Photo: Mariann Tvete, Nationen

This Norwegian Cheese Is Officially the Best in the World

Food + Drink
by Ben Steele Jan 9, 2019

If you love cheese but always stick to the typical European cheeses we all know and love, then you’re missing out on the best cheese in the world. A family-run farm in Norway holds one of the most prestigious titles in the cheese-making world: overall winner of the World Cheese Awards.

The winning aged gouda is called fanaost, and is made by Norwegian cheesemaker named Jørn Hafslund on the Ostegården farm. Fanaost beat out 3,472 cheeses from around the world to claim the title. With a herd of just 12 cows, Ostegården is the smallest dairy to win the competition in the World Cheese Awards’ 30-plus-year history.

Biting into a crumbly chunk of two-year-old fanaost, it’s easy to see why the cheese won over the judges. I’m hit by a powerful punch of umami, and the rich, savory taste lingers on my tongue long after I’m done chewing. Hafslund told me the secret to fanaost’s success is partly due to the local landscape that those 12 cows roam. Ostegården is situated by the side of a fjord, in an area of rich pastureland.

“We have up to 14 types of grasses here, all with their own special flavours,” Hafslund said. “This gives our milk a unique taste.”

Good grass for the cows means good milk, and good milk means good cheese. The judges at the World Cheese Awards took note of the cheese’s origins, saying that it “really delivers a sense of place.”

How the best cheesemaker in the world got started

Ostegarden sign at the front of the Ostegården farm

Photo: Ostegården

Hafslund and his family started making cheese around 12 years ago as a side project to use up some of their farm’s milk supply. The farmer, a wry man in his mid-60s, said the process has been a form of “adult education.”

“You never stop learning,” Hafslund said. “There has been so much to take in, and to get our heads around.”

The family doesn’t just make fanaost. Their small farm also produces a camembert-style cheese, brie, and chili and pear jam.

It’s been “a bit too much fun,” he had said with a rueful smile. He’s due to retire soon, and is already taking steps to hand the business over to his sons.

Winning the top prize in the World Cheese Awards was “the experience of a lifetime.” The awards were presented after a day of blind tasting, which took place in Bergen, Norway in November 2018. The cheeses were sampled by 230 judges from 29 countries, who nosed and sorted them into bronze, silver, gold, and super gold categories.

Of the 78 super gold cheeses, 15 were from Spain; 13 from Italy; nine from the UK; eight each from the US and Norway; five from Austria; four from France; two each from Switzerland, Denmark, South Africa, Ireland, Croatia, and the Netherlands; and one each from Sweden, Estonia, Belgium, and Israel.

Eventually, the competing entries were whittled down to a shortlist of 16 cheeses. The merits of those cheeses were debated by a group called the Super Jury in front of a live audience. It was made for TV drama, but for cheese lovers. A French sheep’s cheese called Ossau-Iraty and a Norwegian brown cheese called Helfeit, Brun Geitost — Tinntradisjon were a few close favorites. Fanaost, however, emerged the overall winner.

“I have no words,” Hafslund said when he was crowned as the winner. “Our herd of 12 cows produces nice milk to make this Dutch-inspired fanaost cheese, which we have been making for 12 years. Cheese makers here look out for each other and work together, so this is for Norway!”

Norway has some of the best cheese in the world

Large wheen of aged Fanaost cheese with smaller wheels in the background

Photo: Ostegården

This isn’t the first time a cheese from Norway won the global competition. In 2016, a blue cheese from the country’s Tingvollost dairy claimed the top prize. Hafslund believes that Norway’s success may come down to strong partnerships between local cheesemakers.

According to him, “Dairy owners here look out for each other and work together. When we have problems, we help each other out.”

This cooperation doesn’t just extend to other dairies. Hafslund has also partnered with local brewers to put on shared food and drink events, and has worked with hotels that want to give their guests a taste of Norway.

He sees collaborations like this as a vital activity for any business. “Working together is the key to success,” he said. “That’s what I believe.”

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