Boursin cheese

Boursin [buʁsɛ̃] is a brand of Gournay cheese. It is a soft creamy cheese available in a variety of flavours, with a flavour and texture somewhat similar to cream cheese.

Boursin
Country of originFrance
Region, townNormandy
Source of milkCows
PasteurisedYes
TextureSoft
CertificationNone
Related media on Wikimedia Commons

The first Boursin flavour, [1] Garlic and Fine Herbs, was created in 1957 by François Boursin, a cheese maker from Normandy. Boursin's product was derived from a traditional party dish, fromage frais (French for "fresh cheese"); guests would take their cheese and add herbs for flavour. His recipe would be the first flavoured cheese product to be sold nationally in France. Boursin cheese was first developed in Normandy,[2] and at one time was produced exclusively in Croisy-sur-Eure, France, by the Boursin company. In 1990, the Boursin name was acquired by Unilever, who sold it to Groupe Bel in November 2007 for €400 million.[3]

Advertising

The brand was advertised on television from 1 October 1968 on, when French television allowed commercial breaks for the first time. [4] In 1972 their iconic advertising slogan: "Du pain, du vin, du Boursin" (English: "Some bread, some wine, some Boursin") was launched.[5] This slogan was later modified to "Du pain, du Boursin, on est bien" ("Some bread, some Boursin, we are good.")[6]

Flavors

  • Garlic & Fine Herbs (1963-present)
  • Pepper (1966-present)
  • Fig & Walnut (2004-present)
  • Shallot & Chive (2007-present)
  • Red Chili Pepper (2014-present)
  • Cranberry & Spice (originally a limited edition flavor in US, sold as Cranberry & Pepper in France)
  • Basil & Chive (2017-present)

Limited Edition Flavors

  • Maple Bourbon (2018)
  • Apple Cinnamon (2020)

Discontinued Flavors

  • Fig, Raisin & Nut (2007-?)
  • Garlic & Roasted Red Pepper
  • Tomato & Mediterranean Herbs (2012-?)
  • Goat Cheese & Rosemary (2013-?)
gollark: Bad?
gollark: Gollarious NN data and usage instructions (it's basically trivial because someone else did all the work) available on request.
gollark: I KNEW Scala was a lie perpetuated by Java users in denial.
gollark: > Beware apioforms. It has zero width space for that.<|endoftext|>The idea was not that it was designed to spread frequently pressed keys around the keyboard and bite.<|endoftext|>I think the key is that they could move onto achieve arbitrary sorts though, but *not* the right way to run a keyboard.<|endoftext|>Well, you could just use a keyboard and not automatically hit it.<|endoftext|>"Your keyboard is a desktop keyboard and has keyboard and speech synthesis capability."<|endoftext|>Ah yes, fair.<|endoftext|>No, it's bad. It has keyboard shortcuts.<|endoftext|>`utilize` should work, because it's a shell.<|endoftext|>`utilize` is a shell but only `rm` is a shell.<|endoftext|>`scala` does not exist.<|endoftext|>`scala` is a shell. It's not lua. It should not recurse infinitely.<|endoftext|>`scala` is the shell.<|endoftext|>`csh` is a shell.<|endoftext
gollark: It... says nothing?

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.