Brie
Brie is a soft cow's-milk cheese named after Brie, the French region from which it originated. It is pale in colour with a slight greyish tinge under a rind of white mould. The rind is typically eaten, with its flavour depending largely upon the ingredients used and its manufacturing environment. It is similar to Camembert, which is native to a different region of France. Brie typically contains between 60% and 75% butterfat, slightly higher than Camembert.
"Brie" is a style of cheese, and is not in itself a protected name, although some regional bries are protected.
Some of the flavour notes that are commonly found when eating Brie are: creamy, nutty, mushroom-like, and slightly-acidic.
Production
Brie may be produced from whole or semi-skimmed milk. The curd is obtained by adding rennet to raw milk and warming it to a maximum temperature of. It is then cast into moulds, sometimes with a traditional perforated ladle called a pelle à brie. The mould is filled by successively adding thin layers, then drained for approximately 18 hours. The drained curd is taken out of the moulds, salted, inoculated with cheese culture, and aged in a controlled environment for at least four or five weeks.If left to mature for longer, typically several months to a year, the cheese becomes stronger in flavour and taste, the pâte drier and darker, and the rind also darker and crumbly, and it is called Brie noir.
Overripe brie contains an unpleasantly excessive amount of ammonia, produced by the same microorganisms that ripened it.
Nutrition
A thirty-gram serving of brie contains about of food energy and of fat, of which are saturated fat. Brie is a good source of protein; a serving of brie can provide of protein. Brie contains a good amount of both vitamin B12 and vitamin B2.Varieties
There are now many varieties of brie made all over the world, including plain brie, herbed varieties, double- and triple-cream brie, and versions of brie made with other types of milk. Indeed, although brie is a French cheese, it is possible to obtain Somerset and Wisconsin brie. The French government officially certifies only two types of brie, brie de Meaux and brie de Melun. Some varieties of brie are smoked.Brie de Meaux
Brie de Meaux is an unpasteurized round cheese with a diameter of, and a weight of about. Manufactured in the town of Meaux in the Brie region of northern France since the 8th century, it was originally known as the "Queen's cheese", or, after the French Revolution, the "queen of cheeses", and was eaten by all social classes. It was granted the protection of Appellation d'origine contrôlée status in 1980. It is produced primarily in the eastern part of the Parisian basin.Brie de Melun
Brie de Melun has an average weight of and a diameter of, smaller than Brie de Meaux. It has a stronger flavour and more pungent smell. It is made with unpasteurised milk. Brie de Melun is also available in the form of "Old Brie" or black brie. It was granted the protection of AOC status in 1980.French non-AOC bries
The following French bries do not have AOC certification:brie de Montereau, Île-de-France, brie de Nangis, brie de Provins, brie noir, brie fermier, brie d'Isigny, brie de Melun bleu, brie petit moulé, brie laitier Coulommiers.
International bries
Australia:King Island Dairy, on King Island between Victoria and Tasmania, produces a range of cheeses sold as "brie", as does Jindi Cheese in Victoria and High Valley Mudgee Cheese Co in Mudgee, NSW.
UK:
Cornish Brie; Somerset Brie; Baron Bigod ; Cenarth brie ; Morangie brie ; Connage Clava brie.
US:
The Marin French Cheese Company in California has made an unaged cheese since 1865 that they describe as "fresh brie".
Kolb-Lena, a Savencia Fromage & Dairy plant in Illinois, has made brie- and camembert-style cheese since early 1900. It still produces brie under the brands Alouette, Delice de France and Dorothy's.
Ireland:
Ireland produces various "brie" cheeses such as Wicklow Bán brie, St. Killian brie, and The Little Milk Company's Organic Irish Brie.
New Zealand has many brie-style cheeses, varying from the Mainland brand, with Creamy, Double Cream, and Blue varieties, to craft cheesemakers such as Grinning Gecko.