Recipes

Classic cheese ball
The cheese ball is an American party food classic. It’s a little retro, but retro food is fun, and a cheese ball is the kind of thing you can easily posh up and adapt to use your favourite cheeses, herbs, and seasonings.
In its original incarnation, the classic cheeseball contained cream cheese, fairly boring cheddar (typically the pre-shredded stuff you buy in a packet), onion, pimento, and Worcestershire sauce, all of which were mixed together, shaped into a ball, and rolled in chopped nuts.
In recent years, however, there’s been a revival of the cheese ball with clever cooks taking advantage of more thoughtful flavour combinations like feta and pine nuts and blue cheese and dates. When you use good cheese and experiment with herbs, spices, dried fruits, and toasted nuts, a cheese ball can become more than the sum of its parts.
I’m sharing below the recipe for my family’s classic cheese ball. Use it as a starting point for riffing. I recommend always including the cream cheese as it’s pretty essential for binding the ingredients. But do try swapping out the cheddar for other favourite cheeses, adding herbs and spices, rolling in herbs instead of (or in addition to) the nuts.
In the picture shown I’ve used a combination of cream cheese and Wensleydale cheese with chopped cranberries, rolled in toasted pistachios.
Classic Cheese Ball
- 200g cream cheese
- 200g cheddar cheese, grated (feel free to swap it for other cheese or a combination of cheeses)
- 1 tbsp finely chopped green pepper
- 1 tbsp chopped pimento
- 2 spring onions, finely chopped
- 2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
- 1 tsp lemon juice
- a pinch of salt and pepper
- chopped pecans
Method
- Mix together the cream cheese and cheddar until well blended (you can use a food processor for this). Add all of the other ingredients except pecans and stir until combined.
- Chill for 30 minutes then shape into a ball (it might help to put all of the mixture in clingfilm and use that to shape your ball). Roll the ball in the pecans. Serve with crackers (always crackers!).
What to drink: Given cheeseball is party food I recommend party wine with it. A soft juicy red like a merlot or a sauvignon blanc would both work well

Buttermilk, Cheddar and Chive Bread
If you fancy baking something easy for the family this weekend try this delicious savoury bread from Claire Thomson's just-published National Trust Family Cookbook.
Claire writes: I enjoy the incremental hike of a bread dough made with yeast, but with alchemy on your side a loaf can easily get to the table in under an hour. The trio of bicarbonate of soda, baking powder and egg works wonders in this recipe. Mixed with the dry ingredients, they elevate the loaf as it bakes. Eat hot from the oven with salted butter or pack for a picnic or lunch.
Makes a 900g loaf
300g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
1½ tsp baking powder
½ tsp bicarbonate of soda
1 tsp salt
80g Cheddar cheese, grated
Small bunch of chives, chopped
40g butter
225ml buttermilk
1 egg, beaten
1 tsp Dijon mustard
Preheat the oven to 200°C (190°C fan). Line a 900g loaf tin with greaseproof paper.
Put the flour, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda, salt, cheese and chives in a large mixing bowl.
Melt the butter and add it to a jug with the buttermilk, egg and mustard. Give the mix a good whisk.
Swiftly add the wet mix to the dry ingredients and combine with a fork. Do not over-mix the dough – it should be a cohesive, sticky mass in well under a minute. It shouldn’t need any shaping so just fit it snugly into the prepared tin.
Dust the top of the loaf with a little flour and bake for 40–45 minutes until a skewer inserted into the middle of the loaf comes out clean.
Leave to cool in the tin for 5 minutes before turning out. Serve warm or leave to cool completely on a wire rack.
From the National Trust Family Cookbook by Claire Thomson, published by National Trust Books. Photo © Jill Mead.
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