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The Rural Voice, 1980-09, Page 42THE YOUNG FARMER Perth student says French dairy farm works "every day the cows do" (Editor's note: Don Melady, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Melady of St. Columban has spent the past year studying in France. This summer he worked on a dairy farm in his host country. Following are some of his impressions.) BY DON MELADY After spending a year of studying French at the Uni versite de Besancon, I decided it would be interesting to see how a French farming community compared to its Canadian counterpart. Through a series of happy coincidences I am now spending several weeks working on the dairy farm of Jean Chopard near the tiny village of Le Chauffaud. Looking out my window across the Alpine meadows and fir forest, I can see the Swiss border just one kilometer away. As everywhere, the type of farming is strongly marked by the geography of the region, the principal influence here being the Jura Mountains, the moder- ately high range of French mountains which, 200 km. further on, melt into the Swiss Alps. For example, the Chopards' farm of 30 hectares (75 acres) is at an altitude of 1100 metres (3600 ft.) very mountainous, seldom hot, and often damp. The result is that no cropping is possible and even garden vegetables have to struggle in the 31/2 month growing season (as of the first of July, the lettuce is still just a thin discouraged green line in the cold soil). Therefore, the only farm produce possible is the milk of the hardy Mont Beliard cows, bred and raised only in this region. The big -bodied chunky cows, red and white with pure white legs and head, are fed only hay with very little mineral supplement and, of course, no grain. The average production is 21 kg/day (50 Ib.) of 3.5% milk which is marketed at $15/cwt. NOT MILK DRINKERS As opposed to Canadians, the French drink very little milk (who would, with all that good wine?) Thus as in most regions of France, the milk from this farm goes entirely to the production of one of the 400 regional cheeses. In this area, it is Comte, the cream-coloured cheese with the Targe holes which Canadians naively call "Swiss." But I assure you, the rich -flavoured, metic- ulously hand -prepared Comte bears little resemblance to the glue -like often tasteless Kraft product one buys in Canadian supermarkets! The nine dairy farmers of this small community are grouped together to form an association of cheese pro- ducers. They own a small "fromagerie" (cheese factory) and employ a profes- sional cheese maker. Because my employer is a part owner of this small plant, I had the rare good fortune to have a guided tour and thus could follow the course of the milk from when it leaves the cow to, almost one year later, when the finished product is marketed in the form of a 100 Ib. circular block of delicious cheese. REFRIGERATED The milk of the Mont Beliards is picked up at the gate after every milking. The evening milk is refrig- erated at the fromagerie until the next morning's production arrives. The cheese -master, a friendly bearded man with the muscles necessary to throw around 100 lb. blocks of cheese, explained to me that he has to work every day the cows do: in other words, he hasn't taken a day off in the 10 years he has worked there! At 7:30 a.m., after the 500 I (125 gal.) of milk have been put into 2 huge brass vats, the natural curdling agent (from the stomach of milk -fed calves) is added. This product causes the milk to curdle and draws out the butter fat in the form of curd. The milk is then heated to 70°C for 2 hours - the "cooking" process which gives the Comte its identifying solid body. At 9:45, after the now -solidifying mass has been agitated to separate the curd from the remaining liquid, the crucial and fascinating "drawing off" process begins. Stripped to the waist, the cheese -master holds a 4 ft. square piece of porous material ("cheese - doth") in his hands and teeth. With a single movement, he plunges his arms up to the shoulders into the curd and, using the cheese -cloth as a scoop, draws out 100 ib. of the dripping cheese. Relying only on his sense of weight, he is never more than 2 or 3 Ib. off. He repeats this process 3 times more, 500 1 of milk giving on the average 4-40 kg cheeses. As the milk must be slightly skimmed to produce the 45% butterfat content of the Comte, the surplus is used to make delicious whipping cream and home -churned, unsalted butter. A MOLD After the curd is drawn off, it is packed into a 2 ft. mold and put in a press to get out excess moisture. It is turned several times and finally re- ceives the date and stamp of the manufacturer before resting in the presses for the rest of the day. The next morning, when the cheese -master's day begins at 5:30, the already solid but still -white cheeses are transferred to the "warm cellar": a large room kept constantly at 27°C with shelves of cheese stretching to the ceiling. The cheese rests here for one month to ferment and to allow the hard crust to form. It is here that I found the answer to everyone's favorite question: what forms the holes? The irregularly -spaced and sized holes are the product of trapped moisture in the cheese which expands and evaporates as the cheese is left in the warmth. THE LONGEST STEP The last and longest step in the milk's progress to "cheese -hood" is its stay in the "cold -cellar." Salt is rubbed into the surface to preserve and flavour the cheese and it can stay here as long as 9 months. It is said that a cheese -master's quality lies in his hands. It is at this stage, relying only on texture, weight and consistency, that he must guide and judge the cheese's progression to perfection. And so that's how the dairy industry works in this small corner of France. Although their produce is still converted according to the old methods, the farms themselves are quite automized, with most having a pipeline milker and a silo unloader, although complete auto- mation is not yet the rule. Another tradition which is dying quickly in the area is the house and barn combined in one building. Called the "Maison comtoise" (after this region, Franche- Comte), it is a concept which flourished up until 20 years ago. Like everywhere in France, and in the world, the agricultural scene is changing, adapting to new demands and markets but retaining the best of the old ways. THE RURAL VUICEISEPTEMBER1980 PG. 41