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Caerphilly CHeese
Posted: 24 March 2008 11:13 PM   [ Ignore ]
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Well the proof is in the eating. I have been making a few cheeses over the last 6 weeks, each time from 20 litres of raw milk, some I have pasturised some I have left raw
Three weeks ago I made 2 x 1 kg Caerphilly cheeses, dried them and stored them the minimum of 2 weeks. I followed the recipe from Neil and Carole Willman’s book ” Home Cheese Making” These are brined pressed cheeses (brined for 24 hrs in 20% brine solution.
I must admit I was not expecting a very flavoursome cheese but I cut one on the weekend and was verrrrrry impressed (I am so proud of my efforts)

Here is a picture of my first baby which is being eaten at a rate of knots, I cant wait to try some of the raw cheddars I have made but will have to wait a few more months yet.

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Posted: 25 March 2008 02:11 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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looks so so good… good work smile

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Posted: 25 March 2008 02:21 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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i noticed that always raw milk stories are more to success.

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Posted: 25 March 2008 09:10 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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I made a Caerphilly a couple weeks ago. I sure hope it turns out as tasty as yours (and hope it’s as beautiful!)

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Posted: 25 March 2008 09:46 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
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Looks great, almost like a Havarti. Congrats smile

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The Cheese Hole

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Posted: 15 April 2008 12:15 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
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hI.  I made a Caerphilly that I aged a couple months.  It’s supposed to be a lightly pressed cheese but I gave it 30-40 lbs.  Anyway, it came out fine.  Next time I’ll
ripen it for three months.

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Posted: 15 April 2008 12:24 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 6 ]
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what is caerphilly like?

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Posted: 15 April 2008 12:26 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 7 ]
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I googled it…a couple entries say it is supposed to be crumbly and dry and salty…(?)

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Posted: 15 April 2008 12:27 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 8 ]
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Q. What is Caerphilly cheese?

A. Caerphilly is a cheddar-type of cheese, originally produced in Wales, but mostly made now across the border in England. It is a crumbly, firm, white, cow’s milk cheese, with a slightly salty flavor. It is not aged for long (one to two months), and is good for melting.

If you don’t have a chunk of it sitting in your refrigerator, Lancashire and the French Cantal are close substitutes.


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Caerphilly cheese is a hard, white cheese that originates in the area around the town of Caerphilly in South Wales, although it is now also made in England, particularly in the South West and on the English border with Wales. It was not originally made in Caerphilly, but was sold at the market there, hence taking the town’s name.

It is a light-coloured (almost white), crumbly cheese made from cow’s milk, and generally has a fat content of around 48%.

It has a mild taste, but perhaps its most noticeable feature is its saltiness. It is rumoured that the cheese was developed over time to provide the coal miners of the area with a convenient way of replenishing the salt lost through hard work over ten hour shifts underground and so was a staple of the diet of the coal-miners.

Caerphilly was one of the many cheeses mentioned in the “Cheese Shop” sketch from Monty Python in the 1970s.

Real Farmhouse Caerphilly production died out during World War II as all milk had to go to the Cheddar factories to help the war effort. After the war these factories started making their version of Caerphilly (initially to help their cash flow as Caerphilly matures quicker than Cheddar), which is how it is mostly known today, dry and crumbly. However, there are now two or three farms making original Caerphilly which is dry in the middle and creamy around the edges.

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Posted: 15 April 2008 12:46 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 9 ]
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I don’t believe that I have ever tried this one.  I will have to look for it.  Looks yummy.

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Kim   cool smile

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Posted: 15 April 2008 01:05 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 10 ]
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Yup, expand on our taste buds wink

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Posted: 15 April 2008 06:33 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 11 ]
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My caerphilly wasn’t very salty.  I added the usual 2% salt.  This cheese has often been made fresh, eaten after two or three weeks’ aging.  But now it is being made with raw milk and aged longer.  It is very yummy!

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Posted: 16 April 2008 06:03 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 12 ]
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Anyone have the recipe?

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Kim   cool smile

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Posted: 16 April 2008 08:39 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 13 ]
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It’s interesting that this topic comes up because I made a batch of this from the recipe in Tim Smith’s book just this past weekend. I hope it’s good because it only takes 3hrs from the time I take the milk out of the fridge to when the curd is in the press. I think what peaked my curiousity was the description that said it was good with dark bread and ale.

Mark

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Posted: 16 April 2008 10:42 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 14 ]
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Mark- send your recipe? Please?

Matt

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Posted: 17 April 2008 05:10 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 15 ]
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I’ll condense it the best I can…

2gal whole milk
4 tablespoons meso mother culture or 1/4tsp DS
1/8tsp CaCl in 1/4c cool water
1/2tsp liquid rennet in 1/4c cool water
2Tbs cheese salt

Bring milk to 90F
Stir in culture and rest at temp for 30min
Stir in CaCl
Stir in rennet and rest at temp for 40min or until a clean break
Cut into 1/4” cubes
Slowly bring to 92F over ~10min and hold for 40min
Rest at temp for 5min
Drain into cloth lined colander and drain for several minutes.
Cut the curd mass into 1” thick slabs and stack on top of one another.
Turn the stack over, top to bottom, twice in 10min

Break up the curd in to “thumbnail-sized” pieces and blend with salt.

Pack into a 2lb mold and press with 10lbs for 10min
Remove cheese, unwrap it, turn it over, put a layer of salt on the top and bottom and then rewrap and press at 10lbs for 10min.
Repeat the procedure above and press at 15lbs for 20min
Repeat and press at 15lbs for 16hrs

Remove the cheese and let it air-dry for several days and the store at 55F for at least 3wks.

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