Making Raclette without special equipment or specific type of cheese

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I have a sizable chunk of emmenthal cheese taking up valuable space in my fridge, and I was looking for a recipe to use it in. Drilling down into Swiss cuisine at wikipedia, I encountered an intriguing mention of Raclette, an apparently simple meal of 'scraped' hot cheese with various accompaniments.

My questions are: 1. Is emmenthal an acceptable alternative to true raclette cheese?
2. I have no intention of going out and buying a specific 'raclette' gadget, so is there some sort of workaround using ordinary kitchen utensils that will allow me to recreate the traditional ralette experience (ie. scraping the edge of the cheese with a knife)?



Best Answer

I would recommend inviting your friends and family over for a cheese fondue party. Fondue requires a large amount of Emmental, so this should take care of your space issue. Also, Emmental is the perfect fondue cheese with its distinctly nutty flavor that complements the addition of dry white wine and Kirsch liqueur.

http://RacletteChalet.com




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Can you use any cheese in raclette?

Raclette cheese is the traditional choice for making raclette, but if you can't find it you can use another kind of Swiss cheese, like emmental or gruyere. And even Cheddar will do in a pinch! If you're not in a hurry and want to do things traditionally, you can get raclette cheese on Amazon here.

What can you use instead of raclette cheese?

If you don't have Raclette cheese you can substitute equal amounts of one of these other cheeses:
  • Gruyere.
  • OR - Emmental.
  • OR - Fontina.
  • OR - Appenzeller.


What is the typical cheese in a traditional raclette dish?

The word raclette is both the name of a type of Swiss cheese and the name of the dish itself. As soon as the nights start to become a bit chilly, the Swiss can be seen tucking into a bubbling pot of Cheese Fondue or sharing a raclette dinner with friends.

How do you make a raclette without a machine?

Don't have a raclette machine or a microwave? Then it's oven time. In this case, prepare a tartiflette with the raclette. To do this, lay layers of cooked and sliced potatoes in a baking dish, add bacon, cover with raclette cheese and bake in the oven until the cheese has melted.



RACLETTE | How to Prepare SWISS RACLETTE at HOME




More answers regarding making Raclette without special equipment or specific type of cheese

Answer 2

To answer the other half of your question, if you did want to do a raclette without any special equipment, I guess you could do something equivalent using the grill in your oven, but you'd have to be eating in the kitchen. You'd need to stand the cheese on something, with one side close to the grill, then whip it out and scrape of the melted bit every so often. (Note: that this would actually be easier with (rectangular) Emmental than real (semi-circular) Raclette cheese)

I would image that in "the old days", the cheese was just laid flat on a surface and placed near any source of heat (open fire), though this would be complicated by the cheese 'running' on its own.

Just for culture's sake, here is what a traditional raclette gadget (four à raclette) looks like: enter image description here

And here is what a modern one looks like: the best are combined with an invertible top which allows you to do pancakes on one side, and table-fried meat on the other (not typically all in the same meal, I hasten to add!)

enter image description here

Answer 3

Speaking as somebody who grew up in and lives close to the Emmental region: No. Raclette is a very specific type of cheese particularly suited for frying. It is produced mainly in the Valais region and is an AOC.

If you try a raclette type dish with Emmental, you'll end up with a stringy mess of questionable culinary value. About the only thing I can think of doing with Emmental (apart from eating it on bread or with baked potatoes) is cubing it into vegetable soup.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Leah Kelley, Pixabay, Dzenina Lukac, Caryn