Ruth is the
owner of Monforte dairy. She is a trained chef and has vast experiences in the kitchen
as well as working with chefs now. The root behind Monforte cheese and her
starting it is the genuine creation of great local cheeses using local milk.
The milk they use are from 4 mennonite farmers. The taste of the milk changes
depending on the season. She makes a small variety of cheeses: abundance, cow tome,
fontina, hodge podge, providence, mary jane, halloumi, yogurts, etc.
I love taking the slow food class because
it really appreciates the suppliers and locality and the importance of it… As
an individual who hopes to own several restaurants one day I can’t see the feasibility
of some of these ideas since the margins in restaurants are slim… the
practicality is that you want to get produce and proteins at a low cost so you
can try to make some money. As great it is to support local farmers, their
products are more expensive and sometimes customers don’t like paying a higher
cost necessarily or don’t understand it. One day when my restaurants hit a
certain level I’d be more interested in supporting more local farmers. But
visiting Ruth and her cheese making facility it made me realize that sometimes
these are easier to use at restaurants while charging a higher cost because it
is local, it is by Mennonite farmers so its all natural, and delicious. Her
cheese could be included into many dishes.
A lot of popular restaurants are
using Monforte cheeses more and more so I feel that consumers are starting to
become more educated about how great local produce and products are. If top
restaurants in Toronto are using these products they must be great.
I got to use
the Halloumi and the Providence cheeses. The halloumi we cut into blocks and
fried them. It was super delicious with the fruity compote. It was great fried
because it had great structure.
The
providence cheese I feel would have been better in grilled cheese sandwiches so
you can actually taste the cheese. We used it for the cheddar & beer soup. I may have ruined it by
adding a bit more beer than was expected however I didn’t follow a recipe so it
was my bad.
It was great
to meet Ruth at her cheese factory. Monforte cheese are something I will now be
on the look out for when I’m shopping at farmers markets.


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