Hi Heathers,
I posted the original recipe and I’d be glad to clarify any vagueness. This is a tricky cheese to make. I have some in the works now. I have discovered that one needs to dry the cheeses for three days to eliminate some moisture. Otherwise, it can develop “slipskin” or “peau de crapaud” (toad skin!), which happens when the skin separates from the body of the cheese. This is a washed rind cheese, like muenster or taleggio. The b. linens bacteria gradually make the cheese get soft and creamy. It also produces that pungent aroma. This is a pretty acidic cheese since it ferments so long. The geotrichum candidum helps lower the acidity so the b. linens can do its work. All of these strange cheese cooties can be bought at Glengarry Cheesemaking, which has the best offering of such things. They are also very nice and helpful.
I am also making a similar cheese, Brie de Melun, which is a rustic cousin of the usual Brie. It’s also a lactic curd cheese (acidic), very fragile, with the difference that it contains penicillum candidum instead of the b. linens. So it gets that cool looking white bloomy rind (which makes this cheese soft and creamy).
Since you are just starting out, you might want to make something more straightforward. Munster for a stinky cheese. Or camembert for a bloomy rind cheese. Camembert is fun because the white felt stuff starts appearing on day 5 or so and is complete after two weeks. Two or three more weeks and it’s done. The website cheesemaking.com has a photographic demonstration of how to make munster.
Good luck,
Mark