Match of the week

 Leerdammer and black coffee

Leerdammer and black coffee

Cheese is so inextricably linked in my mind with beer and wine I sometimes forget there are other delicious pairings out there but coffee? Well, actually yes.

The idea first clicked 18 months or so ago on a trip to Sweden. We visited a cheesemaker who served us black coffee with her cheeses and it set them off beautifully. I shouldn’t have been surprised because of course the standard breakfast throughout northern Europe includes cheese and cold meats.

As I’ve been researching coffee for a feature I’m writing I had to borrow a neighbour’s coffee grinder so we had an impromptu Dutch-style breakfast while we were comparing beans. The cheese we bought was Leerdammer but you could use any mild, smooth sliceable nutty cheese. Some very good smoked ham and crispbread completed the feast.

We drank our coffee black and without sugar which wouldn't be to everyone's taste but I think works better than, say, a flat white or a cappucino would. It's the savoury bitterness of the coffee that goes so well with the smooth mild nutty cheese.

It put me in mind of a cheese I tasted in the states a few years ago called Barely Buzzed which is rubbed with ground coffee and lavender (much nicer than it sounds!) There are some more great ideas for coffee and cheese pairings in this feature on the Culture cheese magazine website

For more creative cheese pairings download my ebook 101 Great Ways to Enjoy Cheese & Wine (and other delicious drinks!)

Photo ©elen09 at fotolia.com

Coffee and cardamom buns

Coffee and cardamom buns

For a long time I’ve resisted the idea of a Nespresso machine but then a friend said she had a spare to get rid of and I’ve succumbed. Why did I wait so long? No sooner does the thought enter your mind that you might like a coffee than you can gratify it. Literally in seconds.

Less easy is finding the kind of coffee pod you like and the right way to brew it - short or long. Bizarrely the machine has decided to make espressos when you press the long switch and longer coffees when you press the espresso one. Or I’ve flicked some secret switch which has muddled it up. Whatever. I’m getting there. I like (I think) the Rosabaya de Columbia and the Capriccio but there are so many colours, strengths and flavours I’m a tad confused.

So I’ve been drinking (black) coffee with everything including the banana and cardamom buns from Meera Sodha’s Fresh India (which is only £9.99 on Amazon at the time of writing) to which I’ve become mildly addicted.

Cardamom and coffee is of course a classic combination so it makes sense to drink one with the other. Obviously it goes with Swedish-style cardamom buns too.

Fairtrade chocolate brownies with Fairtrade black coffee

Fairtrade chocolate brownies with Fairtrade black coffee

This week is the beginning of Fairtrade fortnight, the British Fairtrade Foundation’s annual push to encourage us all to buy more ethically traded products. There are now over 2000 Fairtrade certified products* available in the UK, ranging from peppercorns, cinnamon and vanilla pods, to avocados, rum and wine.

Two of the products that are easy to get hold of are Fairtrade chocolate and coffee which of course make the perfect match. Wine, as I’ve mentioned before on the site, isn’t the easiest pairing for rich dark chocolate cakes and puddings but black coffee is perfect, balancing the intense sweetness and palate coating richness of a full-on chocolate dessert while retaining its own flavour and freshness. If you find espresso too strong try a longer americano or cafetière-made coffee.

The quality of Fairtrade coffee has increased enormously over the past few years largely to an exceptional company called Union Coffee Roasters that I first came across about 15 years ago when they were operating a micro-roastery in Essex. The coffee I particularly like is their Rwanda Maraba Bourbon which is available in Sainsbury’s, Tesco and Waitrose. They are also selling two other ethically sourced brands Ethiopia Yirgacheffe and Natural Spirit which contains Fairtrade and organic coffee beans from central and south America which you can also buy from their website www.unioncoffeeroasters.com

So far as Fairtrade chocolate is concerned a good range is made by the Divine Chocolate Company. It confusingly has two websites, having changed ownership, but you’ll find some suitably indulgent recipes incorporating their products on their original website original.divinechocolate.com

If you want to do a bit more to help Fairtrade producers why not organise your own Faitrade coffee and chocolate morning (or evening) for a few friends and neighbours? Not that you probably need an incentive to eat chocolate...

* The FAIRTRADE Mark is the only consumer label that focuses on ensuring farmers in developing countries receive an agreed and stable price for the crops they grow, as well as additional income to invest for the future.

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