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Waste Not: Holy Scrap

Writer's picture: boxton9boxton9

Updated: May 26, 2023

Reclaiming Cheese Rinds


By Adam Kaye


Adam Kaye, former culinary director at Blue Hill at Stone Barns, now founder and chief culinary officer of Spare Food Co., writes about reducing food waste in the column I conceived and assigned, Waste Not.



I thought about the late Anne Saxelby, who forever changed the landscape of American cheese, on a recent trip to a local supermarket. I was stopped in my tracks at the impressively stocked cheese counter, displaying products from many of the local dairies that Anne had championed. There, nestled among dozens of domestic and imported cheeses, were several small containers of cheese rinds, which struck me as an exciting, albeit unexpected, discovery. That this supermarket would actually see value in selling these oft-neglected odds and ends, and that customers might even pay for them (gasp!), is a sign of progress in our woefully wasteful food world.


Anyone who knew Anne, the founder of Saxelby Cheesemongers, who tragically passed away last October, could not help but be forever impacted by her infectious reverence for cheese. From her tiny, cubby-like perch, first at the Essex Street Market and then at a slightly grander cubby in Chelsea Market, she brought a laser-like focus to the craft of artisanal American cheesemakers. She was the ultimate cheese evangelist who made you a believer in the transcendent nature of curdled (local) milk. All of her irresistible talk about the marvels of grass and milk and microbes and cellars infused each wheel and wedge with life that you could taste in every bite.


But what to do with those cheese rinds? Well, why not honor Anne’s work and gently simmer those hardened ends and moldy morsels with a handful of aromatic vegetables and herbs to produce an umami-rich cheese broth that will become a kitchen staple? I use it in everything from risottos to soups, and occasionally reduce it to glaze a simple dish of fettuccine and pancetta. It’s an homage to an ancient craft, a less wasteful world, and, of course, to Anne.


Cheese Rind Broth


2 cups cheese rinds and scraps (Natural, washed and bloomy rinds are best. No waxed or cloth rinds.)

1 small onion, roughly chopped

2 cloves garlic, smashed

1 bay leaf

Scattering of herb stems


Place all the ingredients in a medium pot. Cover with 6 cups of water and simmer for 1 hour. Strain and chill.

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About Me

I Was Supposed to Go to Grad School

Growing up in a large, loud family of 7, they use to call me “Pass Me The, Pass Me The” for the way that I’d try to doctor my dinner with whatever condiments were on hand. At about 8 or 9, I gave up on condiments and took control of dinner entirely, cooking out of a beat-up copy of The New York Times Cookbook that I still own, my little penciled-in annotations intact. I cooked for 7 people nightly, all throughout high school. By the time I was winding up college, I’d become a damn fine cook.

 

My father was a professor of American History. I figured I’d follow in those footsteps, teaching Dickens to 18-year-olds who were not at all interested. I gathered applications to doctorate programs, meanwhile, I took a job as a waiter in a busy catering company. The kitchen where I worked was perpetually understaffed—my cooking skills were quickly identified and I was press-ganged onto their crew. I LOVED it—the excitement, the creativity, the freedom, the trench humor, learning professional cooking techniques. There I stayed for several years while my graduate school applications gathered dust.

 

Cue me, later, a refugee from a crash-and-burn restaurant opening where I was not only the sous-chef, but also the loan application writer and babysitter for a chef/owner who had gone spectacularly off the rails. By then, I had a couple of herniated discs and no desire to stay in restaurants. I moved back to the world of words, and I’ve never looked back. 

 

Since then, I’ve been a restaurant critic, a national award-winning blogger, a food journalist, a travel writer, a columnist, a cookbook author, and the editor-in-chief of four Edible titles. I can’t wait to see what's next.

 

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