is used in both sweet and savory preparations.
I like it on hot blinis with smoked salmon and duck.
It has a light, creamy taste, a bit more substantial than fresh ricotta. When you taste it, it is easy imagine its use in either sweet or savory preparations. Epecially in Nice, its uses in cuisine are for the most part savory, involving oil, herbs, and garlic. Desserts pair it with compotes in pastry, in dessert verrines, or as a layer with lemon curd on a flat tart.
Near Toulon, the traditional local production was a bit different from neighboring regions and did not include salting it. Because of this feature, it had to be eaten on the same day it was produced. Reference to the cheese goes back several hundred years, with mentions of women flocking to towns with their baskets of Brousse for sale in the morning.
In addition to eating it plain or simply seasoned with herbs and pepper, southerners use Brousse in stuffed pasta and vegetables, and they also roast it in thin pastry with fish and herbs. They roll it in cured ham, and work minced vegetables into it to pair it with eggplant. Brousse has a natural affinity for tomatoes, so we see it not only paired with fresh tomatoes, but dried as well, in tarts.
Brousse du Rove is yet another Brousse that comes from the end of the Rhone before it ends at the Mediterranean, and is often not made from ewe's milk, but goat. It has a special fresh herbal taste and distinctive long thin basket mould.
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