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Two day Mozzarella

Started by MrsKK, June 24, 2010, 02:56:00 PM

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ancksunamun

I finished my Mozzarella off tonight and it went brilliantly! Fantastic stringy, glossy and smooth.

Excellent recipe MrsKK and so convenient!

Thank you.

Sailor Con Queso

Mozz (and any cheese) is all about patience. The whole concept of a "30 Minute Mozzarella" is a setup for failure.

Brentsbox

Quote from: Sailor Con Queso on September 13, 2010, 07:59:12 PM
Mozz (and any cheese) is all about patience. The whole concept of a "30 Minute Mozzarella" is a setup for failure.

I agree with Sailor.  I cant see doing any cheese in the microwave.  Heck, I really dont like to even cook anything in it.

ancksunamun

#33
Agreed! The concept of microwaving it seems so wrong. Mind you, I don't own a microwave at all as I'm not a fan of cooking anything in them so I would say that.

As mentioned my Mozzarella seems to have turned out well but I do have some questions following this make.

1) Are there any guidelines as to how much you should work the curds to make the perfect mozzarella?
2) Is there a trick to making sure they stay soft rather than hardening?

I'm thinking on the fresh mozzarella I have had and while I am pretty happy with mine for a first attempt it is probably more reminiscent of the rubbery bulk mozzarella we have here than the fresh soft stuff I have eaten. It will though be perfect for pizza and other string cheese dishes.

DeejayDebi

Time and patience and more time. If you give it the time it needs it's a fun easy cheese to make.

MrsKK

I agree with Debi about time.  I've found that when it is the upper end of two days, maybe even into three days when I stretch the cheese, that I get better results.

DeejayDebi

I think part of the problem people have is they read about the 30 minute mozzarella then try to make the traditional style and expect it to happen in 30 minutes. I think the 30 minute variety is supposed to ease you into making cheese with little equipment of investment. This is good for places where you may not have a stove or maybe little kids. I always thought it was a simple cheese for newbies until I came here.

MrsKK

I still occasionally make the 30 minute mozz when I absolutely need some of the cheese in a quick time.  Never for fresh eating, though.

mtncheesemaker

Hey Karen,
I've used your recipe successfully a few times but had an "udder" failure the other day. I tested a small piece in water and it "spun" like it should have. But, when I heated up the whey and tried to stretch the rest, the curds just crumbled and wouldn't come together. They also lost loads of liquid into the whey, losing like 50% of their volume. I put the rest back into the fridge for a bit, then nuked them just to see what would happen. They stretched but weren't really that great texture-wise.
Any idea why they stretched in water, not whey, and why they lost so much liquid to the whey? I'm thinking it must be a similar action to feta dissolving in brine, but can't put the answer together.
I'm going to make curds tonight for another attempt but am feeling a bit gun shy!
Any help appreciated.
Pam

Sailor Con Queso

Sounds like it got too acidic.

mtncheesemaker

That's what I thought but why did it stretch in water, and not lose volume?

Sailor Con Queso

I'm guessing that the pH was just a little low - right on the borderline. Putting it in water helped reduce some of the acid on the surface. Just enough to allow it to stretch. Turning a 24 hour moz into a two or 3 day moz can definitely allow the bacteria time to create too much acid, even at refrigerator temperatures. Think spoiled milk. :o

MrsKK

Sailor is probably right.  I've never had that happen myself.  Sorry!

mtncheesemaker


akurtser

Thanks you for the recipe.
I'd like to try it for just 1 gallon of milk, is it just a matter of cutting all the ingredient by 1/4?