Beginner's
Goat Cheese
from Capri
Herb FarmI N G R E D I E N T S
1 Gallon Milk (Preferably
unpastuerized Goat milk, but other milk will work)
1/2 cup white vinegar or substitute 1/2 cup lime juice or 1/2 cup Lemon juice
Salt to taste (minimum is about 1 1/2 tablespoons, or 2 1/2 tablespoons for ricotta or
cottage cheese)
I N
S T R U C T I O N S
Put milk into large stainless steel cook pot
and slowly heat until milk is between 190 and 200 degrees. (In cheese making temperature
is up there next to God, so the temperature has to be right!)
Slowly add the vinegar, lemon, or lime juice while stirring until all is added and mixed
thoroughly into the milk, but only until it is added. Do not over-stir!
It will curdle as it is supposed to do.
Let cool undisturbed until it is around 100 degrees (not too hot to handle with your
hands) Add salt to taste, and SLOWLY either cut the curd or stir very
gently to break up the curd into pieces. If you are wanting ricotta, you break it up into
VERY small pieces. If you want a "cream cheese", you don't break it up into
pieces smaller than quarter sized pieces.
Drain the cheese into a cheese cloth lined colander. (you can buy cheese cloth at most
grocery stores in the laundry/cleanser sections). If you use fine cheesecloth, double or
triple it in thickness. Take the 4 corners of the cheesecloth and bring them together and
tie them together.
Hang the "dripping" cheese until it is the consistency you want. If you want
ricotta or cottage cheese, only hang it for an hour and use less salt since salt pulls the
whey from the curd. If you want a cream cheese, let it hang for 4 hours. If you want a
white harder cheese, let it hang for 12 hours (and use a little more salt to get more whey
out of the cheese). No aluminum utensils and rubber sometimes has a
"smell" to it that will transfer to the cheese, so stainless steel is best!
Untie the cheese, mold it and chill until cold, molding it in whatever size container you
want to use.
A great party cheese is to take a cookie press (battery kind) and make little tiny cheeses
with the press and put them on waxed paper in an air tight container. If you want a very
smooth cheese, like cream cheese, then put the cheese in a mixer after it is untied and
mix until smooth consistency. If you are going for a hard cheese, then the cheese in the
bag will be hard, with small air pockets.
Now, if you have made the
"cream" type cheese, you can make a Torte by taking the cheese while it is still
in the mixer and add 1/4 volume (approximately) pure butter. Then take a mold (a plastic
container that is appropriate size) Put one layer cheese/torte mix sprinkle Black Olives,
sun dried tomatoes, basil pesto sauce (my favorite!) or diced dates, then layer again to
the top, alternating with your gastronomical preferences. On top decorate with pimento
slices, bay leaves, or whatever your desire. Put in refrigerator until cold, and unmold.
Notes:
Mold the cheese while still warm, and then chill. Also, breaking up the curd as well as
the salt as well as the hanging time determines the consistency of the cheese, and yes you
can peek at it while it is hanging and draining!
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