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CHEESE
MAKING 101
The Basics
Cheese making 101 - Printer Friendly Version
To get
consistent results, it helps to follow the recipes pretty closely, or as exactly
as you can, but timing and temperature are two very important items.
Slight variations in processing will still give a pretty good result (most of
the time) but it won't always be what you expected. Always, always, no
matter what, stress clean, clean, clean, from counters to thermometers to pots,
pans, and ladles, and of course, your cheese cloth or butter muslin. I
have white counters, so I can scrub mine with bleach and make sure they're
clean.
Equipment:
Sterilize with boiling water! Some people use bleach on their pots, pans,
etc. I don't like to do that, because if the bleach doesn't get rinsed off
well enough (and it's hard to rinse off well), it interferes with your
cultures. Of course, wash your hands before and after each step of
handling milk or curd.
A list of
what equipment you will need:
1.
Pots and/or pans with lids: Stainless steel, glass, ceramic, or un-chipped
enamel. Do NOT use cast iron or aluminum. I use my stainless steel
pressure cookers for this (small and medium) and use a different lid to cover,
or I use my blue speckled enamelware canners for big batches. Stainless
steel stockpots are good for this, and can usually be bought reasonably
priced in a set of 3 with lids. I have a set of those too.
2.
Cheese ladle: A slotted spoon works well. I always keep 2 or 3
handy. A spoon rest comes in handy too, but I use a desert plate for this
or an aluminum pie tin.
3.
Butter muslin: If it says use butter muslin, don't use regular cheese
cloth that you buy at the grocery store because the weave is too wide. I
did find some very tightly woven cheese cloth at a kitchen specialty store at
the mall that worked just fine, though. I also made a drawstring bag out
of finely woven curtain muslin. These were white curtains that I didn't
use any more. I washed up the material, doubled it over, sewed it into a
bag, and sewed a hem at the top for a drawstring. So, the bag is big
enough to fit over my colander bowl. After draining through the colander,
I can draw up the bag and hang it to drip drain some more over my sink or some
other container.
4.
Curd cutter: This is just a knife. It has to be long enough to reach
the bottom of the pan you are using. The bigger the pan, obviously, the
bigger knife you will need.
5.
Dairy thermometer: I bought a candy thermometer which clips to the side of
the pan. As long as the temperature goes as low as 85 degrees (mine starts
at 75) and as high as 120 for most cheeses, 170 for mozzarella, and 200 for
ricotta. Most candy thermometers will cover that whole range. You
don't have to leave it clipped to the pan, but do check the temperature every
few minutes. I would love to have a real dairy thermometer, the kind that
floats in the milk; but they are not to be found around here (so far anyway).
6.
Colander: Something with small enough holes to drain whey without
losing curds. I have a large colander with a frame that can be
slid to rest on my sink top. I also have a bowl type colander, and
a smaller round sieve type colander with a pan-handle on it that can be
placed easily above another bowl if you wish to save the whey. It
can be plastic, aluminum, or stainless steel. I don't think the
material matters on this.
7.
Cheese mold and follower: For Mozzarella cheese and other cheeses which
require a mold, I save butter tubs, small ones and big
ones, and use those. Plastic butter tubs, tupperware, and other food grade
plastic works great for homemade molds for your cheese. If you drain your
curds well, you don't need to punch holes in your molds. However,
if you want to punch holes to help drain the last bits of whey, punch
the holes from the inside to the outside.
8.
Cheese press: This is for a little more advanced cheeses.
You don't need this until you get into more hard cheeses. My
husband built me a few of them, and I will be posting photos of
those. They are expensive to buy, but can be built at home.
If all else fails, before you spend a bunch of money on one, try a
temporary one made from a coffee can. Punch holes in the bottom
third of the can, from the inside to the outside. Put your cheese
in the bottom, add a can sized flat plate as a follower, then weight the
top of it with a half-gallon jug full of water or something that's
heavy.
9.
Bowl or pan: Shallow bowl or pan to set the press and cheese in
while it drains.
Ingredients:
1.
Milk: Fresh, clean, raw goat milk from healthy goats. If you
want to pasteurize your milk because you're not sure of the source, heat
it to 165 degrees for 3 minutes. If you pasteurize, bring the
temperature back down to room temperature before you start to use it in
many cheese recipes.
2.
Starter cultures: Some recipes require these, and some
don't. A starter culture is a pure form bacteria added
to warm milk to produce an acid. Starter cultures should always be
made from pasteurized milk.
**
Mesophilic culture: Made from live culture buttermilk bought from
the store and "ripened", or can be bought from a cheese making
supply store.
**
Thermophilic culture: Made from live culture yogurt such as
Dannen's, or can be purchased from supply store.
3.
Rennet: This is the enzyme that turns the milk into curds.
Rennet comes in liquid or tablet form or can be purchased as Junket
brand rennet in many grocery stores. The breakdown goes like this:
Liquid
rennet = tablet rennet at 1:1:
One
teaspoon of liquid rennet = one rennet tablet
1/4
teaspoon liquid rennet = 1/4 rennet tablet
Junket,
however, is different. Junket must be quadrupled. If your
recipe calls for 1 rennet tablet or 1 teaspoon liquid rennet, you would
use 4 junket tablets. More commonly, your recipes will call for
1/2 tablet or 1/2 teaspoon, etc. 1/2 teaspoon liquid or 1/2 rennet
tablet = 2 junket tablets. 1 junket tablet is equal to 1/4
teaspoon liquid rennet or 1/4 tablet of regular rennet.
Junket
is about the only type of rennet available around here. You can
find it most commonly in grocery stores or places that sell ice cream
making supplies, as it can also be used to make ice cream and
custards. Liquid rennet or regular tablet rennet can sometimes be found
in health food stores or can be ordered through cheese making supply
stores.
4.
Salt: We use non-iodized table salt. Iodized salt works
too. The other is just a personal preference. Sea salt is
the very best of all.
5.
Additions: Herbs, chives, sage, garlic, parsley, etc. Have
fun, make up your own! Hey, I added Ranch dressing mix, the
powdered kind, and it was great!
Making
Cheese:
1.
Clean kitchen, clean counters, clean utensils, clean hands. Clean,
clean, Clean! If you make bread and knead dough on your counters,
make extra sure you wipe up all traces of yeast. Even a bit of
yeast can make your cheese FLOP. (but hey, the dogs will eat
it). You don't have to sterilize with gloves, masks, and gown,
etc. Any good kitchen cleaner will work, or a bit of mild bleach
water on white counters wipes out germs, yeast, etc., and get your
counters white to boot!
2.
Start with a simple recipe. Practice soft cheeses first.
Follow the recipe exactly the first few times, then improvise if you
wish.
3.
Have fun! Eat and enjoy.
Goat Cheese
Goat's Milk Recipes
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