Well guys, here’s a pic of the stirred curd cheddar I did yesterday.
I feel as if I hit my Ph marks pretty well on this one and after taking it out of the press I’m happy with it.
After giving it a lot of thought I doubt that I age this one long at all…..probably only a couple of weeks.
My reason for doing this is because I am trying to perfect a process and there’s no sense in making more of this variety, (using the same recipe) unless I know that my recipe is correct.
If I am happy with what I find I will continue aging the rest of the cheese for several months, taking samples at 3, 6 & 9 months to see how it ages.
I will probably be doing a lot of the early cuttings on many of my cheeses this year.
Last year I was not happy with many of my cheeses after aging and of course I had several of each variety that were pretty much all the same.
This year is devoted to refining things and keeping what works and getting rid of what doesn’t. This process worked well on my Camemberts so I’m going to apply that reasoning to the rest of my cheeses as well.
Honestly the only varieties of cheese that I’ve been happy with are my Camemberts, Stiltons, Goudas and Swiss (happy with the taste and texture of swiss but not with eye formation).
I’ve decided that it’s time to rethink all of my recipes and make adjustments as needed. The first variety that I’m trying this with is cheddar so here’s my results so far.
Dave