The Insufficient Kitchen

Cheese Straws

Adapted from Tamasin Day-Lewis’s Kitchen Bible

Prep time: about 15 minutes

Baking time: about 20 minutes

Yield: 30-40 cheese straws, depending on slicing technique

Please read the notes, below, for a discussion of the many possible recipe variations.

45 grams/1.5 ounces sharp Cheddar cheese, grated

1 egg yolk

170 grams/6 ounces/3/4 cup AP Flour

1 teaspoon fine sea salt

1 teaspoon pepper

100 grams/4 ounces unsalted butter, cold

enough water to bind, if needed

Additions: Add no more than two, or your dough may fall apart:

1-2 teaspoons horseradish

1-2 teaspoons Worcestshire sauce

1-2 teaspoons seedy mustard

1-2 teaspoons English mustard (i.e. powdered)

1-2 teaspoons cayenne pepper

1/4 teaspoon-1 teaspoon hot red pepper flakes (consider your eaters here)

1-2 teaspoons sumac

1-2 teaspoons ground pomegranate seed

1-2 teaspoons chaat masala

1 small garlic clove, crushed to remove the peel, then very finely minced

the green portion of 1 scallion, very finely minced

Preheat the oven to 375F/190C

Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicon baking liner.

Either grate the cheese into a medium bowl or pare it finely with a vegetable parer. If you’re confident about your egg-separating abilities, you can separate the egg into the cheese, but I’m not deft enough and prefer doing this in separate bowls.

Measure the flour into a large bowl. Add the salt and pepper.

Cut the butter into small pieces and add these to the flour. Using a pastry cutter, two forks, or your clean fingertips, blend the butter and flour until the dough begins to cohere.

Add the egg, cheese, and your chosen variations to the flour/butter mixture. Mix until you have a dough. You may need to add some water; this depends on weather, your kitchen, and the ingredients.

Once the dough begins coming together, lightly flour a clean work surface and dump the dough out. It can still be pretty rough. Knead into a ball, and allow it to rest a few minutes–while the dough rests, you can do the washing up.

After five to ten minutes, flour a rolling pin lightly. Flour the dough ball very lightly, and gently roll/pat it into a rough square:

I know pictures in recipes are a hassle, but in this instance I hopes it helps.

With a sharp knife, slice the dough thinly-or thickly–into straws. As noted in the post, the dough breaks easily. It helps to slip the straw on to the flat edge of the knife, and move it over to the baking tray that way. But don’t fret too much over this.

Line up the straws as best you can on the baking tray; the process can get messy, in my experience.

Once all the dough is sliced, bake for about 20 minutes. You want the straws golden but not browned.

Allow to cheese straws to cool on a rack before storing in an airtight tin. Cheese straws will keep 8-10 days.

To freeze cheese straws, open freeze slice, unbaked straws on lined baking sheet. Once they’re frozen, store them in a freezer bag and bake from frozen, allowing a bit more baking time.

Notes:

Other sharp or strongly flavored cheeses may be used here, like Parmesan, Manchego, or Gouda.

If you want to make crackers, a less intense dough is recommended–hold back on spices on like cayenne or hot pepper flakes. Remember crackers are a base, not the reason to eat.

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