Friday, June 11, 2010

Homemade Cheese! Well, Pudding.....





In our quest to be a little more self-sufficient and to eat more locally, we tried to make cheese! Now, we're on top of the bread (check it out here) - I'm onto my second batch of bread dough from 'Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day', and we're about to eat our tenth loaf and we're very much enjoying it! We're going to try some of the other recipes next - we'll let you know how it goes. But I saw, on Etsy, a great kit for cheese making. It's from the Etsy shop Urban Cheesecraft we got the deluxe kit for $50 US, it has everything needed to make different cheeses including paneer, queso blanco, firm and soft goat cheese, ricotta and mozzarella. The kit includes molds, a thermometer, fine cheese cloth, citric acid, cheese salt, rennet and complete instructions for all the cheeses. So, last night, off we go! I love goat cheese, and I can source goat milk quite easily so that's where we started. It's quite simple, really; mix the citric acid in water, add to milk, heat without boiling, pour into a colander lined with the cheese cloth, pack the captured curds into a mold and let set up. Really! It's that simple. We were aiming for the soft goat cheese, problem was I didn't see any curds forming. I re-heated, still no curds. I read the instructions again and then went to the Urban Cheesecraft's website where I found the goat milk has teeny tiny curds so I poured my mixture into the colander. An upside here is that chickens and pigs love the whey that we collected under the colander. After letting it drain for half an hour, there was something sort of solid there, so I packed it into a mold, where it continued to 'weep' moisture. Left it there for longer than the instructions said, and then gently tapped it out onto a plate. Looking good! We have a soft goat cheese! However, within fifteen minutes if had rather melted, so we have awesome goat cheese pudding! It's really very tasty. Referring back to Urban Cheesemaking's website, I may have stirred too much, or I may have skimped a bit on the citric acid. But this stuff is tasty!! And my cracker doesn't care how solid the goat cheese is! We'll definitely do this again - there's enough stuff in the kit for lots more batches. Maybe queso blanco next. I can hardly wait for fresh mozzarella to go with fresh tomatoes!! But I do think Farmer Man, who is of Danish parentage, will have to wait awhile before I get around to havarti!

6 comments:

  1. I am truly jealous. Homemade cheese! WIN!

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  2. It was quite easy, and it's quite tasty, even though it didn't set fabulously. You know your way to Etsy.......

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  3. The cheese looks delightful. Someday I will have to try it. I remember my grandfather making cheese - yum. Last year I capture "wild yeast" from my grapes and have been making all our bread. So easy - I love it.

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  4. although I admire your homemade cheese I am far too lazy to replicate.

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  5. We've been meaning to make cheeses, again. We even found a source of raw milk, which isn't easy in a big city!

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  6. Gloria, I'm interested in how you capture wild yeast. Did you blog about it?

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