Posted on 04/17/2015 1:08:22 PM PDT by greeneyes
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For this batch, I'll put the gallon of whole milk in one of my stainless steel pots and let it come to temp with some kind of mesophilic bacteria. I may use a culture because I don't think I've got any spoiled milk or cultured buttermilk to start with.. Although I may use the cultured sour cream.
By the time I get back to it, it will be the next day, at room temp, and turning well.
I'll mix up the rennet and bring everything to the required temp. I'll have to look that up at the time. I forget numbers too fast.
When the cheese sets, I'll separate the curds and whey by hand, and save the whey for the dogs next door.
I'll salt and mill the curds to my specs (whatever that day) and then press it lightly to remove more whey.
After I remember to come back to it, I'll turn it and get rid of more moisture.
I'll probably mill and salt the curds one more time.
Then I'll wrap and press the cheese until it's pretty dry. Turning it when I remember.
At some point, when I'm happy, I'll turn it out of the press and shelve it. Probably in a warm fridge for that.
At least, without the kidz around, I've got a chance of keeping it on hand until it matures a few months later.
If I build a cold smoker, I may smoke the cheese, since I like smoked cheeses.
It's a pretty hap-hazard affair around here.
/johnny
Thank you for these weekly updates ~
Hey we have that in common, I made cheese from our fresh goats milk for 20+ years. Some summers I made cheese 5 days out of the week out of 2+ gallons of milk daily. Everything from cream cheese, fresh mozzarella, mozzarella for pizza, hard cheddar (I used my grandfathers cast iron sausage press with my cheese mold in it)and I once made a 2 lb block of parmesan that aged for 10 months. I used hubbys beeswax from his hive to coat it. I also made a lot of kefir - I really miss that the most. I still have 3 last packages of cream cheese in the freezer, made a cheesecake last week and it was still yummy! Not on my diet but I couldn’t let the cheese get any older.
Go girl! No fear. It's just milk.
/johnny
I had heard you say that a couple years ago, Johnny, and I certainly thought of you when I heard this guy! It was cool to learn more details about how to do that!
Thanks for helping this get to the right place, greeneyes! Sorry for the mess up, but could not find the newer thread.
You are welcome for the reports.
Sounds as though you have the cover crops and organic soil amending nailed! I imagine much of this is actually old news to many of you!
That's why I love it when you provide details.
/johnny
You are very welcome, tubebender!
:-D I understand that perfectly! I tend to be a detail person, and I’m also loving this specific information being made available.
There are quite a few more pages of notes on soil, but have been involved in some other projects and am trying to fit it all in when I can!
I love the smoked cheeses too. When I was just a young’un my friend’s brother worked at the local cheese plant - not a national brand - man did they ever have great cheese.
Anyway we would go round to the plant while he was on and he’d take some of the curds and put them in a paper lunch bag, and give it too us. We’d run off to the nearest shade tree and eat that stuff till we could pop.
It was warm and very salty stuff. Even to day I am sitting here wishing I could have a bag of that stuff. Those were some great times we had - today they would call us free range kids I guess.
The best online source I could give you is cheesemaking.com. Run by an older lady Rikki, who was a younger lady when she started the website and wrote some books. I found one of her books at a garage sale and it was full of sticky notes with special cheese notes again 20+ years ago. It was great timing because I was just starting to make cheese. Her website is great now, they even have cheesemaking contests and a newsletter, I love reading about people all over the world who are cheesemakers. The culture I used most was the mesophilic, but I also used he thermophilic. At her website you can get culture packets for just about anything, even camembert, which I never made. If you can find junket tablets they are really handy for all the softer cheeses. I almost always used raw milk. For the harder cheeses I pasteurized it. I was dealing with mass quantities for a family of 3 and the softer cheeses froze easily. I went into one winter with 40 lbs of cheese in the chest freezer. The basics are pretty easy, super clean utensils, lower temp, softer curd, softer cheese. You can do some really nice softer cheeses with herbs stirred in at the end. The junket tablet box even has recipes. I better stop I could go on and on. LOL
I don't know exactly which website I use, but since I know what I want, I don't waste a bunch of time on ordering. Mainly, I get real rennet and cheesecloth. I may have used cheesemaking.com
You are correct. Absolutely clean is very, very important. I lost my cheese thermometer, so I use my beer thermometer.
I'm not too picky about the exact type, so I select hard or soft, and work the cheese that direction.
One year I did do bleu cheese type of cheese. It was the only one I actually used a recipe for, and bought stuff especially for.
/johnny
The junket rennet is especially good for cottage cheese. I also had a cream separator so I had cream to add it was delicious. I also used the Hansen’s rennet. Just depended on what I was making. Bleu cheese is evil! But hubby likes it too. Never made it. I have these cheesecloths that I used year after year, found them at a fabric store and could never find any others. Like an acetate type mesh that I could just put through the washing machine time after time and they came out looking the same. Plus the fabric never stuck to the curd. Those I will never get rid of.
A trash can plays a large part of my laundry duties. ;)
/johnny
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Antique-Cast-Iron-ENTERPRISE-8-Quart-Sausage-Stuffer-wine-cider-fruit-lard-press-/151658195152?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item234f8868d0
That sounds like a military expression :
"Adapt..
Adjust..
Overcome !"
/johnny

Some of my handywork.
It's an old favorite of mine that I haven't had for quite a while. I did the work up including the calories.
They are dates, filled with crushed Sunflower seeds.
Some stuff I can't eat easily without teeth. Like whole sunflower seeds. So I crush them.
I stuff the dates with the crushed sunflower seeds and roll the dates (sticky) in powdered sunflower seeds.
I've worked out 180 calories per serving. With a serving being about 6 dates. Obviously the servings of dates don't match the servings of sunflower seeds, so I had to do some fiddling to measure everything with scales and do all the math.
But there it is. They are ugly, but I like 'em.
/johnny
“Adapt..
Adjust..
Overcome !”
LOL!
Those look yummy, plus I’m starting to like your china pattern. LOL
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