More or less by the book recipe (200 Easy Cheeses). I had a weird experience making this cheddar: we are ‘enjoying’ a record heatwave, and instead of adding hot water to the water bath to raise the temperature of the milk, I found myself adding ice cubes to keep things cool! (Target temperature 32 degrees C, ambient temperature 38 degrees C).
I used culture from a pack that is supposed to be enough for 50 litres of milk, and it was a bit of a hassle trying to work out just how much I should use - in future I think I’ll stick to the ‘one packet does 8 litres’ stuff, where there’s less chance of me getting things wildly wrong. What happens if there’s too much/too little culture?
The weight for the final pressing was 21 kilos, and the cheese seems quite solid. I hope it will have a good texture. I also hope I’ll be able to resist cutting into it for at least 6 months. In the meantime I hope to be making a few shorter-aging cheeses (eg another Caerphilly) to help me fight temptation.
The whey produced over 500 gm of ricotta, which will probably turn into a cheesecake. But is there any way of having less ricotta and more hard cheese? Would increasing the amount of calcium chloride raise the yield? The cheddar weighs 1.6 kilos, which seems just about right since the book says to expect a yield of 10%.
On the subject of whey and heatwaves, I found a great way of using leftover whey! The juice of two lemons (about 6 tbs) and 50-70cc honey melted in half a cup of warm water added to a litre or so of whey (after ricottafication, I just made up a new word), chill in the fridge and serve over ice cubes. Very, very refreshing on a hot summer’s day!