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Photos by Evan Lewis/elewis@vicad.com
Emilio Martinez, 30, and Andrea Cudin, owner/cheese maker of Lira Rossa Artisan Cheese in Moulton, make burrata. The cheeses can be purchased at the Urban Harvest Farmers Market in Houston.
CHEESEMAKER BRINGS TASTE OF ITALY TO CROSSROADS BY ELENA ANITA WATTS ewatts@vicad.com
Andrea Cudin, owner of Lira Rossa Artisan Cheese, places fresh, homemade cheeses made from original Italian recipes in the refrigerator in a small building on the Four E Dairy in Moulton. The building is always open, and some of the bags are marked with customersâ names who leave money when they pick up their purchases. Other cheeses are there for the taking by anyone, and they are asked to leave their payment. Lira Rossa operates under the rule of the honor system. Cudin brought old-world recipes from the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region of Italy 94
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DISCOVER 2019
to the Crossroads when he moved to the area with his wife, Jillian Scheumack Cudin. Since then, he has returned to a small village creamery in his native country for five weeks to learn more about making cheese. He turned his hobby into a business in 2016, and the cheesemaker who provided Cudin with instruction in Italy made the trip to Texas for the grand opening. Milk from Four E Dairy is piped directly from the milk barn into the creamery where Cudin makes his cheeses. The quality of the milk determines the quality of the cheese, and more than 300 Jersey cows at the Four E Dairy produce a
high-quality product, Cudin said. The cows are grass-fed and roam free on the farm. They are not given antibiotics or hormones. âThat makes the milk richer in healthy enzymes and less prone to contaminations, therefore, safer,â Cudin continued. âCheese is a result of processing milk, so you already know if you have good cheese based on the milk.â One gallon of milk makes about one pound of cheese. Cudin makes at least 15 types of cheese that range in weight from about an ounce to 14-pound wheels. The most popular cheeses are latteria, mozzarella and ricotta. The latteria, made
from raw milk by following an original Friuli-region recipe, is the signature Alpine-style cheese. The flavor is âdelicateâ and âstrengthens and becomes more aromatic with age.â Other varieties include caciotta, ricotta affumicata and formadi frant. âFirst, mozzarella was our bestseller, and now, latteria is,â Cudin said. âAnd our ricotta, when you try ours, you never go back because itâs so different.â Lira Rossa is the only creamery anywhere in the area making what Cudin calls âreal ricotta.â Cudin travels every Friday to Houston, stays the night and attends the Urban Harvest Farmers Market on