A few hints make cooking with Wisconsin cheese an easy and tasty success: Use low heat, just enough to melt the cheese and blend it with other ingredients. High heat makes natural cheese tough and stringy. Avoid long cooking, which also makes cheese tough and stringy; cook just enough to melt. To promote even melting, slice, shred, grate, cube or dice cheese before adding as an ingredient.
PILED-HIGH ROAST BEEF, CHEESE & ONION CLUB
1-1/2 cups sautéed onions* 3/4 tablespoon dried oregano 1/3 cup white or red horseradish 1-1/2 pound hearty Italian bread loaf, sliced horizontally 6 ounces Swiss cheese, sliced 2 cups mixed baby greens 6 ounces Colby cheese, sliced 1/2 pound roast beef, sliced 6 ounces Provolone cheese, sliced 1/2 cup sweet pickle chunks (optional)
Mix sautéed onions and oregano and set aside. Spread horseradish on the bread bottom then layer with the Swiss cheese, mixed greens, Colby, roast beef, Provolone, onions and, if desired, pickles; top with remaining half loaf; slice and serve.
*To sauté onions, cook four cups (equals 1-1/2 cups sautéed) onions on low with 2 tablespoons butter until browned.
Cheese is a nutritious milk product that has been one of man's most important foods for thousands of years. The United States and France rank as the leading cheese-producing countries. Wisconsin is the leading cheese making state. Wisconsin Cheese comes in about 350 varieties and in many different sizes and shapes. There are literally several thousands of varieties world wide.
History of Cheese Making
Widmer's Wisconsin Cheese Legacy...
In Wisconsin, the cheese making
legacy runs deep and examples of
third-and fourth generation
Wisconsin cheese makers carrying
on the family tradition are common.
Joe Widmer, is one such third-generation example. Widmer's Cheese Legacy
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