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Hello from Paris

Started by nicooOmg, November 28, 2016, 04:25:36 AM

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davidsmith150

Hello! I am David smith from paris and I am working as a content writer at Help4assignment.

Al Lewis

Welcome to the forum David! ;D
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nicooOmg

Quote from: davidsmith150 on December 13, 2016, 11:17:41 AM
Hello! I am David smith from paris and I am working as a content writer at Help4assignment.

Welcome :)

AshleySewell

Welcome, David. I hope that you will always enjoy with good knowledge and information.

Jay-1

 Welcome to the forum, David, I was in Paris around a year ago. :)

OzzieCheese

@David... Welcome...
@Niko.  Well,  This is certainly a challenge... Given that you have at least some refrigeration/Freezer then the freeze dried cultures would survive quite a while - as long as the bulk of them stay frozen.  If you are going to take them, then I would suggest that when you get there use two sterile jars and transfer a small 'Working' amount to one and keep the other as storage.  While I applaud your choices of cheese both the Forme d'Ambert and Camembert do require quite a bit of attention once they are made. Have you considered some of the harder cheeses - Caerphilly, Cheddar or Manchago etc.  Just thinking of the maturing required but the success rate might be higher.  As I don't know what conditions you are going to live under, there are a couple of books I would suggest you read.

1. The art of Fermentation by Sandon Katz  https://www.amazon.com/Art-Fermentation-Depth-Exploration-Essential/dp/160358286X
2. The Art of Natural Cheesemaking by David Asher http://www.chelseagreen.com/the-art-of-natural-cheesemaking

Also, as already recommended, for your requirements Kefir grains sounds like the way to go for your culture needs.  You can get them in dried form that will re-energise once place in milk once more - might take a couple of weeks to get a consistent ferment but from then you can just keep making Kefir to drink even if you don't make cheese - Win-Win !

Just my Ten Cents worth.

-- Mal
Usually if one person asks a question then 10 are waiting for the answer - Please ask !

matsnykanen

Hi there welcome to the forum  :)

Col68

Hi Nico, bienvenue à toi depuis l'Alsace, moi aussi je suis nouveau, sa fait plaisir, à bientôt si tu est actif. Bon fromage, cordialement.

samsmith150

Quote from: davidsmith150 on December 13, 2016, 11:17:41 AM
Hello! I am David smith from paris and I am working as a content writer at Help4assignment.

Welcome david have a good discussion ahead and i love paris.

panamamike

Hello Nico ,

Welcome to the fourm.  Here in Panama the locals use banana leaves sewn together with a small amount of thread into hoops . With the warm weather here, they make a fresh cheese  ( Queso Blanco ) .
There are a lot of citric fruit to use to set the cheese in Columbia. Hope this helps and good luck with your adventure in cheesemaking and to a new and exciting country.