It is usually studded with caraway seeds, the
most natural spice for curds.
Limburger
Limburger has always been popular in America, ever since it was
brought over by German-American immigrants; but England never took to
it. This is eloquently expressed in the following entry in the English
_Encyclopedia of Practical Cookery_:
Limburger cheese is chiefly famous for its pungently offensive
odor. It is made from skimmed milk, and allowed to partially
decompose before pressing. It is very little known in this
country, and might be less so with advantage to consumers.
But this is libel. Butter-soft and sapid, Limburger has brought
gustatory pleasure to millions of hardy gastronomes since it came to
light in the province of Luettich in Belgium. It has been Americanized
for almost a century and is by now one of the very few cheeses
successfully imitated here, chiefly in New York and Wisconsin.
Early Wisconsiners will never forget the Limburger Rebellion in Green
County, when the people rose in protest against the Limburger caravan
that was accustomed to park in the little town of Monroe where it was
marketed.
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