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France's Distinctive Cheeses Are Disappearing

JENNY BARCHFIELD   02/ 3/10 01:23 PM ET   AP

France Save Le

LA SAVINAZ, France — The milk that Paulette Marmottan uses in her cheese comes fresh from her cows and goats, so warm that on cold mornings, a cloud of steam goes up as she pours it into a cauldron.

It's the first step in making persille de Tignes, which according to local lore, was a favorite of the mighty 9th century emperor Charlemagne.

But the Marmottans are the last family making it, and while most French people may be content with the mass-produced cheeses of their globalizing world, the disappearance of traditional varieties is seen by some as threatening the very essence of Frenchness.

The persille de Tignes is not alone on the list of endangered fromages. Dozens have been lost since World War II, and experts say another dozen or more are considered at risk of extinction. No one has a precise count of how many cheese types France produces, but the country has long prided itself on having a different one for every day of the year.

"The French have forgotten what real cheese is," said Veronique Richez-Lerouge, who heads the Association Fromages de Terroirs, a group aimed at protecting France's cheese culture.

Many blame the Americans, saying they habituated the French to pasteurization, to the detriment of raw-milk cheeses – an ironic claim, considering that the germ-killing process was invented by a French hero of science, Louis Pasteur.

Other big forces are also in play: the creeping homogenization of the global palate, food-safety regulations imposed by the European Union, and the increasing weight of the food industry, which churns out just a handful of blockbuster varieties.

Some small farms cannot cope with the new rules, and Big Food stands ready to buy them out.

"There are plenty of cheeses that only exist as names in old books," said Stephane Blohorn, who owns Androuet, a famous 101-year-old chain of Paris cheese shops.

The French are still prodigious cheese consumers. They eat just under half a pound a week per person on average, according to the Eurostat statistics agency. That puts them just behind the 27-nation EU's champion cheese-eaters, the Greeks.

What has changed is the kind of cheeses the French eat.

Raw-milk cheeses, which until World War II and the arrival of the U.S. military accounted for nearly all French production, now make up only 7 percent of annual consumption, according to the cheese-boosters' group. Now most French people go for pasteurized, mass-produced, plastic-wrapped varieties like emmenthal, camembert and the orange-colored mimolette, and processed cheeses like the Laughing Cow brand.

"Buying cheese has become like buying a box of detergent," said Richez-Lerouge, whose association publishes a calendar featuring bikini-clad pinups straddling hunks of Saint-Nectaire, Savarin and Rocamadour from family farms.

In La Savinaz, a village perched on a snow-covered peak in the eastern French Alps, Marmottan trudges downstairs to the stable – on the ground floor of her Swiss-style house – to milk her 30 cows and 80 goats.

In the outsized cauldron, she blends the milks and adds yoghurt to kick-start fermentation. Several days later, she mixes and salts the curd, packing it into tall cylindrical molds that leak out any remaining whey before being dispatched to the cellar to age for a few weeks.

Local histories tell of Charlemagne tasting persille de Tignes tasting it during a visit and ordering a selection of the best wheels shipped back to the royal court.

Within recent memory there were dozens of families making persille de Tignes in this region of Savoie. Now Marmottan, 52, her husband and older brother are the last ones, making some 33,000 pounds a year.

"Little by little, the others got old and retired or decided it wasn't financially worth it to them," Marmottan told The Associated Press. "A farm has to be viable financially and the product we make has to interest people or we can't in good faith continue. It's too hard a job."

In the past two decades, the number of small family farms has plummeted, falling by 14 percent between 2000 and 2004 alone, to just over 100,000, according to an Agriculture Ministry study.

The shift away from raw milk cheeses began with the rise of pasteurization, which kills the occasionally deadly micro-organisms that can lurk in milk.

Then, in the 1960s and '70s, supermarkets moved in and the one-product store felt the squeeze. In 1979, France had some 20,000 fromageries, according to the National Federation of Milk Product Retailers. Today, there are about 3,300.

"Supermarkets have effectively squeezed out the small retailers," said Androuet's Blohorn. "Those who survived are really offering a superior product aimed at very discriminating consumers."

At Au Bon Fromage, a Paris store, persille de Tignes can retail for up to $16 a pound.

Marmottan follows a recipe passed down orally by her parents, who learned it from theirs. Marmottan taught it to her three children, but like many in the younger generation of the village and surrounding Alpine valleys, their interests appear to lie elsewhere.

The Marmottans' eldest daughter is a lawyer, and the youngest is a member of France's national ski team. Their son, 28-year-old Francis, is a ski instructor and maintains the farm's equipment for half the year during the off-season.

So his mother has pinned her hopes on the next generation – Francis' 2-year-old boy and 6-month-old girl.

"I say my prayers every day that they'll turn into little cheesemakers," said Marmottan, her face crinkling in a mirthful smile.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects style on 'persille' and 'fromage' to lowercase)

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LA SAVINAZ, France — The milk that Paulette Marmottan uses in her cheese comes fresh from her cows and goats, so warm that on cold mornings, a cloud of steam goes up as she pours it into a cauld...
LA SAVINAZ, France — The milk that Paulette Marmottan uses in her cheese comes fresh from her cows and goats, so warm that on cold mornings, a cloud of steam goes up as she pours it into a cauld...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Cause Endures
03:34 PM on 02/05/2010
Liberal blogs discuss fine cheeses.

Sounds about right.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NoMercy
Member Since October 2005
08:28 AM on 02/05/2010
"Blessed are the cheesemakers"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XiDmMBIyfsU

"It's not to be taken literally. It's meant to refer to all makers of dairy products."
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NoMercy
Member Since October 2005
08:01 AM on 02/05/2010
This "worm cheese" from Sardinia is the rarest of all -
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/148017/yummi_cheese/
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CigarGod
What is your process?
08:52 AM on 02/05/2010
Your avatar fits your cheese offering.
Have a cigar.
03:53 AM on 02/05/2010
Oh no! Another terroiriste plot!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Phalanxman
Everything in Moderation
12:36 AM on 02/05/2010
Humans have abandoned many foods over the many millenia of our existence. We don't eat bugs and worms anymore, but you don't hear anybody really complaining about it.
06:17 AM on 02/05/2010
eating insects or entomophagy is actually quite common around the world.
I don't fancy it, but a lot people seem to like it
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NoMercy
Member Since October 2005
08:22 AM on 02/05/2010
I ate ants instinctively when I was a kid. Red ones had a sour tang I loved.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LiberalLee
Yes I am a witch. Deal with it.
12:29 AM on 02/05/2010
There are tribes and populations of PEOPLE vanishing from the face of the earth and someone's fussing about a fermented batch of mammalian lactose extraction?

Heelloooo...
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
12:13 PM on 02/05/2010
Well, there are inarguably too many people. There are, however, not too many cheeses.
.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LiberalLee
Yes I am a witch. Deal with it.
12:29 PM on 02/05/2010
Sadly there are people that ARE cheeses....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jonathonz
12:32 PM on 02/28/2010
This is about PEOPLE disappearing LiberalLee...small farmers in France are disappearing because they can't make money anymore...these people represent a great culinary tradition in Western culture...it's not a good sign...
12:15 AM on 02/05/2010
This is true also of butter and pastries. Supermarkets are more popular because people have less money. The French are hurting too & the media does a disservice in its reporting. The French are being told our "recession" is over (!) while we hear how much better off the economies of France & Germany are because they didn't get so involved with derivitives and subprimes. The reality is we are all suffering because jobs have been exported overseas by the Capitalists.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
12:14 PM on 02/05/2010
Right, even jobs that were making good products at a profit. _That_ is the part that pissesmeoff!
.
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brooklyncitizen
Soror quaerens lucem
11:47 PM on 02/04/2010
Thank God for the cheese nun, I believe she is in a convent in NJ.She has several advanced degrees and has been making cheese the old-fashioned way for years. Folks here in the US are prohibited from making/selling un pasteurized cheeses.There are underground cheese clubs in the city where they sample and share "illicit" cheeses.Pretty funny.
10:28 PM on 02/04/2010
the world has gotten away from real food and is paying the price for it with our health ... factory food sucks
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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08:56 PM on 02/04/2010
Adieu, des pertes vaginales. Vous ne serez pas manquer.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
starrianna
A strong black woman with style and substance.
09:01 PM on 02/04/2010
Ta bouche en a vu de pires!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:10 PM on 02/04/2010
Oui, ta mère est dégoûtant.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
julia06
Sassy lipstick maverick
12:07 AM on 02/05/2010
@Schmalz
vtfe
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rolanda Ridley
Librarian
08:13 PM on 02/04/2010
I hope that this doesn't affect my Delice de Bourgogne, because I would just die-I love that cheese so much!!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:17 PM on 02/04/2010
Sad. And thinking about cheese making has got me wondering....how about cheese from human milk? Talk about luxury!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StoryTime
Running on plenty/Oh j'cours toute seule ,)
07:24 PM on 02/04/2010
I've actually heard about it, and I heard about a restaurant that uses human milk in their dishes can't remember where...sorry about that...
I hope we can get younger people to go on tours to artisan fromagers all around France and we need their parents to do the job too, which starts early...
I can't think of not having a boulette d'avène anymore or a banyon or cancoillote et other brillat-savarin ahhhhhh
A l'aide !
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quindy
If repubs don't drive you crazy you are not normal
07:36 PM on 02/04/2010
Human milk is very sweet. Not good for cheese.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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knightoftheroundtable
Old Knight without porfolio or armor
08:33 PM on 02/04/2010
And you know this, how? Of course the female nip pl.e is very sweet itself.
09:00 PM on 02/04/2010
It's because it won't curdle -- too little protein and too easily digestible... good for pancakes and smoothies, though.
Knights of the Round Table will never know this because they have to take a vow of chastity.
:-))
06:48 PM on 02/04/2010
It's an incredibly sad state of affairs to be losing so many craftsmen(people) of all sorts , all over the world. Some people will never savor their creations & will only get to experience the soul-deprived mass produced items which have never been caressed by loving , caring hands, and most will be too uh humm, "naive" to care.
05:31 PM on 02/04/2010
Indeed, US cheesemakers (including VT) are required to pasteurize UNLESS the cheese is aged at least 60 days. And $16 @lb. would be way too cheap for handmade, farmstead cheese in VT, as well as other hot beds of the US cheese renaissance (NY, CA). France subsidizes; we challenge.

While we're on the subject, here's a plug for our book about becoming an artisanal cheesemaker, Over the Rainbeau: Living the Dream of Sustainable Farming, available at www.rainbeauridge.com. Lisa makes a dynamite Loire-style line of goat cheeses.
04:43 PM on 02/04/2010
Touche pas a ma persille de Tignes! I would knock your teeth off for it.