Meijer has an better cheese section with a few international cheeses and cheaper American counterparts, the American counterparts absolutely suck.
The main “cheese” area is just blocks of cheeses like those, and grated cheeses with extra cellulose.
American Cheddar sucks compared to UK Cheddar, don’t even taste like the same cheese. And Colby jack is OK.
There’s also the issue that American cheese culture didn’t got a chance to mature before corporations took over and started making a handful of mass produced cheap products.
The main “cheese” area is just blocks of cheeses like those, and grated cheeses with extra cellulose.
Nah, I stand with the other guy, I think you just suck at shopping. This doesn’t describe literally any non-budget grocery store that I’ve been to in the past decade.
That’s the fucking point, in Europe you will have to go out of your way to find shitty blocks of cheese. While in the US you have to go out of your way to find decent cheese.
And if you love outside of a city? Practically impossible unless you drive a couple hours.
There’s a lot more than one “American Cheddar”, it’s a big damn country with several distinct dairy regions. (Wisconsin, California, New York, and Vermont being significant but not exhaustive) And the cheese culture is just a fork of the various European colonizers/immigrants that brought cattle over, combining old techniques with new resources.
Cream cheese, Humboldt Fog, and Cougar Gold are some highlights of American-developed-and-produced cheeses.
This isn’t about what’s available in Europe (also, hyperbole makes a terrible argument. I can just point to something like Reykhólar) You’re specifically complaining about cheese availability in the United States and I think you’re way more invested in hating the country than actually trying to fix your problems.
If this is the only cheeese you’re finding, are your unsure you’re not looking at a convenience store? We’ve never lacked for choice of cheeses, even if the biggest quantities are the plainest choices
You’re supposed to put it on a burger/sandwich, not pasta.
I an referring to American cheese, as in cheese made in America, not kraft singles.
Well then you are just revealing your own ignorance to the world.
Enjoy your large blocks of cheap Cheddar and Colby jack, I do miss real cheese though.
There’s a reason for less cheese variety/quality in the us, milk must be pasteurized for cheese, which limits the cheeses available.
Non pasteurized cheeses are safe (unlike non pasteurized milk consumption)
If you can only find Cheddar and Colby Jack (which are real cheeses) then you’re doing a very bad job shopping for groceries.
Meijer has an better cheese section with a few international cheeses and cheaper American counterparts, the American counterparts absolutely suck.
The main “cheese” area is just blocks of cheeses like those, and grated cheeses with extra cellulose.
American Cheddar sucks compared to UK Cheddar, don’t even taste like the same cheese. And Colby jack is OK.
There’s also the issue that American cheese culture didn’t got a chance to mature before corporations took over and started making a handful of mass produced cheap products.
Nah, I stand with the other guy, I think you just suck at shopping. This doesn’t describe literally any non-budget grocery store that I’ve been to in the past decade.
That’s the fucking point, in Europe you will have to go out of your way to find shitty blocks of cheese. While in the US you have to go out of your way to find decent cheese.
And if you love outside of a city? Practically impossible unless you drive a couple hours.
It’s like you can’t read, either
There’s a lot more than one “American Cheddar”, it’s a big damn country with several distinct dairy regions. (Wisconsin, California, New York, and Vermont being significant but not exhaustive) And the cheese culture is just a fork of the various European colonizers/immigrants that brought cattle over, combining old techniques with new resources.
Cream cheese, Humboldt Fog, and Cougar Gold are some highlights of American-developed-and-produced cheeses.
Question, I lived in various European countries and the US, that’s why I making said comparison.
Did you spent significant time outside of the States?
Because listing some highly specific cheeses that aren’t available in any of my local distributors doesn’t count.
In Europe, in any town, from large cities to tiny villages, there’s a shit ton of cheeses, from national cheeses to imported cheeses.
This isn’t about what’s available in Europe (also, hyperbole makes a terrible argument. I can just point to something like Reykhólar) You’re specifically complaining about cheese availability in the United States and I think you’re way more invested in hating the country than actually trying to fix your problems.
If this is the only cheeese you’re finding, are your unsure you’re not looking at a convenience store? We’ve never lacked for choice of cheeses, even if the biggest quantities are the plainest choices