This is my fourth year making cheese, and I’ve been using the same recipes for Gouda, Jack, Colby and Cheddar for the last three years. Last year’s cheeses grew a lot of mold, but many had a fairly moist, smooth, almost creamy texture, and they melted. This year;s cheeses have little mold but tend to be dry with a crumbly, gritty or grainy texture, and I think in many cases the flavor isn’t quite as good as last year’s; and they don’t melt very well. I’m trying to figure out why. Several possibilities come to mind.
I’ve been fiddling with the aging process. Last year I aged waxed cheeses in our damp wellhouse/root cellar; the thermostat there was set to 40 F but sometimes it got considerably warmer. The mold really frustrated me, so i bought a thermoelectric wine fridge to age cheeses in this year. It’s at about 55 F; I don’t have a hydrometer, but I think it’s fairly moist, because new cheeses wouldn’t dry enough for waxing when kept in it. (Anyway some people tell me that humidity doesn’t matter once the cheeses are waxed, which mine are.) I turn the cheeses weekly.
Our most productive milk goat has not had a kid since 2006, and I understand that the milk’s pH changes as the goat gets farther from lactation.
We improved our pressing system so that the cheeses were actually pressed at the full recommended weight more often than last year.
Would any of these changes be likely to cause drier, crumblier cheese? Any other ideas? Any help would be greatly appreciated.