It’s not so long ago that I was waxing lyrical about my lovely Caerphilly that tasted so good…..today I looked in the cave (after an absence of several days - pressure of work) and found that three of the wedges I had vacuum-packed had gone mouldy.
It seems to be only on the surface, so I washed them in vinegar and scrubbed them with salt, and repacked them.
I ate the slice I cut off, and the taste was reminiscent of the gorgonzola sauce my local Italian restaurant serves, not like Caerphilly at all. Fine if you like blue cheese I suppose, but I wanted Caerphilly….:(
So, questions;
How did my cheeses get blue/green mould on them? There is no blue cheese in the house, there never has been in the 20 years we’ve been living here, I don’t understand where it can have come from.
How is it possible for these three pieces to be overrun like this, while the remaining four wedges remain (as far as I can tell) pristine? They were all packed together at the same time, and kept on the same shelf in the cave.
Is this stuff safe to eat? It’s more than an hour or so now since I had my little taste, and I haven’t started foaming at the mouth .....
Is the mould likely to return once it’s latched on to the cheese? I washed it off as best I could, but the cheese does have some little holes in it that may harbour little blue-green mould nasties….Should I leave the cheese and see what happens? Slice off the outside bit and eat the middle quickly before the contamination spreads? Should I lower/raise the temperature in the cave? (At the moment the bit these cheeses are in is set at 16 Celsius (60 Fahrenheit), the outside temperature is low to mid 30s C)
Help!