Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (2024)


Have you ever seen the fondue kits they sell in the grocery store? Now flip the packaging over and read the ingredients....

hmm.

There's a lot of stuff in there that's not all that pronounceable!!

I am not a purist or a food snob in any way --- I'm happy with melting Velveeta down and mixing it with a can of Rotel! :-)

BUT.

Sometimes you want something a bit more sophisticated.

And that's a-okay.

Here is a From Scratch recipe for CrockPot Fondue. AND?

You can use the Little Dipper(aff link) which is totally and completely awesome.

:-)

Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (1)
Day 270.

It's Friday Fondue Day! I've had quite a few fondue recipes bookmarked on the computer and torn out of magazines, but I haven't made any yet.

I don't really know why, and since I have less than 100! days to go, I figured I better get cracking.

So, for the next few Fridays, I'm going to post a fondue recipe until I run out.

That means that my Friday Fondue Day will really be on Thursday.

I made this in a Little Dipper, but you can use any small crockpot, or insert an oven-safe dish into your big one.

STEPH, what do you mean an "oven safe" dish? Use anything you'd feel comfortable throwing into an oven, the microwave, or dishwasher. Usually a heavy ceramic dish like Corningware or thick glass like a Pyrex (aff link).


Or you can quadruple everything and have a big vat of cheesiness.

:-)

How to Make Homemade From Scratch Cheese Fondue

The Ingredients.
serves 4 to 6


Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (2)
3/4 cup TOTAL of "fancy cheese"
--> I used 1/4 cup goat, 1/4 cupgruyere, and 1/4 cupswiss <--
1/4 cup white wine
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

PS: mix up the cheeses however you'd like --- sharp cheddar, brie, pepper jack --


what's great about this particular recipe is that it will melt nicely and still be thick without needing to add flour.


This keeps this fondue keto and low carb friendly, along with being naturally gluten free.


The white wine provides a bit of a "bite" -- but if you do not want to add alcohol, use apple cider instead.

The Directions.

Shred the hard cheese and put them in the Little Dipper.


Add the goat cheese.


Pour in the white wine and sprinkle the nutmeg on top.

No need to stir---it will melt together.

Plug in the Little Dipper. Cook for 45 minutes, then stir.

Cover again and heat until cheese is melted and bubbly.

Serve with bread, croutons, crackers, or your favorite dipping vegetables.

I made large croutons out of a loaf brown rice bread since we are gluten free.

All I did was brush olive oil on both sides, and sprinkle with Kosher salt and pepper.

Then bake at 400 until golden, flipping once.

HEY STEPH: I don't like gruyere!
then use something you DO like! :-)



The Verdict.

Very tasty.

The kids really liked this more than I wanted them to. I kind of thought this was going to be a grown-up snack, but they ate a LOT.

I'm envisioning a fondue party in our future.



Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (3)

Posted by: Stephanie O'Dea | A Year of Slow Cooking at September 26, 2008

Labels: appetizers, dip, fondue, gluten free, mini crockpot, snacks,

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What they say about this article

  1. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (4)

    Mmmmmm.... cheese. I've not had cheese fondue before but could just about eat my weight in chocolate fondue. I'll have to try this for our Christmas Eve "dinnertizer". Christmas Eve dinner is just a bunch of appetizers and this would be wonderful.

    ~micha

    ReplyDelete

  2. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (5)

    okay, let me show my cheese ignorance....there was another recipe I wanted to try with gruyere, and I couldn't find it at 2 different stores....is there another name it might go by?

    ReplyDelete

  3. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (6)

    I don't know, Gretchen! I've found it in the "fancy" cheese part of the grocery store, which is usually not where cheddar, string cheese, etc. is sold, but in a separate dairy case with brie and laughing cow cheese.

    Gruyere tastes like a hard swiss with more of a nutty flavor. It's quite tasty! It is the cheese that makes French Onion soup so yummy. (psst. you can make that in a crockpot...) ;-)

    xoxo
    steph

    ReplyDelete

  4. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (7)

    Jessie Weaver9/26/2008

    We used to have fondue parties at home--just me, my parents, and sister. We would rent a movie or play a game and it was a big old time! Wonderful memories. :) In later years after I was married they sometimes did fondue with friends for Christmas Eve. It's something that seems fancy even if it's not hard!

    ReplyDelete

  5. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (8)

    Jessie Weaver9/26/2008

    Gretchen, Sometimes they have Gruyere in the deli--you could have them cut you off a hunk. You can always sub Swiss though, they're very similar.

    ReplyDelete

  6. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (9)

    Karen9/26/2008

    ooh YUM...A stupid question/worry of mine...can you cook safely with wine in the crockpot? I always worried it didn't get hot enough to burn off the alcohol....does it?

    ReplyDelete

  7. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (10)

    Anonymous9/26/2008

    Yay Steph i can't wait to try this!! Thx!
    -Christine

    ReplyDelete

  8. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (11)

    Anonymous9/26/2008

    Kind of new to your blog, but am loving your recipes and ideas. I use my crockpot 3 to 4 times a week otherwise we'd never have a good meal for dinner.

    Have you tried those bags they make for the crockpot that you cook your stuff in and don't have the clean up? I've never tried them and figure since you're the crockpot queen maybe you can give me a thumbs up or down as to whether to not to buy them.

    Thanks.
    Shelly

    ReplyDelete

  9. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (12)

    Stephanie9/26/2008

    To make this a bit better for the kids to eat (or anyone who prefers non-alcoholic), you could probably substitute chicken broth for the wine. I've done cheese fondue very similar to this using broth. So yummy!

    I really love your little dipper. It's such a cute little crockpot, and makes so many yummy things!

    ReplyDelete

  10. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (13)

    Kai, that's not a stupid question. I don't really know. I like Stephanie's idea of using broth instead.

    Shelly, I haven't personally used those bags. I've heard from TONS of people that they are amazing and save so much time, but currently Adam does all the crockpot cleaning, so I haven't been all that worried about it. ;-)

    xoxo
    steph

    ReplyDelete

  11. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (14)

    Melissa9/26/2008

    The only way Fondue Friday could be better is if you posted the ingredients on, say, Wednesday, so I could get them Thursday and make the fondue immediately after you posted it Friday. Because, let's face it, nothing's better at the end of the week then a pot full of cheese. Unless it's a pot full of chocolate.

    ;)

    ReplyDelete

  12. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (15)

    Unknown9/26/2008

    What fun! I think it's a great idea for a party. Thanks!

    I hope you'll post a chocolate recipe. Then again, I don't. For the sake of my bottom and thighs.

    ReplyDelete

  13. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (16)

    Abby9/26/2008

    Yesterday I received Everyday Rachel Ray in the mail and she had several fondue recipes (I don't know if they are for the crockpot b/c I was just flipping through the magazine).

    Also, Sams Club has a 6.5 quart stainless steel crockpot with a little dipper right now for less than $30. Good gravy, I sound like an advertisem*nt. But if any of your readers are looking for a new one, there you have it!

    I'm going to make 2 of your recipes this week. I can't wait!
    Abby

    ReplyDelete

  14. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (17)

    Anonymous9/26/2008

    When you cook with any sort of alcohal it does not take much for the actual alcohal to be cooked away. It is safe for everyone to eat. But it does leave a yummy taste that nothing else can replace! ha ha

    Sarah

    PS... I am new to your blog and I am so excited to look at all your daily recipes and start cooking! Thanks!!! Great IDEA!

    ReplyDelete

  15. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (18)

    Anonymous9/26/2008

    Apple slices are tasty with cheese fondue too! I pretend that Im eating healthy if I eat apples ;)Ha!

    ReplyDelete

  16. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (19)

    Anonymous9/26/2008

    I am a crockpot conver thanks to you. I went out and bought my first crockpot and have used it everynight (both) since, with your recipes. Love it!! The lazy chicken tacos and the candy chicken. Wonderful!!

    Katie

    ReplyDelete

  17. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (20)

    This Mom9/26/2008

    OKay I hope you don't think you get to stop this project after the end of the year. I come by everyday to see what you are cooking and learn new crockpot things. I NEED YOU.

    by the way this looks yummy.

    ReplyDelete

  18. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (21)

    Unknown9/26/2008

    Oh, wow. I fixed cheese fondue and chocolate fondue for New Year's Eve. We dipped everything--fruit, bread, meat, veggies, poundcake, etc. It was a hit with DD and DH, so that may be a New Year tradition for us! :)

    Thanks for the recipe! :)

    ReplyDelete

  19. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (22)

    heatherann9/26/2008

    Yeah fondue!! A socially acceptable way to play with your food... not surprised your kids loved it. Mine do. I substitute chicken broth for the wine... not the same but delicious. Thanks Crockpot Lady! I vote for 2009 recipes.

    ReplyDelete

  20. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (23)

    Samara9/27/2008

    I was wondering what was the consistency of the cheese? I thought that fondue cheese needed to be lightly coated in flour or corn starch to make it "stick" together, but still make it creamy (so that it's more like a dip and less like stringy cheese sticks).

    Fontina and butterkase are mild cheeses that can be used for fondue if you don't really care for the swiss flavor and you can add more exotic flavors in it. (i.e. pineapple juice, sweet peppers, and lime zest)

    ReplyDelete

  21. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (24)

    Shirley9/27/2008

    You can also substitute white grape juice for white wine. This recipe sounds wonderful--thanks!

    ReplyDelete

  22. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (25)

    April Barnett9/27/2008

    I LOVE your site ... it is my new favorite. You ROCK. So, what is going to happen in 2009? 365 days of the toaster oven? I guess I need to get out more!

    ReplyDelete

  23. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (26)

    Anonymous9/28/2008

    This looks excellent!

    And I highly recommend the fondue party - you should check out The Melting Pot's recipes for cheese fondue...but send the kids to bed because they might eat it all!!

    ReplyDelete

  24. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (27)

    Kate12/31/2008

    I've had my crockpot (with little dipper) for over a year ... decided to try it tonight for the first time with something sounding easy (like this cheese fondue recipe). I don't understand what wrong, but after an hour and a half, the cheese still wasn't melted and bubbly. There were just chunks of cheese in wine.

    I gave up and put it in the fridge to hopefully reheat later or something. I used gruyere and swiss ... does anybody have any idea what I could have done wrong??? I'm scared that I'm just awful at crockpotting now since I messed up the easiest recipe :(

    ReplyDelete

  25. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (28)

    Esther1/01/2009

    Just made this for NYE, it was a great hit. I went to Trader Joe's and got their goat cheese, Comte and Emmenthal cheese and their 3-buck chuck. We used an artisan bread for dipping, baby carrots, crimini mushrooms, and brocolli. The mushrooms and bread were my favorite. Thanks for the great recipe!

    ReplyDelete

  26. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (29)

    Anonymous7/09/2009

    Do you think you could make this with all swiss? Or maybe add cheddar? I live in the middle of nowhere and if I said fancy cheese to my grocer he would hand me Cheez-Whiz.

    ReplyDelete

  27. Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (30)

    Unknown2/24/2013

    Grew up loving my mom's avocado color crock pot (which will give you an idea how old I am!)We loved doing beef in oil and dipping in a sour cream onion dip, russian dressing and a curry sauce--yum! I can remember when it was my now husband's first exposure to fondue (he came from a traditionally Italian family who didn't have a clue what fondue was)you would have thought he'd died and gone to heaven! We also do shrimp--yum! Cheese my fave is w/apples, but bread will do in a pinch. Bet you could dip potatos though like they do for raclette. (Also bet you could use raclette cheese but haven't tried it in a fondue pot.)

    ReplyDelete

Fancy Cheese Fondue Little Dipper Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the best melting cheese for fondue? ›

The best all-around cheeses for fondue are fontina, Gruyère, and gouda. If you aren't sure what to pick, use even amounts of these three. Together are lush and complex. For classic Swiss cheese fondue (meaning one like what you would find in Switzerland), a mix of traditional, firm mountain-style cheeses is best.

Why is my cheese fondue rubbery? ›

If the fondue has been over-cooked and the cheese is turning into hard lumps then adding a teaspoon or two of lemon juice should help to restore the texture. If the cheese has split and looks greasy but not lumpy then adding extra cornflour (cornstarch) will help to re-emulsify the mixture.

How can I improve my packaged fondue? ›

Pimp My (Cheese) Fondue Recipe

Pour the fondue kit package into the saucepan over medium-low heat. Add the cheese to by handfuls alternating with a 1/2 cup of wine, adding approximately 2 tablespoons of wine at a time and stir slowly until the cheese is just melted. Add white pepper and nutmeg and stir until combined.

Can you overcook cheese fondue? ›

3. Add a generous pinch each of pepper and nutmeg, and cook, stirring gently, until creamy and smooth, about 10 minutes; don't overcook the fondue or it will get stringy. Serve at once.

Why do you put cornstarch in cheese fondue? ›

The cornstarch protects the proteins and the fat in the cheese from breaking down and becoming clumpy and lumpy. Some recipes use flour, but I think that changes the taste of the fondue, making it more starchy. That being said, if you don't have cornstarch you can substitute flour.

How do you smooth out cheese fondue? ›

Whatever the case, you need to fix your fondue fast. Do so by creating a slurry consisting of ¼ cup (60 ml) cold white wine and three tablespoons of cornstarch. (This is good for about 1 ½ pounds/650 grams of grated cheese.) Once combined, whisk it into your sauce little by little until it finally comes together.

How do you get lumps out of cheese fondue? ›

If a fondue is starting to separate then adding cornflour (cornstarch) mixed with a little cold water usually brings it back together again as the cornflour binds moisture to the cheese solids. However if the fondue has turned into a solid lump of cheese then it is most likely that it has been overheated.

What cheese not to use in fondue? ›

We know it's tempting, but you should never use pre-shredded cheese for fondue. These packaged cheeses are covered in a starchy, anti-clumping substance that hinders the melting process.

What should you not do with fondue? ›

Fondue rules

You must not double dip, and never put your fork directly into your mouth. You can grab it off with just your teeth, but the best way is to slide it onto your plate and use a regular fork to eat it.

Which ingredient can you traditionally add to cheese fondue to give it an extra Flavour? ›

5 ways to give your Swiss cheese fondue an extra flavor kick
  • Use other cheeses. In a classic cheese fondue you will always find Emmental and Gruyere. ...
  • Alcohol. A splash of wine usually goes into a classic cheese fondue. ...
  • Dried mushrooms. We have been doing this for years! ...
  • Spices and herbs. ...
  • Other condiments.
Sep 3, 2021

Why did fondue lose popularity? ›

Like any other food fad, the fondue was not meant to last as a trend. By 1999, amid allegations of corruption and concerns over the high costs of cheese subsidies and fondue's decline in popularity, the Schweizer Kaseunion collapsed.

What is fondue etiquette? ›

Fondue etiquette suggests avoiding much mouth contact with your fondue fork since it goes back into the public pot. Overly conscious fondue-rs will remove their morsel from the fondue fork and eat from a separate plate and fork.

What cheese melts smoothly? ›

For superior meltability, look for a full-fat, high moisture mozzarella, like small balls packed in water. You can substitute other types of mozzarella for the ball form (like stracciatella or burrata), or look to other mild-flavored melting cheeses like provolone or Gouda.

What is the best material for cheese fondue? ›

Enameled cast iron adds a smooth coating that makes the pot easier to clean and makes it work a lot like ceramic, another heavy, dense material that's popular for fondue pots. Stainless steel and aluminum are cheaper, lighter, and often have a nonstick coating for ease of cleaning.

What melts better cheddar or gouda? ›

Melting Factor: Gouda's high fat content ensures rapid melting, making it ideal for fondues. Cheddar, though meltable, is better suited for burgers and casseroles.

What cheese melts better sharp or mild? ›

Mild cheddar will melt easily and consistently; however, low-fat cheddar cheese and sharper cheddar melt better if first shredded or cut into strips and cooked over low heat. Learn all about how to best melt cheese with our How to Melt Cheese guide!

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