As you know, here at The Salt we've been a little obsessed with yogurt lately.

But there's a flip side to the story of the yogurt boom. What about that other product made from fermented milk that had its boom from 1950 to 1975, and has been sliding into obscurity ever since?

Cottage cheese took off as a diet and health food in the 1950s.

It makes a cameo in the show Mad Men, that time capsule of the 1960s, as poor Betty Draper describes her last meal before going to the hospital to give birth: "Toast, cottage cheese, pineapple," she tells her unsympathetic nurse.

On the day that he announced his resignation, Richard Nixon ate this meal of cottage cheese and pineapple slices.

On the day that he announced his resignation, Richard Nixon ate this meal of cottage cheese and pineapple slices.

Robert Knudsen/Nixon Library

Cottage cheese peaked in the early 1970s, when the average American ate about 5 pounds of it per year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Richard Nixon apparently ate even more.

The same hidden tape recorders that helped bring down our 37th president also recorded him repeatedly ordering cottage cheese, often with pineapple.

Since then, though, Americans have cut their cottage cheese consumption in half. For comparison, per capita consumption of yogurt has increased sevenfold over that time.

Nobody can be sure of the exact reasons for this.

Tim Noll, who worked for decades as plant manager for a now-shuttered cottage cheese manufacturer called Bancroft Dairy in Madison, Wis., thinks it's partly due to the difficulty of making cottage cheese of consistently high quality. "I think it's safe to say that in just about every plant that makes cottage cheese, it's regarded as the hardest product to make," he says.

Robert Bradley, who's taught cheese-making at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, for 50 years, agrees. "It takes personal attention. It's a very fragile product," he says.

Making cottage cheese starts with milk and bacteria, as yogurt does, although the two products use different types of bacteria. A semi-solid curd forms, and just at the right moment, you have to cut the curd into small cubes. Then the curd is cooked and washed. Sometimes cream is added. It all takes careful handling.

A USDA poster promoting cottage cheese.

A USDA poster promoting cottage cheese.

U.S. Department of Agriculture

"We don't have the degree of dedication to this manufacture that we used to have," Bradley says.

As a result, quality varies. Bradley says that sometimes the product doesn't taste quite right.

Noll, though, points to another difficulty that has nothing to do with manufacturing. The people who run big food companies these days seem to feel that cottage cheese is a little old-fashioned. "I haven't heard anybody on the marketing side trying to do anything exciting with cottage cheese in quite a while," he says.

That, of course, is very different from yogurt.

When I recently visited the dairy aisle of one supermarket, I found five whole sections of shelves filled with Greek yogurt, Australian-style yogurt and yogurt with all different flavorings. Off in the corner, there was one set of shelves with generic-looking cottage cheese.

Gerry Berman, a shopper, says there's lots of marketing about how "Greek yogurt is so good for us." Cottage cheese doesn't have the same marketing behind it. "Nobody talks about it anymore."

"When we were younger, it was really promoted for your salad," says her friend Madeline Anglin.

"Cottage cheese and peach slices!" says Berman. "And a hamburger patty!"

A younger shopper, Mary Scott Bogatz, tells me that she hasn't tasted cottage cheese in years. "It's really good for you, I know, but I just don't like the chunky and the creamy; the texture freaks me out," she says.

She walks off with a big container of plain yogurt.

But then, a few minutes later, she comes back. Just talking about cottage cheese got her thinking about it, she says. She's ready to try some again.

Maybe there's hope for cottage cheese after all.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

This week, we've been telling stories of yogurt. It's an ancient food in the midst of a boom. But as it happens, while yogurt has been on the rise, another cultured milk product has been sliding into obscurity which led NPR's Dan Charles to ask, what's up with cottage cheese?

DAN CHARLES, BYLINE: There was a time when cottage cheese was the food of presidents - one president, anyway.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

RICHARD NIXON: (Unintelligible) cottage cheese with pineapple in there.

CHARLES: If you didn't catch that, it was President Richard Nixon recorded on his White House taping system asking for cottage cheese with pineapple. It was 1973. A year later, that's what he ate right before announcing he would resign. Cottage cheese took off as a health and diet food in the 1950's. Here it is on the show “Mad Men” that time-capsuled the 1960s. Betty Draper is explaining what she just ate before giving birth.

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, “MAD MEN”)

JANUARY JONES: (As Betty Draper) Toast, cottage cheese, pineapple.

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR: (As character) Pineapple - what were you thinking? Anything else, sweetheart?

CHARLES: Consumption of cottage cheese peaked in the early 1970s when the average American ate about five pounds of it every year. Yogurt, at that time, was not even half as popular.

(SOUNDBITE OF AD)

UNIDENTIFIED NARRATOR: If you eat cottage cheese when you diet to help you look the way you want to look, you should eat our kind of cottage cheese.

CHARLES: Since 1975, though, per-capita consumption of yogurt has increased by seven times while average cottage cheese consumption has fallen in half. Nobody can be sure exactly why. Tim Noll worked for decades as a plant manager for big cottage cheese manufacturer Bancroft Dairy in Madison, Wis. He thinks that it's something to do with how you make it.

TIM NOLL: I think it's safe to say that in just about every plant that makes cottage cheese, it's regarded as the hardest product to make.

CHARLES: And here's Robert Bradley, who taught cheese-making at the University of Wisconsin Madison, for 50 years.

ROBERT BRADLEY: It takes personal attention. It's a very fragile product.

CHARLES: Like yogurt, it starts with milk and bacteria, but different bacteria from yogurt. A curd forms, and at just the right moment, you have to cut it into small cubes. Then the curd is cooked and washed. Sometimes cream is added. It all takes careful handling.

BRADLEY: We don't have the degree of dedication to this manufacture that we used to have.

CHARLES: And as a result, quality varies. Bradley says sometimes the product doesn't taste quite right. Tim Noll, though, points to another difficulty that has nothing to do with manufacturing. The people who run big food companies these days just seem to feel that cottage cheese is a little old-fashioned.

BRADLEY: I haven't heard of anybody on the marketing side trying to do anything exciting in cottage cheese for quite a while.

CHARLES: That, of course is very different from yogurt. In the dairy aisle of this supermarket, I find five whole sections filled with Greek yogurt, Australian-style yogurt, yogurt with all different flavorings. Off in the corner there is just one section with generic-looking cottage cheese. Gerry Berman and Madeline Anglin, shoppers here, say that's the difference.

GERRY BERMAN: Marketing that Greek yogurt is so good for us - it's not the marketing for cottage cheese. Nobody talks about it anymore.

MADELINE ANGLIN: When we were younger, you know, it was really promoted for your salad, for just…

BERMAN: Cottage cheese and peach slices (laughter) and a hamburger patty.

(LAUGHTER)

CHARLES: A younger shopper, Mary Scott Bogatz, tells me she hasn't tasted cottage cheese in years.

MARY SCOTT BOGATZ: It's really good for you, I know, but I just don't like the chunky and the creamy. The texture freaks me out.

CHARLES: She walks off with a big container of plain yogurt. But then a few minutes later she comes back. Just talking about cottage cheese got me thinking about it, she says. She's ready to try some again. Dan Charles, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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