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Entries in Dubliner cheese (2)

Thursday
Mar142013

Dubliner Breakfast Toast

By Andrew Hunter
For The Family Table, a blog for busy families

One of my favorite food memories as a kid was making cheese toast with my brother. We would toast regular white bread, layer on thick slices of yellow cheese, then add “too much pepper and garlic salt, ” which was just enough by our standards, and then broil them in the oven until mouth-burning hot. I’m sure the cheese dripped down onto the floor of the oven making a mess for mom to worry about.

But alas, our tastes have grown up and we now have our own ovens to clean. So I have refined this childhood favorite in the spirit of St. Patrick. Instead of white sandwich bread, I slice artisan sourdough, and instead of sliced yellow Cheddar I grate Dubliner cheese and sprinkle with minced fresh garlic. The sharp, nutty flavor of the Dubliner takes this dish to a whole new level. Dubliner Breakfast toast is quickly becoming one of Ben and Nick’s childhood favorites too!

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Thursday
Mar152012

Irish Potato Leek Soup 

By Andrew Hunter

All this week, Special Fork bloggers will be sharing recipes for St. Patrick’s Day. And to celebrate, Special Fork is giving away a prize package of a year’s supply of delicious Kerrygold Butter and cheeses, imported from Ireland, courtesy of Kerrygold! It’s easy to enter the sweepstakes.

There’s no better time than St. Patrick’s Day to celebrate the flavors of Ireland, even though they’re delicious year-round. For me, the highlight of Irish food has always been the butter and cheese. The reason is the cows eat the incredibly green grass and are only milked during their natural lactation cycles.

The other great thing about Ireland’s dairy is generations of family farms, many with only a few dozen cows. This means profits go directly to the farmers, the animals are treated humanely, and hopefully future generations of Irish kids will continue in the cooperative, national tradition.

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