Bonne Bouche Explained

Bonne Bouche
Country:United States
Regiontown:Vermont
Source:Goat
Pasteurised:Yes
Texture:semi-soft
Fat:21%
Weight:4 ounces
Aging:10 days
(plus up to 90 days in stores)
Certification:None

Bonne Bouche is an aged goat's milk cheese made by Vermont Creamery, of Websterville, Vermont, United States.[1] "Bonne bouche" is French for "tasty bite".

Made with fresh pasteurized goats’ milk from Vermont and Canadian farms, the curd is hand ladled, sprinkled with poplar ash, and aged to develop a rind. This cheese develops a wrinkled, geotrichum-rind also known as a "geo" rind.[2] After aging for ten days at the creamery, the cheeses are packaged and sent to market where they will continue to age up to eighty days. As a young cheese, the rind has a pleasant yeast flavor and creamy interior becoming softer and more piquant with time.

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: culture: the word on cheese . Culturecheesemag.com . 2017-12-11.
  2. Web site: Bonne Bouche . Vermontcreamery.com . 2017-12-11.
  3. Web site: 2013 Winners . 2013 Winners | American Cheese Society . Cheesesociety.org . 2017-12-11.