A pasteurised cow's milk cheese, mostly from Gloucester cattle. The curds are washed in perry made from the 'Stinking Bishop' pear before being ladled into moulds. To encourage bacterial activity, salt is not added until the cheeses are removed from the moulds. The cheese is washed in more perry as it matures, producing small wheels with an extremely pungent sticky orange rind and pale, creamy, interior. 2021 Made since 1994 by Charles Martell at Laurel Farm, Dymock, who say that "The pear was named after an infamous Ledbury farmer, Frederick Bishop, nicknamed Stinking Bishop, who was born in the mid-19th century and known for his drunken temper. One story is that he blasted a kettle that was on his stove at home, as it annoyed him. He is reputedly buried in the churchyard of the Parish Church of Colwall, a village between Ledbury and Malvern." However, the name 'Stinking Bishop' is known earlier for an insect which, according to The London Examiner of 4 April 1841; "has acquired the epithet by the intolerable nausea with which the air is impregnated wherever it is on wing in the neighbourhood” stinkingbishop.co.uk |
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