Making Fondue

When we first started making fondue, we doubled the recipe, which meant we needed a larger pot to prepare the meal. We found that the Le Creuset Enameled Cast Iron Cocotte spreads the heat evenly. It isn’t as light as a traditional earthenware coquelon, but it has two handles and is easy to move around.

Le Cruesete Duch Oven Open
Le Creuset cookware. Photo courtesy of Le Creuset.

From Le Creuset, we also found a cast iron burner that takes a tin with jelled alcohol. This is used for keeping food warm in catering and is available even in supermarkets.

We use an adaptation of the classic recipe for fondue with a mixture of cheeses. Gruyère, of course, is the base, with half the weight Emmentaler and about two teaspoonfuls of Sap Sago for exceptional flavor.

All are dissolved in a dry white wine with 1/8 cup Luxardo’s Marascino instead of Kirsch and 2 teaspoonfuls of fresh lemon juice.

I’m very excited because I found two perfect wines, one to use when making the fondue and the other to drink with it after it’s finished. The wine I used for cooking is the Corvo Grillo, a dry white from Sicily that is inexpensive enough but also good enough to either drink or use in cooking. It’s a bit on the acidic side, but that works very well with the melting cheese.

The drinking wine with this fondue was from the Cantine Ermes, a co-op in the heart of Sicily’s Belice Valley. It’s called Vento di Mare Moscato and is a lovely, semi-frizzante from a grape ubiquitous in the Mediterranean that has adapted very well to the Sicilian terroir. This is an off-dry effervescent wine that’s nicely aromatic and paired beautifully with the fondue.

Knowing that the flavor of the fondue can only be as good as the cheese quality, I purchase the best available properly aged imported cheeses. The cheese mixture is dredged with a tablespoonful of flour.

The aromatics I use are two pinches of nutmeg, one medium-size fine diced garlic clove, and ground green Malabar pepper. I lightly brown the garlic in one teaspoon of sweet butter at the bottom of the cocotte before adding the wine, instead of just rubbing the pot with a halved garlic clove, as is the regular practice.

Portuguese Rolls
Portuguese hard rolls. Photo by Manos Angelakis.

I like a good sliced baguette with a firm crust as a dunkable. Unfortunately, in our area, a good baguette is practically impossible to find. There are plenty of “Italian” loaves, but most are limp with a spongy interior. When older than second day, they’re like chewing on cardboard.

So the last time we made fondue, we improvised with cubed, fresh Portuguese hard rolls from a local bakery. We used three rolls cut into one-inch cubes, all with one side of crust. This wasn’t as good as a baguette, but much better than the supermarket’s “Italian” loaves.

There are many other dunkables that can be used with a cheese fondue, but I’m a purist. So I normally only use bread. 

Again, a dish is only as good as the ingredients in it. Using the best fresh ingredients you can find is essential in preparing a great fondue.

Enjoy!

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Manos Angelakis is one of the founders, the former Managing Editor for 25 years, the current Managing Editor Emeritus, and Senior Food & Wine Writer of LuxuryWeb Magazine. He is an accomplished travel writer, photographer, and food and wine critic based in Hackensack, New Jersey. As a travel writer, he has written extensively about numerous cities and countries. Manos has also been certified as a Tuscan Wine Master and has traveled to wine-producing areas in order to evaluate firsthand the product of top-rated vineyards. In the past year, he has visited and written multiple articles about Morocco, Turkey, Quebec City, Switzerland, Antarctica, and most recently the South of France. Articles in other publications include Vision Times and Epoch Times.

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