So far I haven’t used calcium chloride in any of my cheeses. I can get (what appears to me to be) good quality non-homo milk from my local Coop, and that seems to give a good curd. But all the recipes seem to include calcium chloride as a matter of course.
The problem as I see it (being a born miser) is that the good quality non-homo milk costs a good bit more than the common-or-garden homogenised variety from the supermarket, and if/when I start making larger batches of cheese the cost per batch is going to make me start twitching.
Common sense tells me that better milk will produce better cheese, but I’m fast learning that cheese doesn’t necessarily listen to my version of common sense. So, is my good-quality expensive milk going to give me better cheese than ordinary milk + calcium chloride, or is the taste/texture the same and the only difference in how the firm curd is achieved?
I know the simple answer is Try them both and see for yourself, but it will take months waiting for the cheeses to mature before I can compare them, and in the meantime the ?? remains hanging over my head….should I continue to shop at the Coop? Or should I buy me a packet of calcium chloride?