flavored semi-hard cheeses, Glanbia Nutritionals won with Monterey Jack/Cracked Black Pepper, and in the open class for flavored hard cheeses Sartori Reserve Espresso BellaVitano won the first-place award for Sartori Company of Plymouth, Wisconsin. BelGioioso Cheese won the class for flavored cheeses with sweet condiments with La Bottega di BelGioioso Artigiano Vino Rosso.

Soft and semi-hard smoked cheeses shared an open class, and Calabro Cheese Corp. won the class with Smoked Burrata. Global Foods International won the class for smoked hard cheeses with Smoked Natural Aged White Cheddar Loaf.
Mill Creek Cheese’s Reduced Fat Brick took first-place in the category for reduced fat soft and semi-soft cheeses, while Valley Queen Cheese Factory, Inc. of Milbank, South Dakota, won the class for reduced fat hard cheeses with its Reduced Fat Cheddar. In the class for lowfat cheeses, Klondike Cheese Co. won for its Odyssey Fat Free Feta. Mill Creek Cheese’s Reduced Sodium Muenster won the class for reduced sodium cheeses.

Pine River Prepack of Newton, Wisconsin, won the category for cold pack cheese or cheese food with Garlic and Herb Cold Pack Cheese Food. Pine River also won the class for cold pack cheese spreads with Pepper Jack Cold Pack Cheese Spread, while Kraft Heinz of Lowville, New York, won the category for spreadable natural cheeses without flavor for Philadelphia 8-ounce Original Cream Cheese and the class for spreadable natural cheese with flavor for Philadelphia Garden Vegetable Cream Cheese. In the classes for pasteurized process cheeses, Gilman Cheese Corporation from Gilman, Wisconsin, won for Shelf Stable Ultra Sharp and Global Foods International won for Smoked Processed Gouda 6-ounce Link. Associated Milk Producers Inc. of Portage Wisconsin, and Lactalis U.S.A. of Merrill, Wisconsin won the classes for pasteurized process cheese slices and pasteurized process cheese spread, respectively.

Saputo Cheese USA Inc. of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, won the award for a soft goat’s milk cheese with Montchevre[TM] Rondin, and Idyll Farms of Northport, Michigan’s Idyll Pastures with Garlic & Herbs won the class for flavored soft goat’s milk cheeses. Mackenzie Creamery of Hiram, Ohio, took home the first-place award in the class for flavored soft goat’s milk cheeses with sweet condiments for Cognac Fig Chevre.

Vermont Creamery’s Bijou took first place in the surface (mold) ripened goat’s milk cheeses category. Vermont Creamery is located in Websterville, Vermont.

Cheesemaker Jackie Chang took the first-place award in the class for semi-soft goat’s milk cheeses home to Longmont, Colorado, with Red Cloud Raw Goat’s Milk Cheese, while Cypress Grove’s Truffle Tremor, flavored with black summer truffles, won the class for flavored semi-soft goat’s milk cheeses. Cypress Grove is located in Arcata, California. Central Coast Creamery of Paso Robles, California, won the class for hard goat’s milk cheeses with its Goat Cheddar.

Green Dirt Farm of Weston, Missouri’s Fresh Plain cheese won the class for soft sheep’s milk cheeses; Landmark Creamery Provisions won the class for semi-soft/semi-hard sheep’s milk cheeses with Anabasque. Landmark is located in Belleville, Wisconsin. Carr Valley Cheese of La Valle, Wisconsin, won the class for flavored soft and semi-soft sheep’s milk cheeses with Smoked Marissa and won again in the class for surface (mold) ripened sheep’s milk cheeses with Cave Aged Marissa. Central Coast Creamery’s Ewereka won the category for hard sheep’s milk cheeses.

In the category for soft and semi-soft mixed milk cheeses, Central Coast Creamery won first place for Seascape, and in the category for surface (mold) ripened mixed milk cheeses, Nettle Meadow Cheese Company of Warrensburg, New York, won first prize for Sappy Ewe. The Farm at Doe Run won first place in the category for hard mixed milk cheeses with The Creamery Collection Batch #17.

Carr Valley Cheese Company’s Gran Canaria won the first-place award in the flavored and semi-soft mixed milk cheeses category, and Carr Valley also swept the rest of the class with a second place for Airco and a third place for Canaria.
In the butter classes, Foremost Farms USA of Reedsburg, Wisconsin, won a first place for its salted butter, Cabot Creamery Cooperative of West Springfield, Massachusetts, won a first place for its unsalted butter, and Pine River Dairy of Manitowoc, Wisconsin, won a first place for its Sea Salt Caramel Flavored Butter.

In the yogurt classes, Upstate Niagara Cooperative, Inc. of Buffalo, New York, won a first place for its Lowfat Orange Creme Yogurt, Karoun Dairies, LLC of Turlock, California, won a first place for its Arz Middle Eastern-style Whole Milk Yogurt, Pine River Dairy of Othello, Wisconsin won a first place for its Organic 100% Grass Fed Lemon Whole Milk Yogurt, Upstate Niagara Cooperative, Inc. won a first place for its 5% Greek Yogurt, Klondike Cheese Company won a first place for its Odyssey Greek Yogurt Vanilla, and St. Benoit Creamery of Sonoma, California, won a first place for its Laura Chenel Yogurt.

In the class for drinkable cultured products, Stonyfield Organic of Londonderry, New Hampshire, took home a first-place award for Stonyfield Organic Low Fat Protein Smoothie – Peach. The Strawberry flavor of the same product won the second-place award in the class.

BelGioioso Cheese won the class for natural snack cheeses with BelGioioso Fresh Mozzarella Snacking Cheese, Great Lakes Cheese Plymouth of Plymouth, Wisconsin wont the category for natural sliced cheeses with Swiss Cracker Cuts, and Lactalis U.S.A., Inc. of Merrill, Wisconsin, won the first place for a cheese-based spread with President Gourmet Pairings Feta with Roasted Red Pepper Spreadable Cheese.

Remaining classes in the competition honored shredded cheeses, dry whey, whey protein concentrate, whey protein isolate, whey permeate, non-fat dry milk and skim milk powder, whole milk powder, milk and protein isolate.

THAT’S TASTY Stir-In Purees Simplify Healthy Habits

THAT’S TASTY, a Shenandoah Growers brand, is making it easy for people to choose healthier eating habits with the launch of its new line of Stir-In Purees. Available on shelves in the coming weeks, the line of purees offers consumers an easy solution to add bursts of flavor to their everyday cooking.

THAT’S TASTY Stir-In Purees use organic ingredients, so consumers can add a ton of flavor to meals and still feel good about enjoying the dish, too. The line, launching this month, includes eight total fresh flavors: Garlic, Ginger, Spicy Harissa, Sun-dried Tomato, Italian Herbs, Parsley, Basil and Dill. Each features the hero ingredient in its purest form, along with organic sunflower oil and organic olive oil. The THAT’S TASTY line of purees is a simple way to add healthy, fresh flavor to any meal.
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Packaged in 2.8-ounce tubes, the purees will be available at all major U.S. retailers and have a shelf life of up to six months refrigerated after opening.

Plant-Based Beverages Claim Growing Market Share

By Greg Gonzales

Plant-based beverages are really taking root in the marketplace. According to Fona International’s March 2019 report on plant-based foods, the number of new food and drink products that include “plant-based” in descriptions climbed 268 percent from 2012 to 2018. The same report found that more than half of all consumers are eating more of these foods, and beverages are no exception ― the category saw a 95 percent growth in releases between 2014 and 2018.

Beetology is a beet-based beverage that comes in five varieties that combine beets with superfoods: Beet/Lemon/Ginger, Beet/Veggie, Beet/Tropical Fruit, Beet/Berry and Beet/Cherry. Each variety is non-GMO, certified organic by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and certified fair trade. Beetology is soy free, dairy free and certified kosher, with no preservatives, additives, artificial colors or flavors. It comes in 8-ounce bottles with a suggested retail price of $3.99.

This year’s big new dairy alternative is oat milk, and Califia Farms offers one made in North America with whole rolled, gluten-free oats with no sweeteners, no gums and no stabilizers. Creamy, rich and delicious, it tastes great by itself, steams with no splitting and works well for latte art. It also has 50 percent more calcium than cow’s milk. The Barista Blend comes in 32-ounce cartons and has a suggested retail price of $3.99. The Unsweetened Oatmilk version comes in a 48-ounce carafe with a suggested retail price of $4.49. Califia’s newest product, Übermilk, packs in 8 grams of protein, Omegas and vitamins, all from plant sources like peas and sunflower.

Pacific Foods offers another milk alternative with its hemp-based beverage. It offers five flavors: Original, Unsweetened Original, Vanilla, Unsweetened Vanilla and Chocolate. Each variety delivers a smooth, creamy texture and mild nutty taste, and all are natural sources of plant-based nutrition, including Omega-3 ALA, calcium, protein and all the essential amino acids. It’s an excellent dairy-free alternative for consumers with nut allergies. Each flavor comes in a 32-ounce BPA-free carton, sold individually and in 12-carton cases, with a suggested retail price ranging $3.49–$4.49.
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Sapp’s Birch Water is an all-natural beverage harvested in the forests of Vermont and New York. Birch water contains three times less sugar than coconut water, contains natural minerals and electrolytes, and has no added sweeteners. The infused versions, Strawberry Lavender and Apple Ginger, contain chaga, an adaptogenic mushroom that grows on the bark of birch trees. Each flavor comes in 12-ounce, BPA-free PET bottles, at a suggested retail price of $3.49.

KiiTO provides protein and other nutrients along with basic hydration. Designed with plant protein to build muscle, the drink combines superfoods and MCTs for a fit mind and body. It’s organic, and free of added sugar, soy, dairy, artificial flavors, gluten and gums, with only 1 gram of sugar and 20 grams of protein per bottle. KiiTO comes in three flavors: Vanilla Ashwangandha, Chocolate Maca and Matcha Moringa, all in 12-ounce bottles. The suggested retail price is $4.99 per bottle.

Mamma Chia‘s beverage is made with whole, organic chia seeds rich in nutrients. The company recently introduced a line of Chia Protein Smoothies in Tropical Mango and Strawberry Banana flavors. Packaged in 12-ounce bottles, each serving includes 1,600 milligrams of Omega-3, 13 grams of plant-based protein, 2,100 milligrams of medium-chain triglycerides and 9 grams of sugar. The suggested retail price is $3.99 per bottle.