California Artisan Cheese Festival Best Bite Competition

Believe it or not, my cheese Friday is not over yet after attending a blind tasting seminar, touring two cheesemakers, a cheese lunch, and a distillery as covered in my previous posts in part 1 and part 2 recap of my trip to enjoy the California Artisan Cheese Festival. After a couple hours break after this tour, my sister and I then went to an event called The Best Bite – A Tribute to First Responders. Then, on Sunday we went to the Artisan Cheese Tasting and Marketplace.
The Artisan Cheese Festival The Best Bite Competition, this year themed The Best Bite - A Tribute to First Responders for 2018. Valette presented cheesesteak with Stuyt Dairy bacon cheese crisp, Stuyt Dairy cheese Whizz, pepper crusted beef tenderloin, pickled sweet peppers, and Stuyt Dairy cheese powder. The Artisan Cheese Festival The Best Bite Competition, this year themed The Best Bite - A Tribute to First Responders for 2018. Valette presented cheesesteak with Stuyt Dairy bacon cheese crisp, Stuy Cairy cheese Whizz, pepper crusted beef tenderloin, pickled sweet peppers, and Stuyt Dairy cheese powder.
At the California Artisan Cheese Festival 2018 Best Bite Chefs category of the competition, Valette presented cheesesteak with Stuyt Dairy bacon cheese crisp, Stuyt Dairy cheese Whizz, pepper crusted beef tenderloin, pickled sweet peppers, and Stuyt Dairy cheese powder.
For the Cheesemonger Bite category, shown here is Oliver’s Market, Cellar Door Platters and Displays Julie Cassotta and Mike Rafter who used Northern Gold from Pedrozo Dairy and Cheese Company to make a beer cheese

The Best Bite

This evening event brought together Cheesemakers, Chefs and Cheesemongers in a Best Bite Competition while paying tribute to first responders who risked their lives during California’s destructive fire storms in October last year. Several of the local heroes got to be judges, and there is also people’s choice award so attendees would get to vote for their winner in each category as well. I took photos of almost everything, both to share with you but also to remember what I ate and who made it for voting later! Photos are my notes!
The Artisan Cheese Festival The Best Bite Competition, this year themed The Best Bite - A Tribute to First Responders for 2018. This year’s competition, showcasing over two dozen cheesemakers, two dozen chefs and two dozen mongers each created a separate bite featuring their cheesemaker’s cheeses that are judged by some local heroes and also voted on by the people attending The Artisan Cheese Festival The Best Bite Competition, this year themed The Best Bite - A Tribute to First Responders for 2018. This year’s competition, showcasing over two dozen cheesemakers, two dozen chefs and two dozen mongers each created a separate bite featuring their cheesemaker’s cheeses that are judged by some local heroes and also voted on by the people attending
Costeaux French Bakery offered a savory cheese twist with an all butter croissant rolled with three cheeses and lavender herbs, as well as another bread stuffed with blue cheese

So now on to my cheese adventures, continued!

The Artisan Cheese Festival The Best Bite Competition, this year themed The Best Bite - A Tribute to First Responders for 2018. This year’s competition, showcasing over two dozen cheesemakers, two dozen chefs and two dozen mongers each created a separate bite featuring their cheesemaker’s cheeses that are judged by some local heroes and also voted on by the people attending. Cypress Grove Cheeses was there The Artisan Cheese Festival The Best Bite Competition, this year themed The Best Bite - A Tribute to First Responders for 2018. This year’s competition, showcasing over two dozen cheesemakers, two dozen chefs and two dozen mongers each created a separate bite featuring their cheesemaker’s cheeses that are judged by some local heroes and also voted on by the people attending

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Travel Tuesday: Visiting The Barlow in Sebastopol

Continuing from my last post where I was on a tour with the Artisan Cheese Festival in California, after a cheese seminar with a blind tasting and visiting Bohemian Creamery, we headed over to The Barlow.  It is a walkable area in downtown Sebastopol that is composed of more then 30 tasting rooms, restaurants, and stores all by local makers in several industrial buildings that used to be the Barlow apple production facility, now re-purposed. We would have our last 3 stops out of the 5 on the tour here while visiting the Barlow in Sebastopol – a lunch showcasing cheese, visiting another cheesemaker, and tasting at a distillery.

lunch with zazu kitchen + farm. Bohemian Creamery's bodacious cheese with a red wine pear, paired with Bucher Pinot Noir RRV 2014, part of the Artisan Cheese Festival tour visiting the Barlow in Sebastopol Wm. Cofield Cheesemakers, part of the Artisan Cheese Festival tour visiting the Barlow in Sebastopol downtown in the North Bay area, California. We had an opportunity in our cheese tour to enter the cheesemaking room and the aging room
Wm. Cofield Cheesemakers, part of the Artisan Cheese Festival tour visiting the Barlow in Sebastopol downtown in the North Bay area, California
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Travel Tuesday: Artisan Cheese Festival Tour

As some of you may have seen in my Instagram and which I posted briefly about here on the blog, I went to visit one of my sisters who lives in the San Rafael/Bay Area recently. The specific event we had in mind to enjoy together was the California Artisan Cheese Festival, now in its 12th year, that celebrates California cheese with tours, seminars, tasting events, and a cheese market. Here’s a look at my review and recap of my experiences, divided among several posts. First I’ll start with my favorite activity during the festival, the Artisan Cheese Festival Tour.

I took off an extra day, Friday March 22, to enjoy the first full day of this 3 day, weekend cheese festival. The first day was devoted mostly to artisan tours to cheesemakers and local artisans via a bus with a group of 25-30 people. The tour I selected was called “Sensory Sebastopol”, which is basically the area 30 minutes away from Petaluma that our tour stops were concentrated on. The tour included a cheese seminar, a visit to 2 cheesemakers, a cheese lunch, and a visit with a distillery. I will cover the cheese seminar and the first cheesemaker, Bohemian Creamery, in this post.
Artisan Cheese Festival tour 2018, a visit with owner Lisa Gottreich of Bohemian Creamery showing us and telling us the story behind the scenes of an artisan cheesemaker. Here are some of the Bohemian Creamery cheeses. In the front, you see a bloomy rind cheese, the triangle soft cheese is a washed rind, and that in the back the harder aged cheeses of different aging periods are examples of natural rind cheeses. Artisan Cheese Festival tour 2018, a visit with owner Lisa Gottreich of Bohemian Creamery showing us and telling us the story behind the scenes of an artisan cheesemaker. We were able to also visit the 3 aging rooms as you see here.
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Holidays in Sonoma – Local Cheese in Sonoma

Besides local beer, I am always looking for local cheeses as well when I travel. When you are in Sonoma, there are several to choose from- in fact, there is a whole Cheese Trail if you are so inclined. With our Thanksgiving weekend visit the timeline was too short to fit such a trip in, but it’s an interesting activity to consider for a future visit for me.

Besides, you will inevitably want some bread, crackers, and cheese as a absorbant snack while you are out on the wine tasting room visits, right? And, while here you want to choose to support artisans here by getting the local cheese in Sonoma right?
Our Sonoma wine tasting picnic with cheese, bread, grapes, hummus, and various spreads

The most convenient cheese stop is right in Sonoma Plaza, in fact it’s even right by a free parking lot! That stop is The Sonoma Cheese Factory. Inside you will find a whole two cases worth of various cheese they produce, as well as a large deli that offers other products for a Sonoma picnic, microbrews and local wine for you to take home as well- even BBQ! They offer some tasty sounding sandwiches or you can build your own selecting from among 16 different proteins, half a dozen types of bread, almost a dozen cheeses, and more than 20 extras varying from brown sugar pecan mustard to three types of aioli or bacon, jalapenos, roasted red peppers, even sauerkraut. You can make your sandwich a lunchbox to take with you if you’d like.

In the cheese cases I was mentioning, they have several that you can sample, and when I saw they had a buy 2 get 1 wedge of Sonoma Cheese Factory Cheese (nicknamed SCF) I couldn’t resist over-purchasing even though there were just four of us.

Most of the cheeses at SCF are Jack type cheeses, and vary from the traditional to some of our favorite flavorings that we picked out of Garlic Jack, Habanero Jack, Pesto jack and Mediterranean Jack Cheeses. They also had some aged Cheddars. The three we ended up getting that you see are the square aged cheddar, the white is the Garlic Jack, and the one with all those flecks is the Mediterranean Jack.

The three we ended up getting that you see from Sonoma Cheese Factory are the square aged cheddar, the white is the Garlic Jack, and the one with all those flecks is the Mediterranean Jack. The three we ended up getting that you see from Sonoma Cheese Factory are the square aged cheddar, the white is the Garlic Jack, and the one with all those flecks is the Mediterranean Jack.

While you are here in Sonoma Plaza, I might suggest you grab some bread at nearby (literally a block away) Basque Boulangerie, which has some great sourdough and French breads. If it’s late and Basque is closed, you might also consider visiting the local grocery store Sonoma Market where I also appreciated they had lots of local bread.

Also nearby to Sonoma Plaza is Vella Cheese, Besides Jack cheeses and Cheddar, they also have some Italian style cheeses. And, they only use vegetarian rennet.

Another option is the Epicurean Connection Cafe, Beer and Wine Bar, where you can stock up on goods and also get some tasty versions of cheesy sandwiches (including more than half a dozen grilled cheese sandwiches), tartines, crepes, salads and cheese plates. Some of the spreads you saw in my first photo of the post are from Epicurean, including a triple cream Les Trois Fromage made from cow, goat, and and sheep milk.

My favorite cheese visit though was much more out of the way. This visit the cheese maker Matos Cheese Factory. The name says Factory, but you are going right to the Farm. Matos Cheese Factory only makes one type of cheese, St Jorge Cheese. This cheese’s heritage comes from Sao Jorge, Portugal, the original homeland of the founders Joe and Mary Matos.

It involved driving up towards Sebastopol as we were heading towards Iron Horse Vineyard anyway, and was only a little 10 minute drive from California Route 116 anyway that you would be taking. Be prepared to be driving a bit longer than you might think on an all dirt driveway up to the farm buildings. And, you are literally parking in the space amid their barns, there is no parking lot. As you are driving up to the farm you will even pass by the cows who produced the milk for the cheeses. You can see they are so impressed by your visit and getting this far.
Cows that produce the milk for St Jorge Cheese at Matos Cheese Factory Cows that produce the milk for St Jorge Cheese at Matos Cheese Factory

As you walk in you might encounter one of the farm cats like we did, or the farm dog as well. The little shop has a little bell that rings as you open the door so that wherever they may be working they then know you are there. The little shop is really more of a counter that only fits a handful of people, though it also offers a glimpse into the much larger aging room.
Visiting Matos Cheese Factory, makers of St Jorge Cheese St Jorge Cheese in the aging room of Matos Cheese Factory in Sonoma St Jorge Cheese in the aging room of Matos Cheese Factory in Sonoma
They are happy to let you taste two version of their St George, also known as St Jorge Cheese – a younger version and an older version, so you can contrast the more buttery younger version that is like a cross between Havarti and Manchego, and also we tried a more aged one that turns crumbly and is a bit more like Parmesan.
Visiting Matos Cheese Factory, makers of St Jorge Cheese Visiting Matos Cheese Factory, sampling their one cheese that they make, St Jorge Cheese Visiting Matos Cheese Factory, sampling their one cheese that they make, St Jorge Cheese
Your whole visit will likely only last 15 minutes or so, but I left with really delicious cheese and the happy feeling of buying directly from the farmers themselves – in fact in my case, directly from the granddaughter of founder Joe Matos himself. They only accept cash or check.
St Jorge Cheese in the aging room of Matos Cheese Factory in Sonoma My purchase of cheese from Matos Cheese Factory, makers of St Jorge Cheese in Sonoma Cows that produce the milk for St Jorge at Matos Cheese Factory

I didn’t have time for this last two cheese locations, but in Petaluma there are also the options of Marin Cheese, which produces a softer cheese in a French style like brie and camembert, and the Petaluma Creamery that offers tries of their Spring  Hill Jersey Cheese, and Petaluma Creamery  cheeses as well as pizza and ice cream.

Have you had cheeses in Sonoma?

This post is part of my series on my trip to Sonoma where I list various recommendations.

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