Hey all,
I’ve been a lurker on this site for years, and find it incredibly helpful and fun. Now I need your help. I have a mystery to solve with my raw milk that is failing to make cheese in a way I’ve never seen before!
I’ve been making cheese on and off for the last 7 or 8 years, depending on my milk availability. I had a great raw milk source a year ago, and enjoyed success with fresh mozzarella and a few hard cheeses. That milk source dried up, though, so I’ve been without fresh cheese for what seems like an eternity! However, I finally found a new source last month, and have jumped right in to making fresh mozzarella once again.
The problem is that my 30-minute mozzarella is failing EVERY time with this new milk! I’ve made it dozens of times before, using the same technique and different raw milk, and never had a failure before. I know it’s not my technique or recipe… it’s got to be the milk. I’m completely stumped as to why it’s failing.
Here is what is happening: I add the citric acid, bring it up to temp at 88-90F, and add the rennet. I let it sit until set, slowly rising to 100F, and that’s when it goes wrong. I get a huge, globby mess like you see in the attached photo “curd_glob.jpg”. When I try to cut the curds, I end up getting a super stringy and limp cheesy, cobwebby, mess, like you see in the attached photo “stringy_curds.jpg”. Sometimes I’m able to get the curds strained enough to form a ball in the bowl, but it’s still limp, as if the cheese is melted. This is before I ever heat it in the microwave, and when my whey is only in the 100-105 range. I’ve never seen anything like it. On the few times I’ve been able to get something resembling cheese out of it, it tastes bland but passable that day, and sour and waxy the next. Sometimes it’s totally rubbery and plastic-y.
I’ve tried more rennet, less rennet, and slower heating. I’ve even purchased a pH meter and checked to be sure that the milk wasn’t too acidic when I started out, but it was right at 6.5. I tried testing my pH carefully after adding the citric acid, and made sure it was right at 5.2 before starting the process. I even tried once with the old-school mozzarella method of letting it acidify on its own overnight, but the acidity never developed and the cheese bombed. I bought new rennet, thinking that might be the problem, and that made no difference. The last thing I tried was cutting the final temp back from 100F to more like 90F and I thought maybe it was going to work—it formed pretty nice curds and after draining I spun them and was able to form a fairly decent ball of cheese, but the texture was still way off.
I have two theories—either I’m still overheating it somehow or the cow has something in her diet that makes the milk fail like this. I haven’t tried making any hard cheeses with this milk because I figure if I can’t even get a simple mozz to work, I sure don’t want to waste hours making a hard cheese and months waiting for it to age.
Any advice you all have would be greatly appreciated!