Hi, I’m new to cheesemaking and thought I’d like to say Hello to everyone on the forum.
I live in Japan where cheesemaking supplies are very hard to come by, though I did manage to find vegetable rennet on Amazon Japan. For the other stuff, so far I’ve been improvising, using homemade plain yoghurt in place of culture, acidifying with citric acid, etc.
To date I’ve made generic soft/cream cheeses, ricotta and quick mozzarella, but what I really want is to make the lovely hard British cheeses of my childhood – Lancashire, Double Gloucester, Red Leicester, Wensleydale, Caerphilly, etc.
For my first hard cheese I used the recipe for basic cheese from one gallon which I found here - http://biology.clc.uc.edu/Fankhauser/Cheese/Cheese98.htm. I followed the instructions more or less exactly, up to wrapping the pressed cheese in a handkerchief and putting it in the fridge. After a couple of weeks the cheese had sort of a yellow rind around the edges, but the sides were still quite soft and had developed mouldy spots. I rubbed the spots with vinegar and salt, which removed them, but next day the cheese was wet. I wiped it off and took it out of the fridge to air-dry. In a couple of days it had developed the cracks you see in the photo, and I hastily returned it to its closed container in the fridge with a bowl of water to provide humidity.
Yesterday the cheese was one month old, so I cut it and tasted. It’s a bit rubbery (not pressed hard enough?) and a bit saltier than I would like, but it’s definitely cheese! Yay!
My second attempt was a Cheshire-style cheese, adapted from this recipe - http://cheeseforum.org/forum/index.php/topic,8296.0/wap2.html - scaled down to 4 litres. I realised later that a smaller cheese needs pressing with less weight; I used 25kilos, and now have a very – very – solid little cheese sitting in the fridge. It looks yellowier than the first one, and smells deliciously buttery.
The Cheshire is supposed to be bandaged. Is it possible to use eg olive oil for this? I’ve only seen lard suggested, and as a vegetarian that isn’t an option.
I’m considering buying a vacuum packer and a wine cellar for aging future cheeses. If anyone has any advice on either of these appliances – what to look out for, what to avoid - I would really appreciate it.
Last question (for the time being!) Lots of recipes call for the milk to be maintained at a temperature of 30-32 ℃; does this mean I cannot/should not try making cheese in a Japanese summer, when temperatures can be in the high 30s? I imagine air drying at those temperatures would also be a problem?