Over the years, I’ve had more than my share of cheeses that are dry and crumbly. It’s almost expected in a sharp cheddar, where the acid level is greater; but even in Colby’s I’ve had dry cheese on occasion. I’ve been looking into reasons for this and here’s what I’ve come up with so far. Any additional thoughts from y’all would be helpful.
First, the common answer is that there’s too much acid development. By utilizing a pH meter, I’ve pretty much eliminated this as the reason.
Next, I emailed Jim at New England Cheesemaking to get his assessment. He suggested that my culture and rennet levels may be too high. Since I use raw milk exclusively, less is more. Raw milk already has some needed bacteria before any culture is added, so less is needed.
I make 4 gallon batches every time. I had been using 1/4 tsp culture - either MA11 or MM100, depending on the cheese I’m making at the time - so I backed off to 1/8 tsp. And, I had been using 1 tsp rennet; this has now been backed off to 1/2 tsp.
I’m now in the waiting stage - waiting for my cheeses to age enough to try them out. But the only difference I’ve noticed so far is that it takes slightly longer to reach a clean break - and that is what I expected. I had been getting a 14 minute flocculation point, but now it’s at 18 minutes. I can live with this, especially if it improves the texture of my cheese.
Nabil, if you’re out there, let me know what you think.