America's cheesiest restaurants
Serving gourmet cheese plates nationwide
It’s really rather odd. Ten years ago, finding a restaurant in America serving a selection of fine cheeses was about as easy as finding good Chinese food in Italy. Except at a few old-line French restaurants serving a rudimentary plate of Brie, Camembert and Roquefort — and rarely in very good condition — American restaurateurs saw little profit in appealing to guests who either opted for dessert over cheese or never even thought of the idea of cheese after the main course.
But that has changed radically all over the country. Increasingly, well-traveled Americans are becoming familiar with cheeses as disparate as Spanish goat’s cheese, Italian burrata, English Caerphilly and American cheeses with names like Drunken Hooligan, Constant Bliss, Maytag Blue and Wabash Cannonball.
And their first taste of such cheeses may well have been at a restaurant in the U.S.
Indeed, it has become almost requisite that a new restaurant opening anywhere in the U.S. have a selection of fine cheeses, often with a focus on those from the region. For instance, The Oak Room in the Seelbach Hotel in Louisville, which Food & Wine Magazine calls one of the 50 best hotel restaurants in the country, has a service featuring artisanal cheeses from Kentucky and the South. Here, you may find varieties with lovely names like Kenny’s Kentucky Blue, Sophia Capriole and Trappist Mild Gethsemani — this last made by Trappist monks.
“I’d feel silly not having good cheeses if someone asks for it, even if that’s a small number,” says Nitzi Rabin, chef-owner, with his wife Pat, of the illustrious Chillingsworth in Brewster, Mass., which Boston magazine says, "is home to one of the most enchanting dining experiences in all of New England.”
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The classic French restaurant La Panetière in Rye, N.Y., proudly rolls over a cart of ten French regional cheeses, all in impeccable condition, presented on a wooden tray. Rarities may include a smoky Auvergne gaperon scented with garlic and black peppercorns, which goes very well with the 1914 Château Latour brought up from the award-winning cellar. According to owner Jacques Loupiac, “An old French saying goes, 'a meal without cheese is like a beautiful girl with one eye only.’ I feel it is part of a classic French meal and is very popular with our guests.”
For a long time, many restaurateurs doubted they could ever serve cheese to Americans. In Healdsburg, Calif., surrounded by Sonoma Valley’s vineyards, Cyrus offers an extensive cheese service that is an important part of its fixed price tasting menu (five courses at $102). “When I was young and wandering around Europe I always thought the cheese course was the best part of any meal,” says partner Nick Payton. “But when I started to manage restaurants in the U.S., all I’d find was some awful Port Salut and salty Roquefort. So when I took the job at the Ritz-Carlton in San Francisco, I insisted on a year’s trial period for a serious cheese cart; and by year’s end, at least half of the guests opted for it. Now, at Cyrus, 70 percent take cheese. We have about 30 cheeses, with 15 to 20 offered on any given night, and there’s nothing I love more than to describe the varieties to my guests.”
At the famous Charlie Trotter’s in Chicago, which Wine Spectator named “The Best Restaurant in the World for Food & Wine,” a cheese course is part of the “Kitchen Table” menu or sometimes as a “spontaneous course” that might consist of as many as ten to 12 cheeses on a plate, served with condiments like tomato jam, yuzu marmalade and olive gastrique.
At The Herbfarm in Woodinville, Wash., cheese is always geared to eight-course “thematic dinners” with names like “A Menu from the Garden of Eden,” “The Herbal Atelier” and “The Hunter's Table.”
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