“Goats
cheese ‘burduf’ with a spring green salad”
At last the
spring has come, the sun is shining and the farmers’ markets are full of
seasonal produce after a long winter of mostly root vegetables and expensive
imported fruit and veg. Prices are starting to drop as local produce finds its
way to the stalls and the hotter weather calls for fresher dishes and crisper
textures.
Burduf
cheese gets its name from its traditional method of production and is a typical
shepherds cheese produced by storing the curds in a bark cylinder and then,
after a period of maturation, mincing, salting, and storing in a sack made from
the skin of a sheep or goat. It’s a rich, soft cheese that can be easily spread
on bread or served in slices and compliments salads of a stronger nature.
I’ve served
this one with a fresh green spring salad made up of leurda (wild garlic
leaves), ceapa verde (spring onions – both the stems and the leaves), ridichie
(radish) and untisor (lesser celandine – or sometimes known as pilewort) mixed
with a little low-fat yogurt and a boiled egg.
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