Session 1
What cheese is
Session 1 · Block A — Foundations

What cheese
actually is

Cheese is concentrated, cultured, coagulated milk. Every style on a cheese board is the same handful of decisions, taken differently — and once you see the decisions, you can predict the cheese.

Duration
45 min · 35 learn / 10 review
You'll need
One cheese to look at closely
Objective
Trace milk-to-wheel; name the five decisions
Reading · 1 of 2

The milk-to-wheel chain

Cheese is a way of preserving milk by removing water and concentrating fat and protein. Every step below is a lever a cheesemaker pulls — and pulling it differently is what makes a Brie different from a cheddar.

  1. Milk

    Cow, goat, sheep, or water buffalo. Species, breed, diet, and season all set the raw material before anyone makes a decision.

  2. Culture

    Bacterial starter cultures are added to acidify the milk and begin building flavor — the cheese world's answer to fermentation in wine and chocolate.

  3. Coagulation

    Rennet (enzymatic) or acid (like lemon juice or vinegar) causes milk proteins to gel into a solid curd, separating from the liquid whey.

  4. Cutting & cooking

    The curd is cut into pieces — smaller pieces release more whey, making a drier, harder final cheese. Some styles are gently warmed to push moisture out further.

  5. Molding & pressing

    Curds go into molds; some are pressed under weight (dense, hard cheeses), others left to drain under their own weight (soft, moist cheeses).

  6. Salting

    By brine bath, dry rub, or mixed into the curd. Salt controls moisture, seasons the cheese, and shapes which microbes can grow on or in it.

  7. Aging (affinage)

    Days for fresh cheese, years for hard aged wheels. This is where rind, texture, and the bulk of complex flavor develop.

Reading · 2 of 2

The five decisions that make every style

Just as the wine and chocolate courses read a handful of structural components, every cheese can be read on five decisions. Click each:

Why this matters more than names

There are thousands of named cheeses, but only a few real decisions behind them. Learn to read milk, culture, coagulant, moisture, and aging, and an unfamiliar cheese on a board stops being a mystery — you can predict roughly how it will taste and feel before you cut it.

Check yourself

Five questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. List the milk-to-wheel chain from milk to affinage.
  2. What does rennet do, versus acid?
  3. How does curd-cutting size affect the final cheese?
  4. Name the five structural decisions.
  5. Why learn decisions instead of memorizing names?
Session 2 · Block A — Foundations

The Tasting
Instrument

Cheese asks for a slower read than most food: rind, paste, and finish all carry separate information. Learn the method, then read structure before reaching for a flavor word.

Duration
45 min · 35 learn / 10 review
You'll need
2–3 contrasting cheeses
Objective
Run the method; read structure, not flavor
Reading · 1 of 3

Six steps: look, smell, feel, taste, texture, finish

Cheese is alive — the rind is doing something different from the paste underneath, and both change with temperature. The method captures all of it, in order.

  1. Look

    Rind color and pattern, paste color, any veining or eyes (holes). A bulging rind or a paste that's darker at the edge tells you aging is happening from the outside in.

  2. Smell the rind, then the paste

    They often smell completely different — a pungent washed rind can sit over a mild, sweet paste. Smell both before you conclude anything.

  3. Feel

    Bend or press a piece. Fresh cheese yields easily; a well-aged hard cheese resists and may show tyrosine crystals — small, gritty, savory crunch points.

  4. Taste — bring to room temperature first

    Cold mutes fat and aroma. Let cheese sit 20–30 minutes before tasting; the same wedge tastes noticeably different cold versus at room temperature.

  5. Texture in the mouth

    Creamy, crumbly, elastic, grainy, waxy — texture carries as much information as flavor about moisture, age, and milk type.

  6. Finish

    How long flavor lingers and how it evolves after swallowing — salt first, then fat, then often a final savory or barnyard note in aged cheeses.

Reading · 2 of 3 — the instrument

Read the structure

Set each axis for the cheese in front of you; the instrument reads the combination back.

Tasting Instrument
Instrument reading
Set the axes above to generate a reading.
Why structure first

"Funky" or "sharp" are subjective and easy to misuse. Moisture, salt, acidity, and pungency are more measurable and point directly to milk, age, and rind type before you reach for a single flavor word.

Reading · 3 of 3 — calibration

Anchor your scales

Borrow reference points from the kitchen so your sliders mean something. Click each:

Do this now · ~8 min

Run one cheese through the instrument

  1. Room temperature

    Pull the cheese 20–30 minutes before tasting — never straight from the fridge.

  2. Rind and paste separately

    Taste a bite with rind, then paste alone. Note whether they agree or contrast.

  3. Log it

    Set all six axes, read the synthesis, and check it against what you'd expect from the cheese's name or style.

Check yourself

Five questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. List the six steps in order.
  2. Why smell the rind and paste separately?
  3. What are tyrosine crystals a sign of?
  4. Why bring cheese to room temperature before tasting?
  5. Give a kitchen anchor for high acidity and one for high pungency.
Session 3 · Block A — Foundations

Calibration &
the flavor wheel

Tasting cheese well is trainable. Fix your reference points for the basic sensations, then use a working vocabulary instead of reaching for "sharp" every time.

Duration
45 min · 35 learn / 10 review
You'll need
A mild fresh cheese and a pungent aged one
Objective
Calibrate the basics; use the flavor lexicon
Reading · 1 of 2

The sensations you're measuring

Several things happen at once on the palate. Separate them and your notes stop being vague.

The common beginner error is collapsing sharpness, acidity, and pungency into one word. They come from different causes — age/salt, culture/coagulation type, and rind bacteria respectively — and separating them is most of the skill.

Reading · 2 of 2

The flavor wheel

Rather than reaching for "cheesy," work from families. Click each to see what lives inside it:

How to use it

Start broad (which family?), then narrow (which note?). "Nutty → toasted → hazelnut" beats guessing "hazelnut" cold. A young chèvre lands in fresh/lactic; an 18-month Comté lands in nutty/brothy. Naming the family is enough to start.

Do this now · ~8 min

Train two contrasts

  1. Fresh vs aged

    Taste a young chèvre or fresh mozzarella, then an aged hard cheese. Note how acidity fades and savory/nutty notes build with age.

  2. Mild vs pungent

    Taste a mild semi-hard, then a washed-rind cheese. Fix the difference between "flavorful" and genuinely pungent.

  3. Name families, not just notes

    For each cheese, commit to one or two flavor families before hunting specific notes.

Check yourself

Five questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Distinguish sharpness, acidity, and pungency — cause of each.
  2. How does flavor typically shift from fresh to aged?
  3. Name four flavor families and a note in each.
  4. What causes tyrosine crystals, and what do they signal?
  5. Why start with a family before a specific note?