Hi
I’m new to this forum. It is the best one I have found so far. Thanks to Rick R. for
setting this up.
My name is Carl. I live in Sonoma County, CA, which is pretty close to cheese
heaven with many artisan creameries with an hours drive (not to mention a
thousand wineries). I’ve been making beer and wine for years.
Looking forward to this new hobby.
So far I’ve made 2 serious (non-fresh cheeses). My first cheese is a cow camembert, and
my second is a goat camembert (which has its own issues—more on this later)
For cheese #1, I followed the recipe in Morris’s book, summarized here…
Used Trader Joe’s Organic “Cream Top” whole milk. The word on the street is that this
milk is from Strauss Family Creamery, a local high end producer. (This may not
be true for TJ’s in other locations) Strauss milk is the
milk that is used by Cowgirl Creamery for their cow cheeses. (If you have never
tried Cowgirl Creamery “Red Hawk”, you should!)
Left 4L milk out over night to warm to room temp
Warmed milk to 84F (29C)
Added 1/8 teas MA4001
Added 1/8 teas Penicillum Candidum
Added 1 tsp CaCl disolved in 1/4 cup filtered water
Added 1/8 tsp microbial rennet in 1/4 cup filtered water
Held at 84F for 90 minutes
Clean break achieved
Cut curds into 3/4 inch cubes, let rest 5 minutes
Drained off as much whey as possible
Ladled into 3 moulds, refilling as necessary
Drained over night on plastic draining mat on top of sushi mat, flipped
in the morning. Flipped again in the evening
Nov. 4 Placed in heated plastic tub in fridge. Temperature
in the tub is about 45F. Whey continued to drain slowly
for the next few days.
Nov. 9 First evidence of Pen. Can. bloom. Flipped daily
from now until wrapping.
Nov.13 quite furry
Nov. 23 took picture #1
Nov. 27 wrapped in cheese paper, put back in plastic bin. Cheese
still felt quite firm.
Nov. 30 bought wine chiller—transfered cheese to wine chiller set to 54
Dec. 3 unwrapped one cheese to view - looks like camembert! Ammonia
smell is noticable. Cheese is getting softer to the touch. Took picture #2
Dec. 7 Sampled Cheese. Flavor was fairly mild. Interior was quite liquid
and flowed out onto the cutting board, except for a ~5mm thick part in the
middle that didn’t seem ripened yet.
So (finally) my question….
Like Rick R., I’m not so happy about the consistency. What variables should
I try to vary to make the cheese firmer? My thinking is that it is not over-
ripened, because there was still a little bit in the middle that appeared “fresh”, i.e.
not mold-afftected. So maybe there is too much water in the cheese?
I notice the Neil doesn’t have this problem, and he does a little pressing, which
presumably expels more whey.
Should I try pressing a little? Or pre-draining in a colander? Or maybe I should
use a higher “cooking” temperature? Or let the milk ripen before adding rennet,
(as some other recipes do) which might lead to more acidity which I’ve read
leads to whey expelling easier? Rick R., did you ever solve this?
Comments and thoughts please.
Thanks
-Carl