Three baby Wensleydales, plain, cranberry and orange, dried and ready for waxing.
I’d read somewhere that the cranberries are prone to ferment during aging, so I poured boiling water over them to kill off any nasties and to wash off the oil that the label said was added to stop them sticking together.
For the orange, I soaked 30 gm dried orange peel in hot water overnight and ended up with a bowlful of peel, far more than I needed for the cheese; and a lot of the flavour seemed to have gone into the soaking water, so I decided to use that. I added a few drops of annatto to intensify the colour, and intended to let the curds sit in the orange-coloured/flavoured water while I dealt with the other two cheeses. Unfortunately my hand slipped as I was pouring, and most of the soaking water went over my work surfaces and very little onto the curds. Dang! I also added some orange-flavoured salt and just a sprinkling of the peel for atmosphere (?).
Like the Cheshire, these little cheeses did not want to knit, and you can see that even now the cranberry has crevices, but the other two seem to have knit quite nicely.
Fingers crossed that the fruit doesn’t do anything untoward while the cheese is aging. And now I need to find myself a use for all that unneeded reconstituted orange peel. Maybe a cake or a pudding.