Saturday, September 26, 2009
Ile de France Cheese of the Month: Roasted Pears with Saint Agur
For anyone who grew up during the 70's and 80's in middle America, bleu cheese was only consumed in one way; salad dressing. Not that there's anything wrong with bleu cheese dressing, it's necessary for hot wings and a staple on salad bars, but there is so much more to the blue-veined cheese that it really should be tried, if only once, as-is or with something other than a lettuce leaf.
There is more than one variety of bleu cheese, though and not all are created equal. The Ile de France bleu cheeses are a perfect example of quality and variety. Saint Agur, for example, is a wonderfully rich and creamy bleu rather than the usual crumbly type. It is deep in flavor and the texture is beautifully smooth; the perfect complement to roasted pears. It melted perfectly with little heat and remained very flavorful even after cooling.
Roasted Pears with Saint Agur
Serves 8
Printable Recipe
4 large pears, halved and seeded
1 Tabespoon olive oil
8 ounces Ile de France Saint Agur Bleu Cheese
Heat oven to 350 degrees F.
Coat the bottom of a non-stick roasting pan with olive oil.
Set pears, cut side down, into pan. Roast for 20 minutes, or until pears soften.
Set pears right-side-up and top with cheese.
Let stand briefly as cheese melts. Serve warm.
Labels:
bleu cheese,
pears
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
5 comments:
You have got to send me a goodies box! I am so hungry.
this looks fantastic...I eat apples and pears both with all sorts of cheese, including bleu, and I don't like blue cheese dressing as it is generally over-processed goop in American restaurants...
of course home made bleu cheese dressing made with the real thing is great...
oh...I should say, I've NOT cooked the fruit first and I am intrigues and WILL be trying it!
thanks!
What a wonderful dish! We love blue cheese in so many ways, even in mac & cheese.
We love blue cheese also, have you tried it with other cheese as well? I was just wondering, what other cheese would go well with the pears.
Post a Comment