Sparkenhoe Red Leicester
Sparkenhoe Red Leicester is a cheese raised from the dead. Raw milk, clothbound Red Leicester has been made in Great Britain for over 300 years, but it went extinct during World War II. For the next 60 years, the only Leicester you could find in the United Kingdom was rubbery, pasteurized, and pre-packed in plastic. That is until 2005, when the Clarke family was struggling to make ends meet at their dairy and decided to try cheesemaking to save the farm. Armed with an old recipe, the Clarkes set about resurrecting Red Leicester using traditional methods and raw milk from their own herd. The wheels are clothbound with lard and cellar aged for 8-12 months. Coloring cheese seems like a modern practice, but it has a historic past. As the seasons change, a cow’s diet switches from diverse pastureland to hay, and the buttery yellow summer milk fades to a pale winter white. Farm wives would dye the milk with carrot scraps to bring a bit of cheer back to their winter tables. The Colonial Age b