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CHEESE TYPE BOARDS (for Cheese Lovers and Cheese Makers) => ADJUNCT - Rennet Surface White Mold (Penicillium candidum) Ripened => Topic started by: Dinerdish on February 26, 2011, 11:20:58 PM

Title: a fine Camembert!
Post by: Dinerdish on February 26, 2011, 11:20:58 PM
 I have to say, I'm pretty pleased with this one.  ;D

Dinerdish
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: mtncheesemaker on February 27, 2011, 02:03:26 AM
Congratulations! Looks good.
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: tnbquilt on February 27, 2011, 03:07:22 PM
That is lovely! A work of art
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: smilingcalico on February 27, 2011, 05:03:48 PM
That looks perfect! Clearly you had great patience to wait till it was ready.
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: Bishop on February 28, 2011, 07:05:51 AM
Love the pineapple pattern on the PC :)
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: CheeseSnipe on February 28, 2011, 07:53:33 PM
That looks like the model to strive for! Congrats. I'm going to have to keep at it. I'm on batch #4.
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: Brie on March 01, 2011, 12:11:23 AM
Looks great, Diner! How does it taste? How many weeks affinage is this?
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: Dinerdish on March 01, 2011, 03:12:09 AM
Ah shucks guys. Thanks for the compliments.

It tastes yummy! This cheese spent 3 weeks in the cheese fridge at 52 F, in a ripening box. Then wrapped loosely in cheese paper and almost 3 weeks in the regular household fridge.

Brie, I've seen your posts about patting down the mold and not wrapping. I like to keep the majority of my cheeses in the regular fridge so I worry about drying out. But I wrap pretty loosely. They wouldn't fit into the traditional wooden box. I haven't noticed an ammonia buld up. You had a picture of your Camembert with a really gnarly rind! Do all your patted down cheeses come out like that? how does that rind taste?

Dinerdish
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: Brie on March 02, 2011, 12:56:24 AM
Diner_-You can either pat the rind or wrap in appropriate (breatheable) paper. Either way, it does need to continue to have high humidty. It's easier for me to keep them in their humidified ripening container-I pat them down to alleviate slip-skin. If you do choose to wrap, continue to keep humidity high. As for the "gnarly rind"--this is what Cam/Brie evolves to after aging for 9 weeks. The b.linens combine with the rest of the cultures and add another dimension. True Brie.
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: Dinerdish on March 02, 2011, 02:42:14 AM
Interesting.... Do you add b. linens intentionally or is it ambient where you age your cheeses? You make more than camembert types, right?  And if you do add it, when and how? I've been reading posts about which cheese creatures prevail over which other cheese creatures under which specific humidities and temperatures, so how does (do) b. linens play with PC or Geo?

Boy, the more you find out, the more you realize there is to find out!

Dinerdish
Title: Re: a fine Camembert!
Post by: Brie on March 03, 2011, 11:47:35 PM
I don't add b.linens to Cam or Brie--just Geo and P. Candidum--I believe the b.linens come about naturally in the aging processes for these cheeses. Geo makes a nice playground for b.linen growth with cheeses such as Reblochon, Muenster, and Morbier.