Michael Blackie has a ball with feta and elk at Cooks/Curds

People's Choice at Cooks & Curds. Photo by If Music Be Food of Love, Play On.

A unique feta and elk dish created by Chef Michael Blackie expressly for The Great Canadian Cheese Festival was voted the most popular dish by close to 400 guests at Cooks & Curds Cheese Gala, the social and gastronomic highlight of the Festival.

Chef Blackie, head of cuisine at National Arts Centre in Ottawa, named his creation Clarmell Feta Cheese Pistachio Crusted Sphere with Pulled Lip Sticky Chipotle-Saskatoonberry Elk.

Plainly put, Chef Blackie, using two kinds of rice flour, made a crusted ball with goat feta from Clarmell Farms and served it on a bed of pulled elk.

In reality, a fusion of flavours—rice, pistachio, olives, chipotle, brown sugar, honey, carrots, celery, onion and garlic—powered the dish to People’s Choice honours, with a scattering of Saskatoon berries providing a lovely Canadian finish.

Paired with a fruity, silky St. Laurent 2007 from Prince Edward County’s Harwood Estate Vineyards, Chef Blackie’s creation was a standout among standouts at the Gala in historic Crystal Palace. See the menu below.

Michael Blackie’s name is widely known because of his prestigious position at the National Arts Centre, but what is Clarmell Feta?

Clarmell Farms is a fifth-generation dairy farm on the Rideau River in Manotick, within Ottawa’s city limits, that moved from cow’s milk into goat’s milk two years ago. The Clarmell Farms feta and chevre are made with single-herd milk by Margaret Morris-Peters at nearby Glengarry Cheesemaking and Dairy Supply.

Quantities are limited, so buy it when you can at the farm’s store, open Mondays to Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., at 3401 River Road (within Ottawa’s city limits) or at Nicastro’s Food Emporium, 1558 Merivale Road, and Manotick Village Butcher, 2-5556 Manotick Main Street.

Chef Michael Blackie of National Arts Centre, Ottawa.

Chef Blackie was born in Leicestershire, England, and raised in Montreal. Following his apprenticeship, he worked as chef with Jamie Kennedy at the Founders Club, a private food establishment at Toronto’s SkyDome (now the Rogers Centre).

Chef Blackie also held positions as sous-chef at Toronto’s Westin Harbour Castle; Executive Chef at the Pierre Marques in Mexico; executive sous-chef at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in Hong Kong, which was voted “Best Hotel in Hong Kong” by Asiamoney Magazine and won both the “Gold List Award” and “Best Hotel in Asia” awards by Condé Nast; and executive chef at the Oberoi in Bali, Indonesia-a five-star hotel that was given the highest overall score in the “Leading Hotels of the World” Quality Awards.

Chef Blackie visited Shanghai, Hong Kong and Macau in 2008 as guest chef on the “Canadian Asian Cuisine Tour,” and was a host chef on the “Exposing Canadian Cuisine” tour to Munich, Frankfurt, Hamburg and Zurich, sponsored by Ontario Tourism and Air Canada. In 2007, he won the Silver Medal in the Canadian Culinary Championship in Whistler, B.C., and prior to taking the helm at National Arts Centre two years ago, Chef Blackie was the culinary mastermind behind Perspectives Restaurant at the Brookstreet resort in Kanata, one of Canada’s top restaurants.

Click to view larger image of the Cooks & Curds menu.

The Cooks & Curds Cheese Gala at The Great Canadian Cheese Festival was co-ordinated by the singular Ivy Knight.

Photo of the People’s Choice winner by If Music Be the Food of Love, Play On. Read the review of Cooks & Curds.

Great Canadian Cheese Festival sponsors and producers

Canadian cheesemakers represented:

BRITISH COLUMBIA
Salt Spring Island Cheese
Poplar Grove Cheese
MANITOBA
Bothwell Cheese
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
Cows Creamery
QUEBEC
Fromagerie Blackburn
Fromagerie du Presbytère
Fromagerie Île-aux-Grues
Fromagerie La Station
Fromagerie Le Détour
Fromagerie Médard
Fromagerie Nouvelle France
La Fromagerie Du Champ à la meule
La Moutonnière
Laiterie Charlevoix
Le Fromage au Village
Les Bergeries du Fjord
Les Fromagiers de la Table Ronde
Maison d’Affinage Maurice Dufour
ONTARIO
Best Baa Dairy
Black River Cheese
Empire Cheese & Butter
Fifth Town Artisan Cheese
Glengarry Fine Cheese
Mariposa Dairy
Primeridge Pure
Quality Cheese
Union Cheese Factory
Upper Canada Cheese

Prince Edward County wineries:

Harwood Estates Vineyard & Winery
Rosehall Run Vineyards
Lacey Estates Vineyard & Winery
Sandbanks Estate Winery
The Grange of Prince Edward Vineyards and Estate Winery
Keint-he Winery & Vineyards
Karlo Estates
Redtail Vineyard
Huff Estates Winery
Closson Chase Vineyards
Casa Dea Estates Winery
Waupoos Estate Winery
Stanners Vineyard
Sugarbush Vineyards

Ontario craft brewers:

Mill Street Brewery
Beau’s All Natural Brewing
Barley Days Brewery
Grand River Brewery
Creemore Springs Brewery

Local artisan food producers:

Major Craig’s Chutney
Sprucewood Handmade Cookie
Henderson Farms
Mercury Chocolates
Scottish Accents
Evelyn’s Crackers
Queenies Bake Shop

First Great Canadian Cheese Festival a huge success

Georgs Kolesnikovs, founder of The Great Canadian Cheese Festival, welcomed more than 2,000 cheese lovers to the inaugural event.

More than 2,000 cheese lovers enjoyed the first-ever Great Canadian Cheese Festival last weekend, assuring the event will become an annual fixture on the Canadian cheese calendar.

Total attendance was an amazing 2,246, with the Artisan Cheese & Fine Food Fair drawing 1,607 cheese fans from as far as New Zealand. (OK, the Kiwis were visiting family in Ottawa.) The Cooks & Curds Cheese Gala, with close to 400 guests, was a sell-out. The Cheese-Tasting Seminars were at capacity. The Cheese Tours sold out two weeks earlier.

Many exhibitors reported selling more cheese during the five-hour Fair than in any other five hours in their experience. One Quebec prominent cheesemaker reserved booth space for the next 10 years. All eight chefs asked to be invited back for the Cooks & Curds Cheese Gala.

June 1-3 are the dates for 2012, again at historic Crystal Palace in Picton, in the heart of Prince Edward County, Ontario’s fastest-growing culinary destination and Canada’s newest VQA wine region.

More than 100 artisan cheeses were available for tasting and purchase, including the cheddars of Black River Cheese.
Fromagerie du Presbytère was one of 14 cheese producers from Québec represented.
Fifth Town Artisan Cheese was one of the 10 Ontario cheesemakers at the Festival.
County wineries, such as The Grange of Prince Edward, and Ontario craft breweries offered tastings.
The ambiance of historic Cystal Palace and the surrounding grounds was perfect for a Cheese Fair.
Cheese, wine, beer and artisanal food: recipe for a great day in the country.
Good eats and good companions, who could ask for more?
Dairy Farmers of Canada presented winners of the 2011 Canadian Cheese Grand Prix in a guided tasting led by Debbie Levy.
The tasting plate of Grand Prix winners.
Henderson Farms was among the artisanal food producers at the Sunday Fair.
Slow Food the County dispensed recipes and information.
Andrew Laliberté offers a taste of Fifth Town Artisan Cheese.
Anything this golden must be Jersey du Fjord!
Huff Estates Winery pours a sample for tasting.
What or who has the rapt attention of these children and one parent?
Petra Kassun-Mutch and Stephanie Diamant (at left) demonstrating how cheese is made and offering children (and adults) tips on how to taste cheese.
Another treat for children as well as adults was the visit by Big Momma from Ontario Water Buffalo Company.
Big Momma brought along a four-week-old baby but all he wanted to do was nap.
Waupoos Estates Winery was the first winery established in Prince Edward County.
Volunteers such as this tasting-ticket seller were key to the smooth running of the Festival.
A full day of Cheese-Tasting Seminars on Saturday preceded the Cheese Fair on Sunday.
Stephanie Skinner represented Culture, Official Magazine of The Great Canadian Cheese Festival.
A cooler bag for hauling home purchased cheese was included in the price of advance tickets.
Everyone wanted a souvenir snapshot with our Cheese-Head-in-Chief. Here he is with the staff of Culinarium in Toronto.

All photos courtesy of CountyLive.ca, the home page for residents of Prince Edward County.

Cooks and Curds sold out! Tasting Seminars and Cheese Fair still available

With a dessert menu like this, small wonder Cooks & Curds Cheese Gala at The Great Canadian Cheese Festival has fully sold out.

Tickets are still available for All-Day Cheese-Tasting Seminars on Saturday and the Artisan Cheese & Fine Food Fair on Sunday.

Here’s what’s still available in seminars. Because the full range of topics no longer is available, the All-Day Seminar admission price has been reduced to $100.

SATURDAY, JUNE 4: ALL CHEESE, ALL DAY

Keynote Presentation: 9:00 to 10:00 a.m.

An introduction to what arguably are the best cheeses made in Canada today—from cow’s milk, goat’s milk and sheep’s milk. Taste the three cheeses, meet the makers, start the day on a high.

Tasting Seminars, First Session, 10:15 to 11:30 a.m.

Canadian Cheddar: A Vertical Tasting
A great way to entertain, vertical tasting means tasting the same cheese at various ages, from as young as possible to well-aged. Tasting different cheddars in this manner will introduce your taste buds to the amazing range of flavours to be found in Canada’s favourite cheese.
Presenter: Deborah Levy of Dairy Farmers of Canada, cheese educator

Lunch: 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.

A healthy buffet lunch for All-Day Seminar Pass holders by Waring House in Picton.

Tasting Seminars, Second Session: 1:00 to 2:15 p.m.

Battle of the Blues
Marvel at the different taste sensations delivered by a cross-section of blue cheeses made in Canada, from Tiger Blue in British Columbia to Dragon’s Breath in Nova Scotia with several stops in Ontario and Quebec.
Presenter: Andy Shay of AndyShay.com, cheese consultant and cheese buyer at Sobeys Ontario

Wine or Beer with Cheese: How Does One Decide?
Presenter: Andrew Laliberté of Fifth Town Artisan Cheese, chef and sommelier

Tasting Seminars, Third Session: 2:45 to 4:00 p.m.

Europe’s Cheese Classics
Roquefort, Parmigiano-Reggiano, Gruyere and others, why are they still the yardsticks by which all cheese is measured? How close are North American cheesemakers to catching up? Taste a selection of classics.
Presenter: Gurth Pretty, cheese guru and author of The Definitive Guide to Canadian Artisanal & Fine Cheese

Artisanal Cheese Defined and Defended
Why integrity of ingredients matter. Why turning milk into cheese is a craft. Why the bond between and farmer is important, and worth preserving. What’s with MMIs? A selection of artisan cheeses for tasting.
Presenter: Ruth Klahsen of Monforte Dairy, cheesemaker

Invest in Cheese/Getting started in cheesemaking
For cheese lovers interested in getting into the business of cheese.
Presenter: Andy Shay of AndyShay.com, cheese consultant and cheese buyer at Sobeys Ontario

BUY TICKETS NOW!

All-Day Tasting Program includes one adult admission to full day of cheese talk and cheese tasting, Saturday, June 4, including a Festival tote bag, a buffet lunch, the keynote presentation and one seminar in each of three sessions. In most seminars, the cheese will be paired with wine, beer or cider. FREE parking

Cooks and Curds Cheese Gala: First sitting sold out!

One look at that menu and small wonder the first sitting has quickly sold out! With such an array of outstanding chefs and fascinating dishes, who wouldn’t want to be at the Cooks & Curds Cheese Gala at The Great Canadian Cheese Festival this Saturday evening?

Tickets are still available for a a second sitting at 7:00 p.m. to taste the creations of eight outstandings chefs:

  • Braised Oxtail Poutine with Two Black River Cheddars
  • Chef Jamie Kennedy, Gilead Café, Toronto, Ontario
  • Rosehall Run Cold Creek Cabernet Franc 2007
  • Fromagerie du Presbytère  Louis D’Or, Oulton’s Smoked Bacon and Apple Chutney Panini   (V)
  • Chef Michael Howell, Tempest, Wolfville, Nova Scotia
  • Kent-He Hillier Blanc 2008
  • Clarmell Feta Cheese Pistachio Crusted Sphere, Pulled Lip Sticky Chipotle-Saskatoonberry Elk
  • Chef Michael Blackie, National Arts Centre, Ottawa, Ontario
  • Harwood Estates St Laurent 2007
  • Fifth Town Counting Sheep Cheese with Cranberry Beans and Tomato Jam on Red Fife Bread   (V)
  • Chef Anthony Rose, The Drake Hotel, Toronto, Ontario
  • The Grange of Prince Edward Sparkling Rosé
  • Dragon’s Breath Blue Cheese Mousse Bruschetta with Smoked Beef, Wild Rhubarb Jam, Chervil and Maple Candied Walnuts (V)
  • Chef Craig Flinn, Chives Canadian Bistro, Halifax
  • Karlo Estates Quintus 2009
  • Tequila and Lime splashed B.C. Spot Prawns with Little Qualicum Bleu Claire in a Lettuce Leaf  (V)
  • Lisa Ahier, Sobo, Tofino, British Columbia
  • Lacey Estates Riesling Off Dry 2010\
  • Moose burgers: Homemade Kaiser, Newfoundland Moose, Tomato Confit, Fromagerie du Presbytère Le Bleu d’Elizabeth and House Pickle
  • Jeremy Charles, Raymonds, St. John’s, Newfoundland
  • Sandbanks Estates Foch Reserve  2009
  • Manitoba Trappist Cheese with Rabbit and Fennel Rillettes, Coriander-Orange Mustard and Pickled Celery on a Fennel and Black Pepper Cracker   (V)
  • Alexander Svenne, Bistro 7 1/4, Winnipeg, Manitoba
  • Redtail Vineyard Pinot Noir 2009
  • (V) indicates a vegetarian version is available

It’s a strolling tasting dinner, not a sit-down affair. Dress up rather than down.

Admission for one adult to a gastronomic gala pairing chefs with cheesemakers, wineries and craft brewers to create extraordinary tasting dishes for a rapt audience of cheese enthusiasts and foodies. Eight chefs, eight tasting dishes, eight cheeses, eight wines, eight beers. Eight stations on risers around Crystal Palace. Groaning board of Canadian artisanal, farmstead and specialty cheese, featuring winners in the 2011 Canadian Cheese Grand Prix. Followed by sweet delights, port, ice wine and coffee. Age of majority event. Free parking. HST included in admission price of $95. No fee charged for online ticket purchase.

What a line-up of exhibitors for Great Canadian Cheese Festival on Sunday!

More than 100 artisan cheeses will be available for tasting—and purchase—this Sunday at The Great Canadian Cheese Festival.

Here are the Canadian cheesemakers represented at the Artisan Cheese & Fine Food Fair:

BRITISH COLUMBIA
Salt Spring Island Cheese
Poplar Grove Cheese
MANITOBA
Bothwell Cheese
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
Cows Creamery
QUEBEC
Fromagerie Blackburn
Fromagerie du Presbytère
Fromagerie Île-aux-Grues
Fromagerie La Station
Fromagerie Le Détour
Fromagerie Médard
Fromagerie Nouvelle France
La Fromagerie Du Champ à la meule
La Moutonnière
Laiterie Charlevoix
Le Fromage au Village
Les Bergeries du Fjord
Les Fromagiers de la Table Ronde
Maison d’Affinage Maurice Dufour
ONTARIO
Best Baa Dairy
Black River Cheese
Empire Cheese & Butter
Fifth Town Artisan Cheese
Glengarry Fine Cheese
Ivanhoe
Mariposa Dairy
Primeridge Pure
Quality Cheese
Union Cheese Factory
Upper Canada Cheese

Here are the Prince Edward County wineries at the Fair:

Harwood Estates Vineyard & Winery
Rosehall Run Vineyards
Lacey Estates Vineyard & Winery
Sandbanks Estate Winery
The Grange of Prince Edward Vineyards and Estate Winery
Keint-he Winery & Vineyards
Karlo Estates
Redtail Vineyard
Huff Estates Winery
Closson Chase Vineyards
Casa Dea Estates Winery
Waupoos Estate Winery
Stanners Vineyard
Sugarbush Vineyards

Here are the Ontario craft brewers at the Fair:

Mill Street Brewery
Beau’s All Natural Brewing
Barley Days Brewery
Grand River Brewery
Creemore Springs Brewery

Here are the local artisan food producers at the Fair:

Major Craig’s Chutney
Sprucewood Handmade Cookie
Henderson Farms
Mercury Chocolates
Scottish Accents
Evelyn’s Crackers
Queenies Bake Shop

Admission for one adult to the Artisan Cheese & Fine Food Fair on Sunday, June 5, at Crystal Palace in Picton, Ontartio, is $30 when purchased in advance online or by calling 1.866.865.2628.

Adult admission includes free parking, 10 tasting tickets, a Festival cooler bag for cheese purchases, a Festival wine glass for sampling wine and beer, access to all vendors and exhibitors, a tasting seminar featuring winners of the 2011 Canadian Cheese Grand Prix. Rush seating for the tasting. HST included in admission price. No fee charged for online or telephone ticket purchase. Regular price $40.

Admission for one youth aged 14 to 18 years includes 10 cheese-tasting tickets, a special presentation on cheese-tasting and cheesemaking for kids, a tasting seminar featuring winners of the 2011 Canadian Cheese Grand Prix. Rush seating for the tasting. HST included in admission price of $15. No fee charged for online or telephone ticket purchase.

Admission for one child aged 13 years and younger includes 5 cheese-tasting tickets, a special presentation on cheese-tasting and cheesemaking for kids, a tasting seminar featuring winners of the 2011 Canadian Cheese Grand Prix. Rush seating for the tasting. HST included in admission price of $5. No fee charged for online or telephone ticket purchase.

Julia Rogers shares her passion and her knowledge

Julia Rogers is a cheese professional, wine educator and event animator—recently a guest judge on Top Chef Canada—and one of the featured tasting seminar presenters at The Great Canadian Cheese Festival.

Her extensive knowledge of food and food lore has been formed by studying, teaching and traveling. She is passionate about cheese and dedicated to sharing her discoveries with others.

Years of tasting, encounters with cheesemakers, and diverse retail, catering and consulting experience have given her a thorough understanding of cheese history, flavours, and production.

Julia trains sommeliers and hospitality students in cheese appreciation, and teaches for the internationally recognized Wine and Spirit Education Guild. Her articles appear in Food and Drink, Slow Food Canada and Wine Express, and in her newsletter, The Wedge Issue, accessible via her website, www.cheeseculture.ca.

Among other regular Toronto engagements, she hosts Night School for Cheese Fans at the Leslieville Cheese Market, which was recently voted “Best Cheese Appreciation Class in Toronto” by Toronto Life Magazine.

In April, she was guest judge on Top Chef Canada when an episode of the Food Network Canada program featured Canadian cheese.

During the All-Day Cheese-Tasting Seminar Program, Julia will present:

Cheese Tasting 101
A primer for those who want to appreciate cheese, not just eat it. Get acquainted with the different families and flavours of cheese. Gain insights into pairing cheese with beverages and other accompaniments. Learn to taste and talk about cheese like a pro, as you enjoy a flight of 6 to 9 selections.

Taste of Québec
Québec is the creative leader of our Canadian cheese renaissance. No region comes close to producing the range of styles and flavours that originate in la Belle Province. Enjoy a whirlwind tour of icon cheeses and newer artisan offerings from our trend-setting neighbours to the East.

Cheese Rave: Craziness at the Drake with Ivy Knight

Ivy Knight, Toronto’s extraordinary social convener and food writer, is hosting a Cheese Rave on Monday night at the Drake Hotel to kick off ticket sales for The Great Canadian Cheese Festival. Says Ivy:

I will be blindfolding the city’s top cheesemongers and testing their palates. Afrim Pristine of Cheese Boutique, Cole Snell of About Cheese and Michael Simpson of Leslieville Cheese Markets will pit their talents against each other and the cheese

Cole Snell will be on hand-pulling fresh Ontario Buffalo Mozzarella. Jameson Irish Whiskey will be pouring shots to be taken with cheese chasers for the Name That Shot contest and the cheesemakers of Quebec are sending five award-winning cheeses for you to taste, thanks to Plaisirs Gourmets. Including Alfred Lefermier, Tomme de Gross-Ile and Rassembleu.

From 7 p.m. to 10:00 only, Cheese Festival tickets will be sold on the spot for unbelievable prices ranging from $86 to $8.60 to commemorate the 86’d festivities organized at the Drake every Monday night by Ivy.

Click here to read what the Ottawa Citizen has to say about at The Great Canadian Cheese Festival taking place June 4-5 at Crystal Palace in Picton, in the heart of Prince Edward County, Ontario’s fastest-growing culinary destination and Canada’s newest VQA wine region.

Ruth Klahsen: Rebel cheesemaker with a cause

Ruth Klahsen in a classic cheesemaker portrait photographed by Nigel Dixon for Toronto Life.

If you ask Ruth Klahsen, owner and lead cheesemaker at Monforte Dairy, how she got into making cheese, she’ll tell you, in that self-deprecating way she has: “I’m just an old broad who had a mid-life crisis!”

The real story is that Ruth is a graduate of the inaugural class of ’83 at the Stratford Chefs School where she also teaches cheesemaking. Her cuisine is well-known to patrons of premier restaurants Rundles and the Old Prune in Stratford, Ontario.

For 11 years, from 1990 to 2001, Ruth was the Chef and Manager of the Green Room of the Stratford Shakespeare Festival responsible not only for the entire smooth functioning of the kitchen but also the special on-site catering. When she walks into the Festival today, she still gets hugs from Festival staff and actors. She’s the one who bolstered their bodies and souls with truffles and caviar and anything their hearts desired . . . sometimes on the sly.

While at the Festival, Ruth dreamed of being a cheesemaker and made her own chèvre.

But managing a big operation took its toll and when budget restrictions conflicted with Ruth’s strong principles, she threw in her apron and apprenticed at a local sheep milk dairy.

By 2004, Ruth and a partner opened Monforte Dairy (refinancing her house for the start up money) and started making sheep-milk cheeses in a rented facility in Millbank, Ontario, just north of Stratford.

The partnership dissolved early on but Ruth continued making cheese and Monforte soon became known as southwestern Ontario’s premier artisanal cheese company. Ruth, clad in her vintage apron, sold her signature Toscano and other cheeses at numerous markets in the GTA, quickly gaining fans and followers among foodies, chefs and people who like cheese and remembered when almost every small town in Ontario had a dairy. Monforte doubled sales every year.

Known for its range of extraordinary cheeses, Monforte has become supplier of choice to five-star restaurants, leading wineries and progressive food retailers throughout Ontario. In the fall of 2009, Ruth was invited to the State dinner for Prince Charles and Camilla at Rideau Hall where her cheese was featured on the menu.

Not one to follow the well-worn path and no fan of bureaucracy and procedure, Ruth made the tough decision in January 2009 to pull out of the facility where she was making Monforte cheese, striking out on her own to realize her dream of creating a permanent home for Monforte. Monforte Renaissance 2010, a revolutionary microfinancing campaign through Community Shared Agriculture (CSA), was conceived to raise the capital to build Monforte’s new dairy.

CSAs were offered at three different levels—$250, $500 and $1000—paying out in cheese over five years. Close to $400,000 was raised from her loyal customer base—people who both love Monforte cheese and want to add their support to microproduction, sustainable farming and just food. Ruth has always said the farmers from whom she buys milk have to earn enough to afford piano lessons for their kids.

And the dairy got built. And the party thanking the subscribers and community is now the stuff of legend.

Located at 39 Griffith Road in the heart of an industrial park in Stratford, the dairy has a store front and garden and the sexiest, blingiest, edgiest paint job around thanks to installation artist Corinne Carlson and the graffiti artists at The Loft in Toronto.

Monforte has added cow’s milk cheese to the repertoire of sheep and goat cheese, crackers and charcuterie from the pigs fed Monforte whey. Faced with financial “pinch” in January 2010, Ruth once again appealed to her supporters for help. Within a week her supporters came through with a loan of $100,000.

Says Ruth in her blog, “What a privilege it is to be in this place at this time.”

When you meet Ruth Klahsen, ask her why the integrity of ingredients matter, why turning milk into cheese is a craft, why the bond between and farmer is important‑and worth preserving. Then stand back and listen.

—Maureen Argon

Maureen Argon, a widely published writer, was fortunate to work as the “shepherdess” at Monforte Dairy keeping the community in know during Monforte’s Renaissance year. Maureen now is the Chairman of Chairman Mo Media, a digital consultancy where she helps business people use social media to spread their message.

Shameless plug for The Great Canadian Cheese Festival

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dprAAANakk8&w=480&h=303]

The video was shot during a media event at Fifth Town Artisan Cheese for the upcoming Great Canadian Cheese Festival by Crowe Productions.

As you can see in the clip, it was a mighty breezy day in Prince Edward County which did not deter representatives of Quinte region media outlets from sampling artisan cheeses from Fromagerie du Presbytere, 110-year-old Black River Cheese and Fifth Town Artisan Cheese, wine from Harwood Estates Vineyards & Winery, beer from Barley Days Brewery and an amazing dish prepared by Chef Andreas Feller of Blumen Garden Bistro using Fifth Town cheese.

Mayor Peter Mertens of Prince Edward County welcomed the Festival to the County. Festival director Georgs Kolesnikovs praised the Invest in Cheese initiative for opening his eyes to the rich history of cheese in Eastern Ontario and leading him to base the Festival in the County, specifically at historic Crystal Palace in Picton.

Here are some of the stories that made the news after the press briefing:

For detailed information about the Festival and ordering tickets online, visit CheeseFestival.ca.