Semi-Soft Cheeses Category
These cheeses are great for snacking or desserts, and a few are heat-tolerant enough to be good cooking cheeses.
Many cheeses lose character when frozen, but many semi-soft cheeses can be frozen and thawed without losing too much flavor, though some become crumbly. For best results, first cut the cheese into small (1/2 pound) chunks, and wrap each chunk in an airtight package. Thaw in the refrigerator, and use the cheese soon after it's thawed.
Most semi-soft cheeses are made with cow's milk. Cheeses made with sheep's milk, like Fiore Sardo or Ossau-Iraty, have more butterfat, which make them richer and creamier. Cheeses made with goat's milk, like Syrian cheese, tend to have a tangy, earthy, and sometimes barnyard flavor.
asadero
This stringy Mexican cheese melts nicely, so it's great on quesadillas. It is made from goat and cow's milk.
Learn moreBel Paese
This is a mild, semi-soft Italian cow's milk cheese that's good with apples, pears, and fruity red wines. It's also shredded and used to make pizza, risotto, and pasta dishes.
Learn morebierkäse
This is a soft, stinky cow's milk cheese. German like to put it on rye bread along with some sliced onion, and have it with beer. It's too overpowering to serve with wine.
Learn moreCaciocavallo
This Italian cheese is similar to provolone. This can be made from cow’s milk or sheep’s milk.
Learn moreEsrom
This Danish cow's milk cheese is semi-soft and only slightly pungent. It's a great melting cheese and a popular ingredient in casseroles.
Learn moreGouda
This Dutch cow's milk cheese has a mild, nutty flavor. Varieties include smoked Gouda, the diminutive baby Gouda, and Goudas flavored with garlic and spices. Goudas are also classed by age. A young Gouda is mild, an aged Gouda = medium Gouda = mature Gouda is more assertive, and an old Gouda = very aged Gouda is downright pungent.
Learn moreHaloumi
This salty, crumbly cheese from Cyprus stands up well to heat and can even be fried or grilled. It is made with combination of sheep and goat’s milk. Look for it in Middle Eastern markets.
Learn moreHavarti
This mild Danish cow's milk cheese is perfect for slicing into sandwiches. It's often flavored with spices and chilies.
Learn morejack cheese
This California semi-soft cow's milk cheese resembles Muenster. It has a mild, nondescript flavor, but it's good cheese to slice into sandwiches or melt into casseroles. It also goes by California jack, Monterey jack, Sonoma jack, and Mexican jack, depending on where it was produced. Efforts to boost the flavor have produced Pepper Jack = Jalapeno Jack. Don't confuse this with aged jack, which is a grating cheese.
Learn moreLappi
This is a mild semi-soft cow's milk cheese from the Lapland region of Finland. It's a good melter and works well in fondues
Learn moreLimburger
This is a very stinky and salty German washed rind cow's milk cheese. It's too strong to serve with most wines, so it's often served with beer. Use within a few days after purchasing. For best flavor, serve at room temperature.
Learn moremorbier cheese
This creamy and mild cow's milk cheese has a dark stripe running up the middle, a reference to earlier times when a layer of ash was added to the cheese to protect it from insects. Morbier has a rich, earthy flavor. It's a good melting cheese, but you might want to cook with a cheaper cheese like Lappi or Havarti.
Learn moremozzarella
Mozzarella is a soft, white Italian cheese. The most common type is low-moisture mozzarella, which is often sold in bricks or firm balls, or is shredded and sold in bags. Don't confuse it with fresh mozzarella = high-moisture mozzarella, which is a fresh cheese used for salads and appetizers, and is often sold in tubs of water. Low-moisture mozzarella is one of the few cheeses that doesn't turn rubbery or ooze oil if cooked too long or too hot, so it's a key ingredient in pizzas and casseroles. It's also stretchy--the long white strings that you often see draped over the sides of pizza boxes are usually mozzarella. It can also be frozen and thawed without too much damage to its texture. Buffalo milk has a much higher fat content than cow's milk, so buffalo milk mozzarella, or mozzarella di bufalo, is creamier and also more expensive than cow's-milk mozzarella = fior di latte.
Learn moreMuenster
When produced in Europe, Muenster is a mild-mannered member of the normally stinky washed-rind Cow's milk cheese family, though it becomes more pungent as it ages. It's delicious with dark breads and beer or Gewurztraminer wine. American muensters are much milder.
Learn moreOssau-Iraty cheese
This little-known Basque cheese is made from raw sheep's milk, and it's creamy, nutty, and mellow.
Learn morepasta filata
These cheeses are stretched and pulled like taffy before being molded, which gives them a springy, elastic consistency. It is made from cow or buffalo milk. Unlike many cheeses, they stand up well to cooking. This category includes mozzarella, Provolone, Scamorza, string cheese, and Caciocavallo.
Learn morepepper jack
This a version of jack cheese with spicy peppers mixed in. It is made from cow's milk.
Learn morePort Salut cheese
Port Salut is a mild French semi-soft cow's milk cheese. Don't confuse with Danish Port Salut, which is also called Esrom cheese.
Learn moreprovolone
This Italian cow's milk cheese is like mozzarella, only firmer and more flavorful. It's often used in sandwiches and on on pizza. Provolone dolce is aged for up to three months. Provolone Valpadana is aged longer, and has a sharper flavor.
Learn moreSamsoe
This versatile Danish semi-soft cow's milk cheese is mild and nutty. It is similar to Emmentaler.
Learn morescamorza
This cow's milk cheese is similar to mozzarella or pasta filata, only smaller and firmer. It's often smoked.
Learn moreTaleggio
This creamy Italian cow's milk cheese is one of the better stinky cheeses--not too tame, not too wild. It's great on crackers or bread, but it's also a good melting cheese and works well in casseroles and even on pizza. The rind is edible, but not to everyone's liking.
Learn moreTomme Crayeuse cheese
This soft French cow's milk cheese is rich and buttery. Don't eat the rind.
Learn moreTomme de Savoie cheese
This is a mild and pleasant French cow's milk cheese that's semi-soft when young, firmer when aged.
Learn moreUrgelia cheese
This creamy Spanish cheese is a member of the washed rind (a.k.a. stinky) cheese family, but it's mild and subtle.
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