Cheese Type & Number: Caraway Swiss, #25
Description: A Swiss cheese with caraway seeds in it. One of my favorites! The recipe calls for 2 gallons of milk and makes a normal 2# round. However, I’ve found that this tends to dry out easily and lot of the cheese gets too hard to eat. So, I made this batch with 3 gallons of milk and scaled the ingredients up equivalently. I’m hoping that this makes a nice thick round whose rind won’t take up most of the cheese.
I used a 4 gallon pot that I usually use as my water basin in my double boiler arrangement and used a kitchen sink full of hot water to create my water bath for the double boiler arrangement.
Source of Recipe: And That’s How You Make Cheese by Shane Sokol
Date: 11/25/2006
Warming the Milk: Warmed 3 gallons of whole store-bought milk to 90°F.
Ripening the Milk: Sprinked 2 packets of thermophillic starter plus 1-1/2 teaspoons of proprionic bacteria powder on top of the milk. Allowed it to set for a couple of minutes, and then stirred in gently using 20 top-to-bottom strokes. Allowed to ripen for 30 minutes.
Additives: Added 3/4 teaspoon CaCl dissolved in 1/2 cup of cool distilled water and stirred well. Then added 3/4 teaspoon of rennet dissoved in 1/2 cup of cool distilled water and stirred in with 20 top-to-bottom strokes.
Coagulation: Allowed to set, still in a water bath at 90°F for 40 minutes. The break was not real clean, but sufficient given the gentle stirring and cooking that was to come.
Cutting the Curd: Cut the curd into 1/2” cubes, then stirred very gently. Since I did not have a real firm curd, the curd broke up into rice-sized pieces as I gently stirred.
Cooking and Stirring: Stirred the curds gently for about 30 minutes, maintaining a temperature of 90°F. Then, began adding hot water to the water bath to raise the temperature of the curds and whey to 120°F, slowly, about 1° per minute. This took about 30 minutes—stirring gently, but continuously. Once the mixture was at 120°, I continued stirring for another 30 minutes. By this time the rice-sized curds were firm and fell apart from a mat easily.
At this point I added the caraway seeds and water they had steeped in. (I had placed 4-1/2 tablespoons of caraway seeds in 1 cup of water and boiled gently for 10 minutes. This had sat and steeped the whole time I made the cheese.) I stirred the curds gently to combine the seeds. I then drained off a good amount of the whey.
Pressing: I ladled the hot curds into a cheesecloth-lined press and pressed at 10# for 30 minutes. I redressed the curds and pressed at 10# for another 30 minutes. There is a lot of whey at this point, so I put the press next to the sink to drain. Redressed. Then 15# for 2 hours. Redress. 15# for overnight.
Brining: Made a brine from 2# kosher salt and 1 gallon distilled water. Wet a cheesecloth towel with the brine and allowd to dry to serve as a salt cloth for later. Floated the cheese in the brine, turning once or twice, for all day long, 12 hours.
(At this point, I will write the instructions of what I need to do, rather than what I’ve done.)
Aging: Remove cheese from brine, wipe dry with salt cloth. Place on a cheese board in a 50° fridge for 1 week, turning 2X per day and wiping with dry salt cloth once per day.
Remove to a room-temperature, dry location (kitchen) and allow to set for 3 weeks, wiping once a day with dry salt cloth. Cheese round will swell. Transfer to 50° fridge and age for 6 months, wiping periodically with dry salt cloth.