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first hard cheese gone awry

Started by mattmika, April 29, 2009, 05:51:52 PM

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mattmika

I attempted to make my first hard cheese following the instructions from David B. Fankhauser (http://biology.clc.uc.edu/fankhauser/Cheese/Cheese98.htm) for basic hard cheese.

Heres how it went:
1) Buttermilk starter sat room temp for 24hrs. It didnt seem thicken much but did smell more acidic.
2) Add 3tsp. buttermilk starter to 68F milk and let sit overnight. I was unable to get back to the milk for about 20hrs. to complete next step.
3) Warm milk to 86F and add 1/4 tsp. liquid rennet. After one hour no clean break, wait another hour. No clean break, add 1/4 tsp rennet, still no clean break in morning. The animal rennet I used was never opened, stored in the refrigerator and approx. 10 months from purchase.

I now have a gallon of milk that is mild buttermilk the cosistency of thin yogurt. Any ideas where I went wrong. Im guessing I over acidified the milk or my rennet is not good.

Any tips or suggestions would be appreciated, thanks.
Matt

mightyjesse

If your milk clabbered (got thicker) before you added the rennet, it will never make curds. I have read this most places. I think you left it too long before adding the rennet.

shoelessone

Yes, I would bet the milk may have been to acidic to get a clean break.  I really like frankhouser, but I have to say sometimes I find his instructions a bit difficult to interpret.  I was never sure if "overnight" meant 4 hours, 5 hours, 8 hours, 10 hours, or if it just didn't matter.

Also, I'd really check your rennet.  I'm not sure the brand/type you used, but I know at least some animal rennets loose their potency after 6 months.  Just for the sake of experimentation you might try using a different rennet, such as Junket tablets which can be found at places like walmart (in the ice cream topping area normally).

Good luck!

MrsKK

When following Fankhauser's recipe for the first time, I wrapped the pot in a towel, as my house gets quite cold.  The next morning, I had a five gallon pot of a yogurt-like substance, as well.  I drained it off (through a cheesecloth), salted it and used it as cream cheese.  I froze a lot of it up in 2-cup containers, though, because I never could have used it up fast enough to keep it from going bad otherwise.

timnbama

His 5 gallon batch instructions states not to let it sit for over 8 hours and not to have it at a temp over 70F. Those instructions aren't on the 1 gal batch. I've made that cheese a few times and it worked so it might be your rennet.

DeejayDebi

Quote from: mattmika on April 29, 2009, 05:51:52 PM
It didnt seem thicken much but did smell more acidic.

I am guessing the buttermilk or the rennet could have been the culpret. My buttermilk is usually like yogurt by morning. Did you get a clean break?