The production of
sour milk cheese has been known for around 7,000 years. By accident, the
Sumerians discovered that leftover milk thickens and forms a solid mass with time. Thus, the first sour milk cheese was created. The knowledge of sour milk cheese production was spread by the
Romans throughout Europe. Cheese was made thousands of years ago by the
Celts living in Vorarlberg, the pioneers of cheese-making in the Alpine region. The Celts brought the "cheese maker" to Vorarlberg. "Käsker" is the name given to the form in which the cheese mass is still squeezed out on the alpine pastures. In the 17th century, sour milk cheese was displaced by
rennet cheese production in many regions. Rennet cheese was better storable and transportable. This enabled trans-regional transport to the newly emerging cities. In the Montafon valley, however, the sour milk cheese dairy was preserved. In the 1960s, more and more dairies had to close in the Montafon region. At that time, cheese production was concentrated on a few dairies in the valley. Due to a lack of traditional awareness and low regional marketing, there was a steady decline in local cheese specialties, including the Sura Kees. It was not until the beginning of 1990 that there was a return and revival of historical values. The Sura Kees became more and more popular especially with the younger generations, farm shops emerged and the tourism industry and gastronomy discovered the sour cheese as an advertising medium. The Sura Kees recipe is one of the oldest in the German-speaking region. In 1997, the association "Montafon bewusst-er-leben" was founded to market regional agricultural products. In 2007, the club dealt with the re-marketing of Sura Kees. == See also ==