idiazabal cheese recipe
Posted: 04 February 2012 09:58 AM   [ Ignore ]
New Visitor
Rank
Total Posts:  5
Joined  2012-02-04

I am tasked with creating cheese for a wedding, and the groom is spanish.  He wants me to attempt an idiazabal style cheese, but I cannot find a recipe anywhere.  Does anyone here have any info on this? 

I’m excited about trying smoking cheese.

cheers

Profile
 
 
Posted: 04 February 2012 07:12 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
Indispensable
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRank
Total Posts:  1450
Joined  2008-05-14

Tim,
Welcome to the forum.  We’re always glad to have new input.  You’ve posted a very challenging question.  I’ve never heard of this cheese before.  But I did some Googling and came up with a site that had a description of the making of Idiazabal cheese.  Look here, http://www.cheesefromspain.com/CFS/15112Idiazabal_I.htm , and see if this gives you some help.  In order to make an authentic cheese, it appears that you must have unpasteurized sheep’s milk.  Good luck finding that.  Perhaps you friend would be satisfied with something a bit less exotic???

 Signature 

Rich

Profile
 
 
Posted: 04 February 2012 07:45 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
Indispensable
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRank
Total Posts:  2415
Joined  2007-01-15

Idiazabal is a pressed cheese made from unpasteurized sheep milk, usually from Latxa and Carranzana sheep in the Basque Country and Navarre, Spain. It has a somewhat smokey flavor, but is usually un-smoked.

The cheese is handmade and covered in a hard, dark brown, inedible rind. It is aged for a few months and develops a nutty, buttery flavour, eaten fresh, often with quince jam. If aged longer, it becomes firm, dry and sharp and can be used for grating.

The Denomination of Origin for Idiazabal cheese was created in 1987 and defines the basic regulations for the product’s manufacture. Typically, unpasteurized milk from latxa breed of sheep is used, although in some cases the D.O. permits the use of milk from Carranzana breed, from the Encartaciones in Biscay. The D.O. also stipulates that the milk be curdled with the natural lamb rennet, and permits external smoking of the cheese. The cheeses produced in the following towns in accordance with all the D.O. regulations, are therefore also protected by the Idiazabal D.O. : Urbia, Entzia, Gorbea, Orduña, Urbasa and Aralar. Recently some Basque Country farmers have begun to use hybrid Assaf sheep, which some maintain does not meet the Denomination of Origin for the cheese.

Idiazabal is an aged cheese, from semi-cured to cured, made exclusively from whole unpasteurized sheep’s milk. It is produced by strong enzymatic coagulation. The pressed paste can be either uncooked or semi-cooked. It can eventually be externally smoked.

The milk used to produce Idiazabal must be whole unpasteurized, with a minimum of 6% fat. The milk coagulates at a temperature of 77 to 95 °F (25 to 35 °C), with the addition of natural lamb curd, resulting in a compact curdle after 30 to 45 minutes.

The curdle is cut in order to obtain rice-size grains, and then reheated to 34 to 38 °C (93 to 100 °F). In the case of coagulation at higher temperatures, the reheating temperature can reach 40 to 45 °C (104 to 113 °F). The reheated and shrunken paste dehydrates and is placed in molds where it may or may not be seasoned before pressing. Salting of the cheese is performed by rubbing the rind with dry salt, or by immersing the cheese in highly salted water for 24 hours. Finally, the cheeses are aged under cold and humid conditions avoiding mold, for at least two months.

The optional smoking takes place at the end of the aging process, using woods from the beech-tree, birch-tree, cherry tree or white pine. The intensity of the smoked qualities depends upon the type of wood and length of smoking. The cheeses are usually cylindrical in shape, although they are occasionally cone- or octagonal-shaped. The rinds of artisan cheeses may be engraved with drawings or symbols characteristic of the Basque culture. The rind is closed, smoked, waxy, without mold. The unsmoked cheeses have a yellow-beige color, while smoked cheeses are brownish.

The interior is compact, without air pockets or with only pin-head size holes, and is beige or pale yellow in color. The interior of the smoked cheeses has a brownish border. The taste is strong and pronounced, slightly acidic and piquant, buttery and consistent, with a characteristic sheep milk flavor. The smoked version is somewhat drier and stronger, with a pleasant aroma. The size of every cheese ranges from small to medium, with weights between 2 and 4 lb (0.91 and 1.

 Signature 

The Cheese Hole

Profile
 
 
Posted: 05 February 2012 03:52 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
Power User
Avatar
RankRankRankRank
Total Posts:  248
Joined  2011-05-31

Welcome Tim!
Since you’re tasked to do this, I suppose you are an experienced cheese maker? Depending on where you are living, it can be quite a challenge to get raw sheep milk…

 Signature 

- Herman -

Profile
 
 
Posted: 05 February 2012 08:34 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
Power User
Avatar
RankRankRankRank
Total Posts:  360
Joined  2011-02-16

I can get goat’s milk but not sheep’s milk. And goats milk is very expensive. I think it’s $7 a quart or something like that. I can’t imagine what sheep’s milk would cost, if you could find it, and how much you would need for a wedding.

I wish you luck, but at this point I’d be a bit discouraged.

 Signature 

Herbs, Sausage, Beer and Cheese
Tammy

Profile
 
 
Posted: 05 February 2012 07:25 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
New Visitor
Rank
Total Posts:  5
Joined  2012-02-04

Thank you all,

It looks like a bit of a challenge to make anything like an authentic product with the resources at hand.  Luckily, this is not the only cheese on the list! 

I appreciate all the information and will let you know if I succeed with the sheep’s milk.

Profile
 
 
Posted: 06 February 2012 04:23 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 6 ]
Power User
Avatar
RankRankRankRank
Total Posts:  248
Joined  2011-05-31

Wow Tammy, that’s an incredible price. I pay 0.94 euro a quart, which is $ 1.24. In fact I pay exactly 1 euro per liter and that is at the goat farm for raw milk…
I’m hoping to get 20 liters next weekend to make Cabra al Vino (also a Spanish cheese, but not from the Basque region), last weekend I had to skate with the kids wink

 Signature 

- Herman -

Profile
 
 
Posted: 01 August 2012 08:30 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 7 ]
New Visitor
Rank
Total Posts:  5
Joined  2012-02-04

Just a quick update.

Cheese making for the wedding was a great success, after several failures!  I had a two manchegos and a cheddar that came out way to hard and dry to be useful for the wedding.  However, the Caerphilly put together in the last month approaching the wedding came out great and were featured as the final course. 

The best compliment was that the chef catering the whole affair stole some for his own kitchen! 

Thank you all for your feedback.  This forum as well as the whole cheese community has been wonderfully helpful.

I am off and running with more cheese for my own cave.  Plus a Parm for my good friend to eat on his one year anniversary.

Profile
 
 
Posted: 02 August 2012 08:12 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 8 ]
Indispensable
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRank
Total Posts:  2415
Joined  2007-01-15

Good to hear, practice makes perfect smile

 Signature 

The Cheese Hole

Profile
 
 
   
 
‹‹ Good, bad or ugly?      Florida Newbie Intro ››