CheeseForum.org ยป Forum

CHEESE TYPE BOARDS (for Cheese Lovers and Cheese Makers) => RENNET COAGULATED - Hard Other => Topic started by: Hande on May 27, 2012, 03:31:12 PM

Title: Manchego like
Post by: Hande on May 27, 2012, 03:31:12 PM
I did last year in early summer raw cow milk Mancego like.
Heh, it's bit sad to take cheese out cave and start to eat it, what you taken care of year  :'(

That cheese taste is great, very wide and taste teases hole mouth.
Natural glutamate is definitely boost flavor for that one.

Now is good time to make new one for next summer  :)

But anyway I use that one:
16 l      raw cow milk / 4,2 % fat
1 %     MA4000 mother
0,3ml   mild lipase

Light pressing, age 11c / 85% rh.
EVOO very lightly every 2 months.
Too much oil can go rancid over time.

Hande




(//)
(//)

Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: anutcanfly on May 27, 2012, 03:52:53 PM
That look fantastic, good job Hande! 
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: JeffHamm on May 27, 2012, 05:46:52 PM
That looks very nice Hande!  I've got a Manchego (cow's milk) in my cave that's over a year old.  You're result gives me hope for a nice result.  A cheese to you for your patience and nice result.

- Jeff
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: H-K-J on May 27, 2012, 05:56:57 PM
Another very nice cheese Hande :P a year is a very long wait, but worth it I'll bet  :)
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: DeejayDebi on May 27, 2012, 07:09:40 PM
Very nice Hande! A cheese for you! That's about the best Manchego I have seen here!
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Dulcelife on May 28, 2012, 12:26:34 AM
Hande, absolutely beautiful.  A cheese for you.
I just completed a make today for a Manchego/Hispanico infused with saffron.
I had molded three pounds in two wheels and will definitely age one of the wheels as close to one year as I can bare.
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Boofer on May 28, 2012, 12:44:42 AM
Wait right there, Hande, I'll be right over!  :)

Beautiful cheese. I really understand what you mean about feeling sad to cut into a cheese you have nurtured and watched over for so long. Still, someone has to do it.

I wish I had time and shelf space to do another Manchego. The very first one I did had a little too much lipase. It was difficult to enjoy.

You are right. For those of us in the northern hemisphere, now is the time to be using all that good pasture-fed milk to create cheeses for now and later...and much later. So little time, so little summer milk.   :D

Good job.

-Boofer-
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Hande on May 28, 2012, 02:49:02 PM
Oh boy, thank you so much all  :)

Now I have a better size mould for 16 litres.
New one is 6"x 6".
Here is example that mould cheese,
beaufort like and cream wax on coat.
(//)
Hande
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: hoeklijn on May 28, 2012, 05:41:35 PM
That's also a good looking cheese Hande! I still had to give you a cheese as well for giving me a link to 2 german webshops for cheese supplies. I ordered some different cultures and molds there and I am waiting for the delivery. When I see the last cheese, I'm sorry I didn't order proprioni....
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Boofer on May 28, 2012, 08:53:10 PM
Wow, you just keep surprising us! Very nice.

Why can't I get my PS to behave like that?  :'(

This is a Beaufort-like cheese? More like a Swiss, no?

Does the cream wax coating protect the rind from mold attacks? Seems like I'm constantly wiping with vinegar & salt to remove molds.

-Boofer-
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Sailor Con Queso on May 29, 2012, 12:11:56 AM
Boof - some cream wax has mold inhibitors, some don't.
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Boofer on May 29, 2012, 01:45:04 PM
Hey, I knew that!
Have to get some, I guess, if I could be sure that I could get it off the rind easily when I went to cut the cheese....

What do you do for your alpines, Sailor?

-Boofer-
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Sailor Con Queso on May 29, 2012, 02:15:56 PM
I hate the cream waxes. They stick to the rind & make it inedible. It probably is "possible" to peel it off, but that's too much time and trouble for me.

I make the alpine cheese, chill at 52F for 24 hours, brine for 24 hours (at 52F), dry for 24 hours at 52F, vacuum bag, and then ripen at 68-70F room temp for 3 weeks. I follow the same procedure for my Beauforts and Gruyeres, but only ripen for a week.
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: DeejayDebi on May 29, 2012, 11:00:15 PM
I have the same opinion of the cheese cream waxes. I only tryied one brand but I had to use a potatoe peeled to eat the cheese it left little bits in the rind.
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: hoeklijn on May 30, 2012, 06:19:20 AM
Is cream wax something different than plastic coating? I find the plastic coating easy to peel off at room temperature. 
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Hande on May 30, 2012, 04:23:09 PM
Maybe I use wrong name that my coat http://gnltd.co.uk/goat-nutrition/cheese-making-products/cheese-making-waxes-coatings/yellow-cheese-coating-for-cheese-making.html (http://gnltd.co.uk/goat-nutrition/cheese-making-products/cheese-making-waxes-coatings/yellow-cheese-coating-for-cheese-making.html)
I use it experimental experience for  some cheese  :) ( huh, my English is   ??? )
That coat what I use is easy to take out of cheese,
you can get it away one hand move, nothing left.


Hande
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Boofer on May 31, 2012, 12:20:07 AM
Thanks for the clarification. I ordered a tub to try it.

-Boofer-
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: Hande on May 31, 2012, 02:40:28 AM
And I forgot to say that I put coat after few months aged cheese,
to save some moisture.
After few months cheese is usually get good rind,
so maybe it not stick in cheese.

Hande
Title: Re: Manchego like
Post by: hoeklijn on May 31, 2012, 06:43:49 AM
Quote from: Boofer on May 31, 2012, 12:20:07 AM
Thanks for the clarification. I ordered a tub to try it.

That's the same stuff in a different tub that I use, Boofer. Finally you can give it a try  ^-^

-Boofer-