While drinking my Lime Cooler today and quilting I started thinking........oh no, not thinking. I was thinking some cheese and crackers would taste pretty good about now. If I hadn't been so settled in I would have drove up to New Horizons Creamery in Coneville which is maybe 3 minutes from us. Now that's lazy. They have some very good homemade cheese and word around it's the same method as Olson's used at the Shinglehouse Cheese Factory. I know my family loved their cheese and I can remember going there to get cheese. I was very young and the smell of that place made me hold my breath. It reminded me of what the warm buckets of milk smelled like on our farm, icky. I've never liked milk but cheese, ice cream, yogurt and whip cream, I can eat with no problem. Back to the cheese factory. I remember my mom telling Mrs. Olson how much she wanted. It was a big wheel of cheese and Mrs. Olson would take a lever, pull it down a few times. Thinking about it I bet each time the lever was pulled down it measured the cheese by an 1/8 or 1/4 pound. Once she had it measured she would bring the lever all the way through the cheese to cut the wedge off and wrap it in paper. That's my memory but then again it could wrong.
Shinglehouse Cheese has always been a follow up with strangers when they asked us where we are from. As soon as we say Shinglehouse if they had lived or visited the area they would say, "Oh Shinglehouse Cheese, do they still make it?" In 1982 while traveling through New Mexico we stopped at a gift shop. Even back then I was a conversationalist! Before long we all were laughing. The guy that owned the store was from Bolivar, NY. He had retired from the Air Force Out there and stayed. He wanted to know about Shinglehouse Cheese and got that dreamy, hungry look wishing he could get some. Then a few years back we took the bike and a 2 man tent ending up in Smoke Hole, WV. I blogged a while back about the adventure. Smoke Hole is way back in the mountains next to NO WHERE. Well, we did see 3 men that were on a fly fishing trip from Morgantown,WV. Of course we struck up a conversation on that dusty old country store front porch. Ya never know when a good story might develop. It did, one of the men in his 70's was so excited when we told him where we were from. Shinglehouse Cheese, do they still make it? His story......he had his first teaching job in Coudersport! He taught 3 years there and then moved back to Pittsburgh and on to Morgantown, WV where he retired from teaching. He asked us if we knew of a Lou Schaub a guy with one arm from Coudersport. Of course, everyone that went to our local basketball games knew Lou. He told his friends he should have stayed in Potter County, it is one of the most beautiful places he had lived and oh that Shinglehouse Cheese. What a great feeling to hear positive memories of our area. Shinglehouse is famous for Olson' wonderful Shinglehouse Cheese ♡ What's your Shinglehouse Cheese story?
Della's Lime Cooler recipe: Juice of one lime, save a slice to cut in half and put in each glass. 3 cups of crushed ice, 2 cups of simple syrup and gin (amount to your liking, 2 shooters here). Shake or put in blender.
My mom made Lime Coolers at the Biergarten during the summer months. |
Top photo New Horizon Creamery. Middle photo, all of their specialty cheese. Bottom, my purchase. |