The Alkmaar cheese market in Holland.

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Transcript of The Alkmaar cheese market in Holland.

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Cheese carriers are required to be present at the Waaggebouw (weighing house) at 7 am,

but in reality only the kaaszetters are on time. Cheese carriers arrive at 9.30 am. Those

arriving too late are stated on the “stocks” and are required to pay a fine which is collected by

the “provost marshal”.

Cheese father calls the roll.

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The bell rings on the stroke of 10 am; the sign indicating the start of the cheese

market. The ringing of the bell is often done by a visitor to the market, at the invitation of

the council of Alkmaar, for instance. This may be a famous Dutch person from sports

or TV, or a foreign ambassador

Opening of the market.

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Price bargaining per kilo is still done by means of

clapping hands: bargaining by clapping

one another’s hands and shouting prices. The last

clap clinches the sale of a batch of cheese.

Price bargaining.

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There are five cheese markets operating in the Netherlands. Woerden is a fully functional modern commercial cheese market.

Four, Alkmaar, Gouda, Edam, Hoorn, are reproductions of traditional

merchant cheese markets as operated in the Middle Ages. These shows are today surrounded by stalls selling all things

traditional to the Dutch culture, including cheese.

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This cheese market is open every Friday morning between 10 and 12 from the first Friday

in April until the first Friday in September. Market activities are explained in Dutch, German,

English and sometimes Japanese. There are four teams (vemen) of cheese-porters (kaasdragers),

who can be recognised by their differently coloured straw hats: red, blue, green and yellow.

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The Cheesemaid’s job is to promote cheese and the Cheese Market. The idea came from the Dutch Dairy Board, who are responsible for the promotion of Dutch cheese at home and

abroad.There are always at least two Cheesemaids in attendance at the

Alkmaar Cheese Market.

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Two porters bring cheese on stretchers to the weighing house (Waag) - a typical stretcher

"weighs in" at about 160 kilograms. Merchants sample the cheeses and decide on a price using

a barter system called handjeklap, literally clapping hands

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As soon as the market opens, the samplers

and traders go to work.

Inspecting cheese is more

than just looking at its

exterior. Cheese is

knocked on and a special

cheese scoop used to obtain a piece, which

is then crumbled

between the fingers and smelled.

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Cheese is a food made from milk, usually the milk of cows, buffalo,

goats, or sheep, by coagulation. The milk is acidified, typically with a bacterial culture, then the addition of the enzyme rennet or a

substitute (e.g. acetic acid or vinegar) causes coagulation, to give "curds and whey". Some cheeses also have molds, either

on the outer rind (similar to a fruit peel) or throughout.

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Hundreds of types of cheese are produced. Their different styles, textures and flavors depend on the origin of the milk

(including the animal's diet), whether it has been pasteurized, butterfat content, the species of bacteria and mold, and the

processing including the length of aging. Herbs, spices, or wood smoke may be used as flavoring agents. The yellow to red color of

many cheeses is a result of adding annatto. Cheeses are eaten both on their own and cooked in various dishes; most cheeses melt when

heated.

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For a few cheeses, the milk is curdled by adding acids such as vinegar or lemon juice. Most cheeses are acidified to a lesser degree by bacteria, which turn milk sugars into lactic acid, then the addition of

rennet completes the curdling. Vegetarian alternatives to rennet are available; most are produced by fermentation of the

fungus Mucor miehei, but others have been extracted from various species of the Cynara thistle family.

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Cheese has served as a hedge against famine and is a good travel food. It is valuable for its portability, long life,

and high content of fat, protein, calcium, and phosphorus. Cheese is more compact and has a longer shelf life than

the milk from which it is made. Cheesemakers near a dairy region may benefit from fresher, lower-priced

milk, and lower shipping costs. The long storage life of cheese allows selling it when markets are more favorable.

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Once the batch is sold and weighed, the cheese carriers carry the cheese across the market to the buyers’ lorries.

Cheese is transported on the wooden barrow hanging between two cheese carriers, holding about 8 Gouda

cheeses, each of them weighing 13,5 kilos.

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I am sorry this is no cheese but another Dutch food; the Soused herring.

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Edam is possibly the most popular of the markets

described here, and as the name suggests, this market sells primarily

Edam cheese. The cheeses are still brought to the market by horse-drawn

carriages and boat.

EDAM.

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The biggest cheese ever made, the weight is 600,5 kilo!

http://www.cheesemarkets.nl

http://www.edam.com/

http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Roelof.