There are many food products that dress themselves up by incorporating the word "Amish" into their name even if their connection to the culture is tenuous. But Salemville Amish Blue Cheese? I've actually BEEN to the cheese factory, located in rural Wisconsin. So hard to believe that such a modest, non-descript cheese factory can churn out this outstanding cheese that finds its way into Kroger and numerous other grocery stores across the country. I think whenever you can go to a place and actually see the product being made it gives you a deeper connection and that is what happened for Rachel and I when we went to the Salemville plant.

Here is an excerpt from our book Amish Cooks Across America about my visit to Salemville:
Nowhere have the Amish found their dairy niche more than around the community of Cambria, where the Salemville Cheese Factory makes deliciously crafted cheese. The Salemville Cheese Co-op is the only entirely Old Order Amish–run cheese factory in the United States. The first hint that this place was different was the employee parking lot, which didn’t have any cars, just horse-drawn buggies. Adding to the factory’s “plain” presence was the small on-site retail store, which sells a variety of cheeses and was staffed solely by Amish workers.

Salemville’s cheese niche is narrow: The company makes only blue cheese and one variant, Gorgonzola cheese. It seems like there isn’t much middle ground when it comes to blue cheese: you either love it or you hate it. Many Amish in central Wisconsin have learned to love it. More than 60 Amish dairy farmers participate in the unique co-op that supplies the milk to the Salemville Cheese Company. Amish participating in the co-op hand-milk their cows twice a day and deliver the milk to the Salemville Cheese Company in 10-gallon containers.
It's a fascinating facility. I'll talk more about my visit there in an upcoming post!











brenda
Kevin, you deserve to have a relationship and sponsorship with the items you mention in your newsletter. I know that most bloggers do get some sort of compensation for items we click on and/or purchase. quite frankly I have no objection to this. readers have the option of clicking or going to a website and purchasing something a writer has tried and has good things to say about it.