Discussion:
Asparagus (the Green Stuff)
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Sqwertz
2008-03-13 01:47:26 UTC
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It's a grilled ham and cheese topped with more cheese and a white
sauce (made with more cheese). The one pictured is a double decker
made with Blarney Castle and cheddar cheeses, home made ham, with
romano and more blarney in the sauce. Then broiled.
"Blarney Castle is a semi-soft cheese with a mild flavor and creamy
texture similar to a young Gouda."
There are several brands of "Blarney" cheese, but I think only the
Kerrygold brand is called "Blarney Castle" cheese. One site says
it's produced at the castle itself using cows grazing on it's land,
but I don't see how several different dairies can be operating on
the grounds of the castle.

Some sites also claim it a round waxed cheese. The Kerrtygold stuff
is very mass-produced - especially if they're selling it at CostCo
for $4.85/lb.

Joel - do you have an entry for Blarney cheese in that book of
yours?

[Yes, I'm guilty of crossposting. Sheldon is right - I am a
crossposting scumbag singlehandedly responsible for inviting
spammers selling handbags into RFC]

BTW: CostCo is carryoing three Irish cheeses, Kerrygold butter and I
forget which brand of raw corned beef this month. The beef wasn't
too cheap ($4/lb? It BETTER be good for that price)

-sw
Joel Olson
2008-03-13 09:53:57 UTC
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Post by Sqwertz
It's a grilled ham and cheese topped with more cheese and a white
sauce (made with more cheese). The one pictured is a double decker
made with Blarney Castle and cheddar cheeses, home made ham, with
romano and more blarney in the sauce. Then broiled.
"Blarney Castle is a semi-soft cheese with a mild flavor and creamy
texture similar to a young Gouda."
There are several brands of "Blarney" cheese, but I think only the
Kerrygold brand is called "Blarney Castle" cheese. One site says
it's produced at the castle itself using cows grazing on it's land,
but I don't see how several different dairies can be operating on
the grounds of the castle.
Some sites also claim it a round waxed cheese. The Kerrtygold stuff
is very mass-produced - especially if they're selling it at CostCo
for $4.85/lb.
Joel - do you have an entry for Blarney cheese in that book of
yours?
[Yes, I'm guilty of crossposting. Sheldon is right - I am a
crossposting scumbag singlehandedly responsible for inviting
spammers selling handbags into RFC]
BTW: CostCo is carryoing three Irish cheeses, Kerrygold butter and I
forget which brand of raw corned beef this month. The beef wasn't
too cheap ($4/lb? It BETTER be good for that price)
-sw
Sorrry, neither that nor Kerrygold. But the book was old, even before
the reprinting in 1953.

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