- May 31, 2022
- 772
- 1,447
This only took one gallon of milk, doesn't require a press and it's ready in two weeks. The only down side of it as your first cheese is that you need three different cultures - an aromatic meso culture (I used Flora Danica), and two surface mold cultures (Penicillium Candidum and Geotrichum Candidum).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vy9H2nEHjx8
Start by heating up a gallon of milk (I use raw milk, so I skip adding the Calcium Chloride called for).
This one is a little different than most cheeses. You add cultures, stir them in well, and with no ripening time immediately add two drops (yes, DROPS) of rennet and stir it in. Then go away for 12+ hours until it is set with around half an inch of whey on top.
Now start ladling the curds into baskets (the recipe calls for four very small baskets, I didn't have them, so I went with a couple of medium baskets).
Every 15 minutes add more curds until all the curds are used up.
Gravity begins to do its thing.
The next day, ready for the first flip.
One flipped cleanly, the other was... a mess. Fortunately for this style of cheese, it doesn't matter.
After 24 hours more, flip again. This time it's a little cleaner.
After salting well and a couple more flips, into a ripening box (you want really high humidity, I shoot for 90%+)
Flip daily as the Candidum cultures take over the surface. After two weeks, it's good to go.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vy9H2nEHjx8
Start by heating up a gallon of milk (I use raw milk, so I skip adding the Calcium Chloride called for).
This one is a little different than most cheeses. You add cultures, stir them in well, and with no ripening time immediately add two drops (yes, DROPS) of rennet and stir it in. Then go away for 12+ hours until it is set with around half an inch of whey on top.
Now start ladling the curds into baskets (the recipe calls for four very small baskets, I didn't have them, so I went with a couple of medium baskets).
Every 15 minutes add more curds until all the curds are used up.
Gravity begins to do its thing.
The next day, ready for the first flip.
One flipped cleanly, the other was... a mess. Fortunately for this style of cheese, it doesn't matter.
After 24 hours more, flip again. This time it's a little cleaner.
After salting well and a couple more flips, into a ripening box (you want really high humidity, I shoot for 90%+)
Flip daily as the Candidum cultures take over the surface. After two weeks, it's good to go.