As
a final (for the time being) entry into my Food
for the Million series, may I offer you a short but intriguing item from
the Examiner (Launceston, Tasmania) of
25 July 1905?
A
record consignment of cheese was recently despatched from Liverpool to London.
It consisted of 5000 cheeses, weighing 200 tons, and was consigned to one
person, a London merchant. The whole of the cheese was Canadian. Its value was
about ₤9000. Some 32 railway trucks were required for the carriage of the
cheese.
This
is indeed a different spin on the topic. I thought that cheese was always and
ever a staple food for the masses?
It
appears that Canadian cheese had been an important export to Britain for some
decades, as is shown in the Annual Report
of the Commissioner of Agriculture and Public Works for the Province of Ontario
in 1871 – although the its quality at the time was controversial (perhaps the
reason it was considered suitable for the million/)
Canadian
Cheese in the London and Liverpool markets do not, except in rare instances, command
the highest quotations. In the business circulars of London Houses it is
classed as middling quality, and is quoted from 2s. to 3s. per cwt. below U. S.
Factory Cheese. A Liverpool House, when asked the question, “Why does Canadian
Cheese not bring Cable quotations ?” replied: “ It is only U.S. fancy dairies
which are sold at these extreme prices.” And a Glasgow circular of 21st Dec.,
1870, quotes Canadian Factory Cheese at 60s. per cwt. (112 lbs.,) a figure
fully 10s. below the cable quotations of that date. Now, it will not do to say
that this state of things is the result of conspiracy to depreciate the
Canadian article, neither will it do to say that inferior U.S. cheese is
branded Canadian, and our finest is sold as U.S. for, comparatively speaking, a
very small proportion of the Canadian products is now handled by New York
merchants. We believe that the truth of the matter is this, the disparity
between the market price of Canadian and U. S. Cheese is due to our article not
being, generally speaking, quite the thing as regards quality. The kind of
cheese which commands the highest price in the English market is close in
texture, i.e. not porous, will slice in thin pieces without falling into
crumbs, is mild in flavour, and in colour - is either pure white or a pale red,
the pure white suiting the Lancashire market, and the high coloured the London.
Again and again have we heard from the best authorities that straw-coloured
cheese (the ruling shade in our product) is the most unsaleable that can be
shipped. To produce this class of article is as much in our power as it is in
our New York neighbours………..
As the recipe for the day, I give you a genuine prize-winning
Canadian recipe for cheese from The
Canadian Agriculturist, and Journal of the Board of Agriculture of Upper Canada
(1863.)
CHEESE MAKING.
The
following is the statement of Mr. Hugh McMillan, of Erin Township, of the mode
of manufacturing the cheese exhibited by him at the Provincial Exhibition of 1862,
to which was awarded the second prize:
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