本帖最后由 choi 于 11-6-2021 07:01 编辑
Obituary Anne Saxelby | Say Cheese, America! Anne Saxelby, champion of artisan dairy farmers, died on October 9th, aged 40. Economist, Oct 30, 2021.
https://www.economist.com/obitua ... ers-and-their-wares
Note:
(a)
(i) I did not know or hear of her. Presumably her significance is implied in the online, but not print, subtitle in Economist,com: "pioneering cheesemonger" -- one who sells, but does not make, cheese.
(ii) In the Web, I can find no diagnosis of her heart condition.
(iii) Anne Saxelby bachelor's degree in a studio art from New York University, was the founder and co-owner of Saxelby Cheesemongers (2006- ), and passed away in her sleep due to an enlarged heart. Signifying heart failure, an enlarged heart can come from enlargement of chambers or wall; either way, there is an underlying heart disease that is chronic (not acute), which gives time to heart to adapt to do its best -- until at last it (heart) can not do it any longer. The medical term is
cardiomegaly
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiomegaly
("Cardiomegaly is not a disease, but rather a")
complication -- consequence of underlying disease, not necessarily in heart but can be elsewhere. For example, pulmonary hypertension (high blood pressure in lung only but not systemically (not in the rest of the body) will cause cardiomegaly, because heart (right ventricle specifically) try to push blood into lung.
In Taiwan, I observed an autopsy, where a woman about 50 was on the table, hHer heart was twice the normal size, which is the size of one's clenched fist. Her enlarged heart comes from enlarged chambers, without thickened wall, which made the heart ;ppl fragile, like a deflated basketball once the
(b) "Why do so many local newspapers have the same antique masthead?"
(i) Is the emphasis on "same" or "antique"? Either way, I did not see them. By antique newspaper mastheads, does it mean typeface?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typeface
(ii) masthead
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masthead
("may refer to:
• nameplate (publishing), the banner name on the front page of a newspaper or periodical (UK 'masthead')
* * *
• the top of a mast (sailing), a tall vertical pole of a ship which supports the sails")
(iii) antique newspaper masthead = vintage newspaper masthead
(iv) Trying to know what it is, I search images.google.com with ("antique" newspaper masthead) -- quotation marks around antique only. One of the search return is masthead of Puck (magazine).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puck_(magazine)
(1871/ 1877 - 1918)
(c) "Few things have surprised them [European visitors to America] more, almost into the present century, than the sameness of cheese. From sea to shining sea, America has traditionally offered six. Industrial milky mozzarella, as on pizza; blue cheese, usually as sauce in a plastic bottle; Swiss, a block of pale, thin, rubbery slices, tasting of nothing; Monterey Jack, a pale attempt at Cheddar; inoffensive cream cheese; and then, in orange glory, processed cheese, liquid or semi-solid, to melt onto burgers or to drown nachos in.
(i) mozzarella
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mozzarella
("is a traditionally southern Italian cheese made from Italian [water] buffalo's milk [In US, buffalo is bison] * * * Due to its high moisture content, it is traditionally served the day after it is made but can be kept in brine for up to a week[,] or longer when sold in vacuum-sealed packages. * * * [section 1 Etymology] * * * Outside the EU, 'mozzarella' not clearly labeled as deriving from water buffalo can be presumed to derive from cow milk. * * * [section 4 Production]" )
(ii) blue cheese
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_cheese
Most kinds of blue cheese are made with Penicillium roquefort. The rest of blue cheese are made with Penicillium glaucum.
(A) The first blue cheese, Roquefort, was made in Roquefort (disambiguation)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roquefort_(disambiguation)
(may refer to: "Roquefort-sur-Soulzon, Aveyron")
(B) Roquefort. Encyclopaedia Britannica, undated
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Roquefort
("The designation Roquefort is protected by French law [see the end of this quotation]. Roquefort is one of the oldest known cheeses. * * * Today some authentic Roqueforts are made in Corsica, but all still undergo final aging in the limestone caves of Roquefort near Toulouse in southern France, where the cool and humid atmosphere promotes growth of the mold Penicillium roqueforti. By French law, only cheese that is processed at Roquefort, France, may be labeled 'Roquefort cheese'; other French blue-veined cheeses are called 'bleu' cheese")
(C) Roquefort
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Roquefort
(pronunciation)
(D) Gary Allen, The History of Roquefort French Dressing. The Rambling Epicure, Sept 14, 2018
https://www.theramblingepicure.com/roquefort-french-dressing/
("Roquefort cheese has been made in the caves of Combalou, Roquefort-sur-Soulzon, at least since Gaul was occupied by the Romans — Pliny the Elder spoke highly of it, and he was not the sort who normally gushed gourmet superlatives. * * * The best-known dish making use of Roquefort Dressing is Buffalo Chicken Wings [which is unbreaded], a dish invented by Frank and Teressa Bellissimo, at the Anchor Bar, 1047 Main Street, Buffalo, New York. The hot-sauce-drenched wings, accompanied by celery sticks and Roquefort Dressing, were first served in 1964")
(iii) Monterey Jack
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monterey_Jack
(white; [pasteurized] cow's milk' "In its earliest form, Monterey Jack was made by 18th-century Franciscan friars of Monterey, Alta California. California businessman David Jacks sold the cheese commercially [that is how Jack became part of the cheese name]")
(iv) processed cheese
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Processed_cheese
Please read it from top top bottom, even if you do not understand. After you read the following, return to this Wiki page, and you will appreciate it more.
(A) 9.6.1 Natural And Processed Cheese. In Chapter 9: Food and Agricultural Industries. AP42, 5th ed. vol 1. EPA, ;ast updated in 2001.
https://www3.epa.gov/ttnchie1/ap42/ch09/final/c9s06-1.pdf
Quote:
"The United States is one of the largest producers of cheese in the world.
"9.6.1.1 General[:] Popular types of natural cheeses include unripened (eg, cottage cheese, cream cheese) * * * Examples of processed cheeses include American cheese and various cheese spreads, which are made by blending two or more varieties of cheese or blending portions of the same type of cheese that are in different stages of ripeness.
"9.6.1.2 Process Description[:] The modern manufacture of natural cheese consists of four basic steps: coagulating, draining, salting, and ripening. Processed cheese manufacture incorporates extra steps, including cleaning, blending, and melting. No two cheese varieties [of both natural and processed] are produced by the same method. However, manufacturing different cheeses does not require widely different procedures but rather the same steps with variations during each step, the same steps with a variation in their order, special applications, or different ripening practices.
"9.6.1.2.1 Natural Cheese Manufacture - * * * Ripening - During the ripening or curing stage, varieties of cheeses acquire their own unique textures, aromas, appearances, and tastes through complex physical and chemical changes that are controlled as much as possible by adjusting temperature, humidity, and duration of ripening. For all cheeses, the purpose of ripening is to allow beneficial bacteria and enzymes to transform the fresh curd into a cheese of a specific flavor, texture, and appearance. Cottage and cream cheeses are not ripened, and usually have a bland flavor and soft body.
Some cheeses require the application of a special ripening agent to create a particular taste or texture. For example, some cheeses rely wholly on surface bacteria and yeast applied to their exteriors for curing and ripening (eg, Brick, Brie, Camembert); others require injection of particular bacteria and molds (eg, Blue) or gas-forming microorganisms (eg, Swiss). It is during the ripening stage that the rind or crust forms on the cheese's surface. The rind controls the loss of moisture from the internal part of the cheese and regulates the escape of gases released during ripening. Many ripened cheeses are coated in wax to protect them from mold contamination and to reduce the rate of moisture loss. Cheeses that naturally develop a thick, tightly woven rind, such as Swiss, do not require waxing.
"9.6.1.2.2 Processed Cheese Manufacture - Nearly one-third of all cheese produced in the United States consists of processed cheese and processed cheese products. * * * Processed cheese is made by pasteurizing, emulsifying, and blending natural cheese. Processed cheese foods, spreads, and cold pack cheeses contain additional ingredients, such as nonfat milk solids and condiments. Several varieties of natural cheeses may be mixed, and powdered milk, whey, cream or butter, and water may be added. The following section describes the basic steps necessary for producing asteurized
process cheese, the most common processed cheese.
Pasteurized Process Cheese -
Cheeses are selected to be processed from both mild and sharp cheeses. For example, American cheese is made from Cheddar and Colby cheeses."
• AP 42 Compilation of Air Pollutant Emission Factors
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AP ... nt_Emission_Factors
• Standing for air pollutant, AP42's 5th edition came out in 1995. "In 2001, EPA discontinued publishing supplements to the 5th edition of AP 42." -- from EPA website.
(B) Alex Delany, What Is Processed Cheese, and Should We Eat It? Bon Appétit, Apr 15, 2018
https://www.bonappetit.com/story/what-is-processed-cheese
("Processed cheese is not 100% cheese. Most of the time it hovers around 50% cheese, sometimes more and sometimes less, but at a base level, processed cheese is real cheese cut with other, non-cheese ingredients. Those extra ingredients can include salt, food dyes, preservatives, extra dairy, emulsifiers, or other artificial ingredients.* * * Processing produces cheese that melts like a dream without becoming oily or separating, facilitating the kinds of ooey-gooey cheese pulls that populate Instagram feeds the world over. But really, these ingredients end up in processed cheese because it makes it last longer on the shelf. The preservatives are what give processed cheese the biggest draw. Some processed cheese doesn’t even need to be refrigerated; it can sit at room temperature for a seemingly-indefinite amount of time. * * * It’s cheaper for the producer, the seller, and the consumer. It’s about money and time. * * * Processed cheese can be amazing, and there are times when nothing else will do. If we're talking about a cheeseburger or a breakfast sandwich, we're hoping to see a perfectly melty piece of American cheese on top of that patty or egg. American cheese (and many other processed cheeses) melts in a way that real cheese doesn't, and we love it for that. Cheese Whiz [another processed cheese] on a cheesesteak? Approved. * * * Not only is it not the healthiest thing out there, but it backs you into a corner that's filled with one-noted cheeses. Because of the production process, real cheese holds flavor possibilities that processed cheese will never be able to replicate. The farms that raise the dairy animals, the hands of the cheesemakers, the microorganisms that convert milk into thousands of distinctly different, cheesy delights are all a part of what makes cheese special. With processed cheese, absolute consistency is the name of the game")
• Bon Appétit
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bon_Appétit
(1956- ; monthly; Owned by Condé Nast, it is headquartered at Manhattan)
• For "one-noted cheeses," see note (n): "2a: a characteristic feature (as of odor or flavor)"
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/note
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