Cornish Yarg is so called for the person who invented it in the 1980s, Alan Gray, whose surname spelt backwards is Yarg.
At some point in the 1980s, while digging around in his attic, Cornish farmer Alan Gray stumbled across a 17th century recipe for nettle-wrapped cheese and set about recreating it. Today the cheese is produced by Catherine Mead and her team at Lynher Dairies in Ponsanooth, Cornwall. The nettles are foraged from the local hedgerows each spring and frozen so they can be used throughout the year. By the time the nettles are brushed onto the cheese, they have lost their sting, but they still play an important role in forming the attractive rind for which the cheese is known. The animal rennet Cornish Yarg that we sell is made solely from milk from Lynher Dairy's own herd of Ayrshire cows and is matured there for 21 to 28 days before coming to Neal's Yard Dairy ready to sell.
We have a longstanding relationship with Lynher Dairies, with whom we are in regular contact. Though most of the Cornish Yarg they make uses plant-based coagulant, they produce an animal rennet version especially for sale at Neal's Yard Dairy.