Making Comte Cheese

I was recently joking that when Iโm forced to wake up very early in the morning Iโm not sure if I should feel sorrier for myself, or for the people around me. So when my friend Jean-Louis, who works with the people who make Comtรฉ cheese finally gave in to my incessant pestering to join him for a visit, I was excited when after three years, he finally said โOuiโ. Actually, he speaks very good English. So he said โYesโ.
But when I got the timetable for our few days in the mountains of the Jura, I didnโt need anyone to translate the fact that I saw that we were going to be getting up very, very early in the morning to watch the cheese making.

No matter what it is, from candy to cars, I love seeing how something is made. And I will sacrifice a little sleep if necessary. Living in France, the home of hundreds of cheeses, many still made on a relatively small scale, I always will jump at the chance to meet and see the people making them at work. Even if it means prying myself out of a cozy bed in darkness of winter at 4:47am.

Like a lot of things in French, there are specific words for everything. The cheese production begins, of course, on the ferme where the cows are raised and milked. The milking takes place twice a day on local farms, but since Iโve seen cows being milked, we agreed to meet up when the milk was delivered to the fruitiรฉre.
The word โfruitiรจreโ refers to the place where the milk is delivered every day of the year, with no breaks for holidays, including Christmas or New Years. (Which busts another myth that the French donโt work hard.) The word fruitiรจrecomes from the French verb โfructifierโ which roughly means โto produceโ or โto bear fruitโ.
So the first step in transforming raw milk into cheese, or to get the cheese to โbear fruitโ, takes place very early in the morning when the still-warm milk is brought to one of the 160 fruitiรจres in the Jura directly by the farmers whoโve milked the cows, where the raw milk is measured and filtered.
All the milk used in the production of Comtรฉ cheese comes from within a 25 kilometer (15 mile) radius of the fruitiรจres. It arrives each morning in a large stainless-steel round urn towed by a pickup truck, then is poured into at bin attached to a scale to be weighed. In the past, cow farmers traded milk for cheese since cheese making was originally a way to preserve a bounty of fresh milk for a longer time. Am not sure how itโs done these days, but I am sure a little cheese exchanges hands fairly often between people in the Jura, and everyone seems to win as thereโs no shortage of great cheeses in this part of France, enough for everyone to enjoy.

It takes 400 to 450 liters (100 to 120 gallons) of fresh milk to make one 40 kilo (90 pounds) wheel of Comtรฉ and the first fruitiรจre we visited only produced two to six rounds of cheese per day. Three people worked there and it was damp and humid, a nice contrast to the rather frosty weather outside. I had to keep wiping down the condensation on my lens, as well as frequently ducking, to avoid being hosed down by the rubber-clad workers who spray everything liberally to sanitize and clean all the surfaces. (I suspected a few were aiming for me, yet I managed to avoid them.)
But except for the La Vache qui Rit factory also located in the Jura, which was allegedly started as a way to use leftover cheeses from the region that werenโt up to snuff and transform it into the bland, but beloved, Laughing Cow processed cheese (and I am busted because I once looked into the kitchen of my local Indian restaurants and found out the secret of their naan fromage was cubes of La Vache qui Rit), there arenโt any giant tanker trucks of milk blasting around the highways of the Jura delivering milk for Comtรฉ. This is all artisanal production.
The cheese is produced by a chain-reaction, or as a cooperative; the people who raise the cows provide the milk. The fruitiรจre curdles the milk and presses it into wheels, then the wheels are sent to cool ripening caves in the mountains to age for at least four months. There arenโt any companies that do the whole process from start to finish.
I found the whole thing quite specialโin spite of the crazy/early hour, and for those who follow the โeat localโ mantra, it doesnโt get any more local than this. Each Montbรฉliarde cow seems to have a pretty good life and gets one hectaire (2 1/2 acres) of land to freely graze on. The cows are particularly adaptable to the slightly rugged terrain of the mountains and theyโre kept indoors in the cold winters, fed a diet of hay rather than the green grass of summer. And the cheese is made within the first 24 hours of milking.
Comtรฉ is an AOP cheese, which means that every step of the way that itโs made is protected and must be followed, meaning that the cows must be Montbรฉliarde, the milk must be raw, and the wood planks used to ripen the disks must be made of untreated local spruce, amongst other things.

I was fortunate to be able to follow the process over a number of days, from early morning through nightfall. Youโll notice that in the pictures, some of the milk or cheeses are yellower than the others. It may be surprising to those of us who are used to standardized dairy products, but milk isnโt always pure white. And as the milk gets transformed into cheese via culturing and ripening, the milk and the wheels of cheese go through various processes and transformations during the maturation, which not only affect the taste, but the color and texture.
So if you see a Comtรฉ that is bright yellow, thatโs made from milk produced by cows that graze in the summer months (en รฉtรฉ) when they have their choice of hundreds of flowers to munch on. The flowers have carotine which give the milk (and the cheese) a deep, golden color. And some feel it gives the cheeses a better flavor, like Beaufort dโรtรฉ, although if you want to get a cheese from summer milk, youโll need to do a bit of reverse counting when you buy your Comtรฉ.

After the raw milk is weighed and filtered, the milk is warmed and rennet (prรฉsure) is added, then stirred in. A pot of โstarterโ is taken from each batch and left in an incubator to add to the next dayโs milk. And the one from the previous day is added to the cheese being made right now in the copper vat.
Afterward the milk is left to rest in large copper vats until it forms a giant quivering mass, resembling silky tofu. This step is the caillage, or curdling of the milk, and thereโs a pretty wonderful variety of dairy products in France like Caillรฉ that are made this way. Next time youโre in a French fromagerie or crรจmerie, peek into some of the earthenware crocks and youโll often see rustic versions of creamy caillรฉ, a scoopable fresh cheese is meant to be eaten just as is, with a spoon.
Once the milk for the Comtรฉ is thick, the curd is broken up by using a device with a series of thin metal strings. The curds are still soft, creamy, and slippery. Iโve seen a fair number of cheeses being made and Iโm still always surprised that in just a few months this slippery stuff is going to become a firm and sliceable cheese one day in the near future.
After the cheese curd is cut, itโs stirred further until it forms tight wads whose flavor and texture could best be described as โlike rubberโ. I tasted one and it wasnโt something youโd want to fill up a bowl and park yourself in front to the tv with. I only ate a tiny bit of a piece that was handed to me, and tossed the rest out.

The only way to verify when the curds are the right consistency is by hand. So the expression โlost oneโs touchโ comes to mind as someone who can no longer tell when the cheese is done by feel. If the curds are left even 30 seconds too long, the cheese will be ruined, so the process at this point must be carefully monitored. And a few times during the morning when I was peering into the copper cauldron, watching them inspect the curds, it seemed like all heck would break loose as immediately theyโd all start scrambling to attention to quickly prepare the curds to be deposited into metal molds.
Right away the mixture is strained and the run-off whey is filtered. If youโve ever seen a cosmetic ad touting lactoserum, those are the milk solids from cheese making in the whey. Thereโs also a local cheese, similar to ricotta salata, that is made by pressing the milky bits left in the whey that run-off and I would love to find some of that in Paris. (If only I could remember what itโs called*โฆwhich is the downside of getting up at the crack of dawn.)

(On a side note, whatโs especially interesting is that all cheese basically starts the same way. There are some variables, but basically itโs just milk, and what determines the final flavor is the quality of the milk, the thickness of the pรขte, the materials used, and how itโs ripened. That it becomes cheese is just amazing to me, especially when I see the process involved.)

Large metal molds are filled with the curds then pressed by machine for 24 hours to get the excess liquid out and to compact the curds.
When turned out a day later, the rounds are large rubbery disks that can be flexed and bended. The fellow unmolding these cheeses lifted one up, using the strength of his substantial forearms, he shook it wildly up and down to demonstrate how flexible and bouncy it was. Each round is incredibly heavy and it was surprising at how matter-of-factly everyone at the fruitiรจre (and the ripening caves we visited later) were able to handle the giant disks with seemingly no problems. Iโd be moaning and groaning all day. But on the other hand, Iโd have amazing arms. So I guess itโs a fair trade off.
Before the cheeses hit the wooden shelves of the ripening caves, each wheel is washed and rubbed with a mixture of yeast and water, then scrubbed with coarse sea salt from the Guรฉrande, the only non-local ingredient in the process. (The Jura is the region in France thatโs one of the farthest from the ocean and the only salt nearby is mined and too harsh.) They told me even the rennet was made from the stomach lining of local calves and showed me a twisted sheet of the stuff, which was like crinkly parchment paper.
The cheeses are left to being their ripening before being shipped to cool caves high up in the mountains to finish the affinage.

But the cheeses need to be kept at the fruitiรจre until firm enough to move and this one gentleman had a few decades on me and wasnโt having any problems lifting and flipping the cheeses all by himself. Obviously heโd mastered the right movements to properly balance and flip les meules using his knee and legs, rather than his back.

During my time in the Jura, I was constantly surprised whenever I was talking to someone about a cheese and in mid-sentence, theyโd deftly slip the wooden cheese-lifter (and shown in the photo at the start of the post) under a disk of Comtรฉ and flip it up just as easily as if they were flipping over a pancake.
When they crew is done with their early morning work, they sit down for a well-deserved breakfast, French-style. When I was in cooking school in France, at 10am the chef would stop the class and bring out a tray of Aligotรฉ white wine and weโd all take a pause for a kir. Ever since then, Iโm not all that surprised when being offered a glass of wine in France at an hour that one might not normally consider prudent. But I opted for a cup of dark coffee instead.

But also, I couldnโt resist a glass of raw milk from the local dairy thatโs used in the cheese making as well. I donโt drink a lot of milk, most of the stuff goes into my morning cafรฉ au lait (or ice cream), but this was really tasty and I could see why the cheese tasted so good.
Curiously, when I posted a quick snap of the breakfast from my smartphone on Twitter, a response came back expressing dismay about the tableau. I wasnโt sure what that meant because this was such a wonderful and special little moment: we were up here in the mountains with people sitting down to a meal of crusty bread from the boulangerie across the way, whose fogged up windows we passed on our way to the fruitiรจre earlier that morning. There was a bottle of the local vin du Jura to wash down coarsely-cut hunks of the cheese that theyโd made themselves, and were enjoying the fruits of their labor and seemed to be content.
It was one of those moments that I have in France from time to time, and that happen a lot in the French countryside, where life is decidedly different than in the city. And when I find myself in these situations, I think to myself about how special it is to be sitting here, up near the base of the alps, passing around bread and wine with the cheese makers who likely donโt feel as if theyโre doing anything special, itโs just their life. When in fact, what theyโre doing is pretty special, I think.
Yes, it was still pretty early and maybe it was the coffee that was starting to kick in, but made me really happy to be sitting at the rickety formica table with the people who make these cheeses day in and day out. And youโd think the last thing that people who spent their whole day curdling milk and lifting wheels of cheese all day would want for breakfast would be more cheese. But here they were, lopping off enormous hunks of Comtรฉ and Bleu de Gex, along with thick slices of sausages, and eating them all with gusto.
Since nothing gets wasted here, I discovered a new cheese byproduct, called Cancoillotte, a local spread made from the milk solids recuperated during the cheese making process.
Once called the cheese of the poor, this thick, creamy spread is now something of a local novelty, so much so that what was once considered the โcheese of the poorโ was served to us after dinner at a fairly swank restaurant a few days later. But here, it tasted much better.
Part 2: Ripening and Tasting Comtรฉ, and (almost) meeting my makerโฆ
Notes
These photos were taken at two fruitiรจres in the Jura: Fromagerie de lโAbbaye (in Chรฉzery), and the Fromagerie de Frasne (2, rue de Bellevue, Frasne, Tรฉl: 03 81 49 82 26).
Both cheese making facilities arenโt normally open to the public but they do have excellent shops attached to them where you can purchase their cheeses and other local products. You can find a list of facilities which offer tours at Les Routes du Comtรฉ.
*Jean-Louis notified me the cheese thatโs similar to ricotta salata is Le Serra, which Iโve not seen anywhere else.
Related Links and Posts
Making Morbier and Comtรฉ (The Cheesist)
Making Irish Coffee at Ardrahan Cheese
Comtรฉ (Official Website)
































