Category Archives: Local Dairy – Where To Get It And What To Do With It

Cow or Goat Milk Tomme Cheese

Last week I made a tomme cheese from cow’s milk.  It will be a few months before I know for sure how it turned out but the curds were tasty and they knit together perfectly (unlike my monterey jack flop.) 

se-no-knit-curds

To make it I heated 2 gallons raw cow milk from Dungeness Creamery to 88 degrees then added 1/4 teaspoon of MM-100 culture.  I let it sit for 30 minutes then added 1/2 teaspoon of animal rennet and again let it sit at 88 degrees for 30 minutes.  To keep the temperature steady I fill my 5 gallon brew kettle with water heated to that temperature and then float my 2 gallon canning pot inside with the milk in it.

se-cheese-double-boiler

After 30 minutes I had a clean break (like jello, when you insert a knife you can cut it.)  I cut the curds to 1/4″ cubes then slowly raised the temperature up to 100 degrees.

I poured some whey off so that it barely covered the curds then let them rest at 100 degrees for 10 minutes.  At that point I scooped the curds into a cheese mold lined with cheese cloth and pressed at 10 pounds for 1 hour.  I turned the cheese, redressed with the cheese cloth and pressed it at 10 pounds for 2 hours. 

se-cheese-press

Then I salted the outside heavily and put it on a bamboo sushi mat over a dinner plate in the fridge to dry slightly overnight.  The next day I wrapped it in parchment paper since I don’t have waxed butcher paper and put it in the wine fridge in the garage that I am using as a cheese cave. 

se-tomme

It needs to be turned weekly and can be eaten in 30 days if you used pasteurized milk or 60 days if you used raw milk.  Or you can age it longer for a sharper flavor.  I plan to try it around the second week of July since it’s my first tomme and I want to know if I’m on track before making more!

I have one aging now that Julie of River Ranch made during our cheesemaking class just before St. Patty’s day.  It’s covered with mold but I’m pretty sure I can just brush that off with a wire brush since she demonstrated that for us when we were there.  I’ll post pictures later this week when I brave it.

Making Mozzrella and Whey Ricotta

Last Saturday I set about making mozzarella again. It makes me really mad when I can’t get something to work (or I misplace something and can’t locate it.) I will spend all my energy figuring it out. I knew the last time I made mozzarella that I let the milk get too hot which makes the cheese tough and chewy. This time I figured out how to better control the temperature. And you can too by following my simple instructions.

You will need a few things to make cheese but most of these items are for pressed cheeses (goat’s milk tomme, cheddar, monterey jack, etc.) I have links to several cheesemaking supply places on the right side. One thing I love about www.dairyconnection.com is they have a $20 cheese mold with follower that you can use to make any kind of hard cheese. This puts a new hobby right smack into your budget. They also have all the cultures you will need.

If you are going to order from them you may want to get a few items so that you save future shipping once you realize how fun cheesemaking is. Like chevre molds, cheesecloth and butter muslin, both thermophilic and mesophilic starters (I also have some flora danica that I use for chevre), citric acid which you can also buy at the grocers, cheese salt to save you from having to crush up kosher salt, and vegetable or animal rennet. That really is just about all you need to make all non-molded hard and soft cheeses with the exception of a good digital read thermometer that you probably already have or can purchase at Target. And a good, large stock pot. And a colander. And a whisk. And two wooden spoons. I bet you have those though.

To make mozzarella and ricotta from the spent whey you need:

  • 1/8 teasoon direct set thermophilic culture
  • 1 gallon whole milk (raw if you have it but never ultrapasteurized)
  • 1/2 teaspoon liquid rennet diluted in 1/4 cup cool water
  • 1 teaspoon citric acid for the ricotta
  • Heat the milk to 90 degrees over low to medium heat then add the starter culture, cover it and let it set for 90 minutes while you do other things. This first heating step can be done over direct heat (with the cheesemaking pot on the burner) but the rest of this will be done using a modified double boiler, or you can put your stock pot into your sink full of warm water and keep adding hot water to get the sink water back up to temp as needed.

    cheese-pot

    Note: Don’t begin cheesemaking at 7 p.m. Many’s the night I’ve stayed up until 2 or 3 in the morning to finish the cheese!

    Add your diluted rennet and stir it very gently, using an up and down motion. This is basically like playing little bunny foofoo with the spoon. You don’t want to over mix it. Then cover the pot.

    Your milk with rennet needs to sit just around 90 degrees for about 30 minutes. Check the milk frequently and if the temperature drops, warm up the water in the outer pan until you get it back up to the right temperature. Keep track of the temperature in the outer pan. If it gets more then about 20 degrees hotter then what you want the milk to be at you’ll need to add some ice cubes or your milk will get too hot. Too hot will make your cheese tough and dry. Luckily as far as mozzarella is concerned it will still melt just fine on pizza if you mess up but it’s nice to get the basics down so you can move on to aged cheeses like cheddar.

    After 30 minutes (or sometimes sooner) you can insert a clean finger or butter knife into the milk to check for a “clean break”. That basically means the milk has congealed like soft jello and will part when you draw a line in it with your finger or knife. It’s a little hard to see in this picture but it was the best I could do with one hand in the cheese.

    clean-break

    Once you have a clean break you need to cut your curds. You can do this with a whisk by inserting it straight up and down so it touches the bottom of the pot then drawing lines vertically and horizontally to get 1/2″ cubes.

    cutting-curds

    Now raise the temperature to about 102 slowly. This will take 20 to 30 minutes and you will do this by getting the water in the outer pot up to no more then 120 degrees farenheit. This is one of the critical steps to good texture. Dont’ let the curds get above 102! Once they get close, turn off the heat – if you have an electric stove move the pots to a cool burner – and let it sit for about 10 minutes.

    Meanwhile line a colander with cheesecloth and place it over a large bowl in the sink.

    After 10 minutes drain out the whey by pouring everything into the colander. Save the whey for making ricotta. You can do this for about 3 hours and after that I believe it won’t work any longer (from what I’ve read). If you won’t be making ricotta you can save this whey to add to smoothies, soups, or baking since it is still loaded with proteins and minerals. No more buying whey powder at the health food store! Remember that it has been cooked so it doesn’t have the power to lacto-ferment anything, or break down the phytic acid in grains, seeds, nuts or beans but it’s still healthful. If you happen to have chickens or other livestock this is super nutritious and you can soak their feed in it.

    draining-cooked-whey

    Put your curds back into your cheese pot and put that back into the double boiler. You need to keep the curds between 98 and 102 degrees farenheit. If they go over 102 they will be tough. The curds then need to stay at that temperature for about an hour. They will keep weeping whey which you can continue to drain off.

    While your mozzarella is “cooking” pour your whey into another stock pot and heat it to 180 degrees farenheit over direct heat. Add 1 teaspoon of salt and 1 teaspoon of citric acid. Stir the milk until it separates.

    instant-ricotta

    Line your colander once again with butter muslin or a tightly woven non-fuzzy tea towel and drain once again.

    draining-ricotta

    After about 15 minutes you can tie the tea towel or muslin onto the handle of your sink to continue draining for a few hours.

    hanging-ricotta

    Once that is done scrape the inside of the towel or muslin into a container. Your ricotta will last about 2 weeks in the fridge or you can freeze it. Refrigerate or freeze your whey for other uses. This ricotta is amazingly creamy – not at all like the grainy ricotta you get from the store. However, it will only yield about a cups worth. It’s great on pizza as well.

    The trick to the mozzarella that I have not yet perfected (because I don’t have a fancy pH reader and I can’t get the pH strips to work well) is getting the pH around 5.0. So I look for firm mozzarella curds after about an hour and just go for it.

    Make a brine solution in a bowl with about a quart of cold water and 1/4 cup of kosher or cheese salt. Set it aside.

    This is the fun part. Heat some water to 180 degrees. Take a small amount of curds, about a tennis ball’s worth for pizza or you can use tablespoonsful to make little balls. Shred the curds best you can so they heat up evenly in the water. Put them in a mixing bowl. Add the heated water. Using your wooden spoons, press the curds together to form a nice ball of cheese again. You frequently hear of people stretching the mozzarella but the reason for this is to disburse the heat. By shredding the curds up you skip that step.

    forming-mozzarella-balls

    Put your cheese ball into the brine solution for about 5 minutes or longer if you want it really salty. Repeat until you’ve used up all the curds. Store your mozzarella in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to two weeks.

    Think tomatoes and basil and red wine and summer…

    If this sounds like a lot of trouble to you go to the UW Farmers market and buy the mozzarella from Julie or her sons at River Valley Cheese. It’s only $5 per big lovely blob – no dishes to wash or futzing involved.

    Homemade Chocolate or Chocolate Mint Ice Cream

    Since buying this Cuisinart Ice Cream Maker
    we’ve been on an ice cream bender lately. After all those years of trying to get toddler’s weight up (with both of my kids) I’m kicking myself for not thinking of this one sooner. Organic milk and cream, maple syrup, egg yolks – it’s the stuff I was fortifying their sippy cups with anyway.

    The great thing about making your own ice cream is that YOU control the quality of the ingredients so really there is no reason to say no. Ice cream on pancakes? Well why not? And let’s just take breakfast shake to a whole new level…

    Today’s ice cream was a chocolate one that went very quickly from amazing chocolate ice cream to out of this world chocolate ice cream by the addition of my Theo cocoa nibs and our cajeta.

    Ingredients

    2 cups organic, non-homogenized half and half or whipping cream (better yet raw from pastured cows if you have a reliable and safe source)

    2 cups organic non-homogenized milk (ditto on the raw from a trusted farm)

    2-5 large egg yolks depending on how rich you want this to be

    2/3 cup maple syrup or organic cane sugar

    2/3 cup cocoa powder

    1 teaspoon vanilla extract

    1 pinch sea salt

    Combine the half and half, milk, cocoa powder, salt and maple syrup in a sauce pan and whisk over low heat until the cocoa powder and sugar are dissolved. Set it aside.

    Whisk the egg yolks well and then add about 1/4 cup of the milk mixture to them to warm them up so they don’t cook in the hot milk mixture before you get them incorporated. Add the yolk mixture to the cocoa mixture in the pan, whisking well. Return the pan to the heat and cook over low while constantly whisking for about two minutes, until the mixture coats the back of a spoon.

    Remove the pan from the heat and add the vanilla, mixing well. Chill the mix for several hours or overnight. Pour into your ice cream maker and freeze according to the directions. Once your ice cream is soft set swirl in cajeta and cocoa nibs (or nuts and marshmallows, or dried cherries or candied orange peel or powdered espresso or leftover broken candy canes…)

    Be sure and hide this from the kids or it will be gone before you know it.

    Variation for chocolate mint ice cream: Last summer we discovered that you can take a handful of fresh mint and steep in the warm milk for 10 – 30 minutes prior to making this ice cream. The result is a chocolate mint ice cream without having to buy any mint extract.

    Cajeta – Goat’s Milk Dulce de Leche

    cajeta

    If you are a caramel fan have I got a treat for you! A few week’s back I made cajeta from my goat’s milk from St. John’s Creamery. It took longer then I expected but the resulting sauce was amazing.

    Cajeta is the goat’s milk version of dulce de leche and it’s made by cooking milk, cornstarch, baking soda and sugar for hours until it boils down into a thick, rich, caramel sauce.

    cajeta cooking

    We’ve eaten it on ice cream, pancakes, waffles and added it to yogurt the last few weeks. The kids of course adore it and we’ve been sneaking it as well.

    Here is how to make it:

    2 Tablespoons Cornstarch

    1/4 teaspoon baking soda

    3 quarts whole goat’s milk

    3 cups sugar

    In a bowl make a slurry of the corn starch, baking soda and some milk to dissolve the powder.

    In the pan add that slurry, the remaining milk and sugar and stir well.

    Bring it to a boil, stirring constantly then reduce the heat to a simmer and let it continue to simmer for several hours until it is as thick as you like it.

    I cooked mine for about 3 1/4 hours until it was a thick syrup like honey. You can stop cooking sooner if you want a runnier sauce for mixing with milk. You can also make this with cow’s milk but it’s called dulce de leche. I’ve heard of folks using this between cake layers, swirled into brownie batter, as a pudding parfait layer or swirled into ice cream.

    I’ve had mine in a jar in the fridge for several weeks and it’s just as good as the day I made it. I’m not sure how long it will last so I plan to freeze dollops of it on wax paper first then put it all in a ziplock in the freezer to take out when I need it. At least that way I won’t be snitching it every time I open the fridge!

    Cultured Dairy Products

    Once we decided we would only eat food if we could trace all ingredient sources I found a raw cow and goat milk dairy. We had a source for milk but what about kefir, yogurt, butter, sour cream and cheese? These were things we ate a LOT of.

    Last summer I had bought the Home Cheesemaking Book by Ricki Carrol after seeing it mentioned in Animal, Vegetable, Miracle and am finally getting great use of it.

    I started with kefir by finding kefir grains through this kefir making group. While looking for a great kefir strainer I found Nick’s Natural Nook and moved on to live yogurt and buttermilk cultures after that.

    If you are using raw milk you need to make a “seed” or “mother” with boiled milk to keep separate from what you plan to eat. If you always have the culture in raw milk, the enzymes and good bacteria in the raw milk will eventually weaken the culture. By bringing 1 cup of raw milk to a boil and then immediately turning it down and boiling for 3 minutes you destroy anything that might interfere with your culture. Once it has cooled you can then innoculate your boiled milk with the culture (1 tablespoons of yogurt or 1/4 cup of buttermilk.) and let it set on the counter until it sets up. This can take several days depending on the temperature of your kitchen. An easier way to do this is to buy pasteurized milk to use for your starter but use raw milk when you make what you plan to eat. That way you don’t have to boil the milk.

    Once your seed is set up you then use it to make what you will eat, using the same amounts (1 tablespoon of yogurt culture to 1 cup of raw milk or 1/4 cup of buttermilk culture to 1 cup of raw milk.) You will need to re-culture your starter each week to keep it strong and keep any funkiness at bay.

    Once your seed or eating dairy is set up (it will be semi-firm and sort of like panna cotta or soft set jello) place it in the refrigerator to prevent overculturing, or separation of the curds and whey.

    I forgot to res-eed my culture one week and when I opened them they smelled very funky so I threw them out and purchased new ones. In retrospect they might have actually been ok. I have since re-read the directions from Nick and she mentioned that if they go longer than one week they start to smell “yeasty” but still re-culture a new batch just fine. I’m still slapping my forehead over that one.

    One thing to remember – you need to keep all things fermenting a few feet from each other or the cultures will cross over and contaminate each other. This includes kefir, dairy cultures, or anything else you may have fermenting (like my apple cider vinegar and orange marmalade that wandered into the fil milk again!) They seem to do fine in the refrigerator in close proximity but not on the counter.

    You can also make buttermilk and yogurt using a small amount from a store bought variety, as long as they say they contain “live active cultures” on the container. That’s not a bad way to start out, especially if your budget is already stretched thin. Kelly has some great instructions making buttermilk at her fabulous blog.

    I do love the cultures I got from Nick though – the yogurt is sweet and clean, as is the buttermilk. They are nothing like anything you could buy at the grocers. I have the Piima yogurt, the fil milk and the buttermilk from her and I love them.

    One final thought – this time I plan to freeze enough culture to start a new batch in case something should happen to my starter again. It should keep in the freezer for 6 months, at which point you would want to “re-seed” and freeze the new seed for another 6 months. Or you could give starter to several of your friends as a backup plan. Way better then Amish friendship bread. Way better.

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