- FoodBook - find out about new food taste and experiences

Bath Soft Cheese: Difference between revisions

From FoodBook
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 9: Line 9:
https://parkfarm.co.uk/collections/all
https://parkfarm.co.uk/collections/all


https://scontent.cdninstagram.com/v/t39.30808-6/431565759_892961189507844_4167721807067732178_n.jpg?_nc_cat=110&ccb=1-7&_nc_sid=18de74&_nc_ohc=L5h-SxCcAjMAb4XPxHj&_nc_ht=scontent.cdninstagram.com&edm=ANo9K5cEAAAA&oh=00_AfAtSLe4W4lVOZFQJxJz-LD4V7SJYMYbHUQOVD1ODafRMg&oe=6614D98B


== Please tell them I sent you! ==
== Please tell them I sent you! ==

Latest revision as of 15:54, 4 April 2024

Bath Soft Cheese

The Padfield family have been happily milking a herd of cows at Park Farm for four generations. Edward Ernest Padfield took on the 240 acres of Park Farm in August 1914. Cheddar cheese was made by his wife in the building that adjoined the farmhouse and the cows were milked by hand in the building across the yard. They had a small herd of Shorthorn cows.

In 1990, when Graham Padfield decided to start making cheese again, he was able to do so in the very same buildings in which his grandmother had made her Cheddar nearly 80 years before. Times change and in 2015, production moved into a new cheese dairy adjacent to the cattle dairy and milking parlour. Graham’s award-winning cheeses are now made closer than ever to where the cows are milked – less than 50 yards away!

https://parkfarm.co.uk

https://parkfarm.co.uk/collections/all


Please tell them I sent you![edit | edit source]

Business Owner, Claim your MicroPage[edit | edit source]