Grass-Fed Cheese - Available from where?
Haha, I'm still using the one I got in Norway 34 years ago! And I don't think it is very commonly used because everyone 'looks' at it until I pick it up and show them the 'puzzle'!
I find that molds, good molds, have been pretty predictable with my cheese. A blue mold, left to mature, will give that brown/grey rind on either of the hard cheeses I make and penicillium cand. (white) will not allow the blue to colonize if it is in proximity but will leave the white in it's place, like the other hard cheese in my picture. I like to mix it, proximity wise, with cheese made with bacterial linnens, red, for both flavour and appearance :;): But any colonization of black mold will throw everything (including me) out of sinc and means a day sterilizing my cheese room! The problems that I have had other than that have come from the introduction of coloforms, by accident, into my cheese. I am making your recipe right now! I will let you know how it worked out with my conversions, not scientific, to my cultures. Liz
I find that molds, good molds, have been pretty predictable with my cheese. A blue mold, left to mature, will give that brown/grey rind on either of the hard cheeses I make and penicillium cand. (white) will not allow the blue to colonize if it is in proximity but will leave the white in it's place, like the other hard cheese in my picture. I like to mix it, proximity wise, with cheese made with bacterial linnens, red, for both flavour and appearance :;): But any colonization of black mold will throw everything (including me) out of sinc and means a day sterilizing my cheese room! The problems that I have had other than that have come from the introduction of coloforms, by accident, into my cheese. I am making your recipe right now! I will let you know how it worked out with my conversions, not scientific, to my cultures. Liz
- Broomcroft
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You said it was easy to make cheese. Well I've just looked on WikiHow and this is how to do a basic cheese apparently. Even I could do it and that's saying something...It can't be this simple, surely?
1. Place two cups of milk in the saucepan, slowly bringing the milk to a boil while stirring constantly. It is very important to constantly stir the milk or it will burn.
2. Turn the burner off once the milk is boiling, but leave the saucepan on the element or gas grate.
3. Add 4 teaspoons vinegar to the boiling milk, at which point the milk should turn into curds and whey.
4. Stir well with spoon and let it sit on the element for 5-10 minutes.
5. Pass the curds and whey through cheesecloth or a handkerchief to separate the curds from the whey.
6. Press the cheese using the cloth to get most of the moisture out.
7. Open the cloth and add a pinch of salt if desired.
8. Mix the cheese and salt and then press again to remove any extra moisture.
9. Put the cheese in a mold or just leave it in a ball type form.
10. Refrigerate for a while before eating.
Edited By Broomcroft on 1255879144
1. Place two cups of milk in the saucepan, slowly bringing the milk to a boil while stirring constantly. It is very important to constantly stir the milk or it will burn.
2. Turn the burner off once the milk is boiling, but leave the saucepan on the element or gas grate.
3. Add 4 teaspoons vinegar to the boiling milk, at which point the milk should turn into curds and whey.
4. Stir well with spoon and let it sit on the element for 5-10 minutes.
5. Pass the curds and whey through cheesecloth or a handkerchief to separate the curds from the whey.
6. Press the cheese using the cloth to get most of the moisture out.
7. Open the cloth and add a pinch of salt if desired.
8. Mix the cheese and salt and then press again to remove any extra moisture.
9. Put the cheese in a mold or just leave it in a ball type form.
10. Refrigerate for a while before eating.
Edited By Broomcroft on 1255879144
Clive
Hi Clive,
While there's much more experienced cheesemakers on this forum, who've given me great info, I'll jump in.
This is sort of Ricotta, and while technically cheese, not quite how to do a really 'nice' cheese, IMHO.
I've got a step by step with pics on how to do Camembert if you want to make that, which all things going well this week we'll be doing and then I'll make Anna's (looking forward to that one). www.seco.com.au/homemade_camembert_cheese.php
There's the Rikki Carroll 30 min Mozzarella there as well.
Once you make a successful, good tasting cheese, you just get hooked!
:D
Vicki
Edited By Minnie on 1255900212
While there's much more experienced cheesemakers on this forum, who've given me great info, I'll jump in.
This is sort of Ricotta, and while technically cheese, not quite how to do a really 'nice' cheese, IMHO.
I've got a step by step with pics on how to do Camembert if you want to make that, which all things going well this week we'll be doing and then I'll make Anna's (looking forward to that one). www.seco.com.au/homemade_camembert_cheese.php
There's the Rikki Carroll 30 min Mozzarella there as well.
Once you make a successful, good tasting cheese, you just get hooked!
:D
Vicki
Edited By Minnie on 1255900212
I am sure you can make cheese Clive. You just need some good raw milk (store milk works too of course, but is as funny as store meat), a thermometer and a little patience. It is magic to make and eat your own cheese, I would encourage anyone owning a cow to try it. A milking relation with a cow is also kind of magic. Hard sometimes, but very meaningful.
Your recipe looks similar to panir, an Indian fresh cheese. If you like Indian cooking it is very much worth a try. Mater panir and palak panir are my favourite panir dishes. A bad thing with the panir is that the cheese becomes very small. It is normal, so don´t be to sad when 3 litres of milk result in a very small ball of cheese. Use double or triple layers of cheesecloth, it increases the quantity.
The 30 minutes mozarella mentioned by Minnie is easy and funny to make, try that one too.
Ricki Carrolls book is good for both beginners and more experienced: http://www.amazon.com/Home-Ch....0174647
Your recipe looks similar to panir, an Indian fresh cheese. If you like Indian cooking it is very much worth a try. Mater panir and palak panir are my favourite panir dishes. A bad thing with the panir is that the cheese becomes very small. It is normal, so don´t be to sad when 3 litres of milk result in a very small ball of cheese. Use double or triple layers of cheesecloth, it increases the quantity.
The 30 minutes mozarella mentioned by Minnie is easy and funny to make, try that one too.
Ricki Carrolls book is good for both beginners and more experienced: http://www.amazon.com/Home-Ch....0174647
Anna Bergstrom
Sweden
Sweden
I agree Anna, turning milk into cheese is magic! That is exactly how I feel all the time; it fascinates me. The Ricotta /paneer recipe is also called queso blanco in Mexico! I think that if we look at all the cheeses in the world, with the slight exceptions of culture, temperature and handling of the curds, they are about 5 different ways of doing them. This also fascinates me. Clive I would get a hold of some raw milk, 2 liters maybe, warm it to room temperature, 20- 23, add 2.5 ml of mesophilic starter or 100ml of buttermilk, mix well, a couple of drops of cheese rennet diluted in 100ml cool water or the equivalent of junket (maybe somene could help here, I've never used junket) mix into milk, leave at room temperature for 16 hours, when it makes a cake separated from the pan, drain in cheese cloth for another 16 hours, salt to taste, usually 5ml/ 454 grams of cheese. Best cream cheese ever! Add herbs, smoked salmon, maybe anything you want, but make sure you just try it plain first because :p wow it's good!
Liz ps Anna this is week three of your cheese, I'll let you know if I did it right!
Edited By Liz D on 1256076114
Liz ps Anna this is week three of your cheese, I'll let you know if I did it right!
Edited By Liz D on 1256076114
- Broomcroft
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- Broomcroft
- Posts: 3005
- Joined: Wed Sep 06, 2006 4:42 am
- Location: Shropshire, England
- Contact:
Well I ate it and it wasn't bad. I could taste the vinegar so today I made another queso blanca cheese, and again took no time at all, but I used cider vinegar, that's all I had, and not so much. I added a bit of salt and black pepper to the curd and mixed it in before squeezing it in the cheese cloth. I've eaten that one now as well, and it was a very nice, simple cheese.
Total cost for a cheese about as big as an orange something like 30 pence, or 40 Euro Cents of you prefer. I like that!
I'm going to try using lemon juice next instead of vinegar.
Total cost for a cheese about as big as an orange something like 30 pence, or 40 Euro Cents of you prefer. I like that!
I'm going to try using lemon juice next instead of vinegar.
Clive
- Broomcroft
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I know what you mean Vicki, it is addictive and I think I will always make our own cheese from now on, but I've got to get the right ingredients. No way we're going to buy stuff. I feel like when my dad bought me a chemistry set. Had a good look around your website, very impressive and informative.
Anna - This is Caenwean (Kin-Wen), hardly Woodmagic material but she is a really nice animal and looks sort of the dairy side of Angus to me, not that I know what I'm looking for. Her udder is not perfect although it is nowhere near as bad as it looks in this photo. She is my number one friendly cow and she would probably love to be milked each day, and she isn't too short either which would help. She's due to calve late Spring.
I've got others that produce so much milk when with calf that it's ridiculous, but they aren't as cooperative.
Edited By Broomcroft on 1256549671
Anna - This is Caenwean (Kin-Wen), hardly Woodmagic material but she is a really nice animal and looks sort of the dairy side of Angus to me, not that I know what I'm looking for. Her udder is not perfect although it is nowhere near as bad as it looks in this photo. She is my number one friendly cow and she would probably love to be milked each day, and she isn't too short either which would help. She's due to calve late Spring.
I've got others that produce so much milk when with calf that it's ridiculous, but they aren't as cooperative.
Edited By Broomcroft on 1256549671
Clive
Hi Clive,
We've been waiting on the weather to make camembert and it's cooled down a bit (little rain) so tomorrow's the day, need to get the starter going tonight.
Then Anna's cheese probably next week or in a couple more days depending on the weather again.
Last year we made Camembert and the weather turned hot (40 degrees) and the cheese turned black, another person told me the same happened to them a couple of weeks back.
Now I see why so much cheesemaking in Europe prior to refridgeration. :;):
Now for us we need to get milking in the next year, currently we source directly from a neighbouring dairy.
I love pic of the cow...
:D
Vicki
We've been waiting on the weather to make camembert and it's cooled down a bit (little rain) so tomorrow's the day, need to get the starter going tonight.
Then Anna's cheese probably next week or in a couple more days depending on the weather again.
Last year we made Camembert and the weather turned hot (40 degrees) and the cheese turned black, another person told me the same happened to them a couple of weeks back.
Now I see why so much cheesemaking in Europe prior to refridgeration. :;):
Now for us we need to get milking in the next year, currently we source directly from a neighbouring dairy.
I love pic of the cow...
:D
Vicki