# $LogEntry = $IPAddr . ", " . $WhoFrom . ", " . $txtDate . ", " . $MyAddr . ", " . $SayWhat . ", " . $millisec . "\n"; 129.137.116.240,David F.,11 Sep 2000,fankhadb@uc.edu,Welcome to the new Comments Page. We hope you will let us know what recipes work for you‚ or whether you have any problems with them.
Also‚ if you have suggestions for additions or corrections‚ let us know.
Thanks‚ David F.,1
129.137.117.61,Jan,12 Sep 2000,carterjs@uc.edu,Hi David‚
This should be in reverse chronological order‚ now.,968783286330
213.104.100.39,Riktrense,15 Sep 2000,riktrense@ntlworld.com,Hy David I have now eight cheeses waxed and waiting for maturity. As an experiment I have salted and pressed the Ricotta's . I have also added various herbs. They do taste nice as they are but I have waxed them to see how they turn out. I hope they keep in the fridge I shall test after twelve weeks. Will keep you informed.Can you make cheese from UHT milk?This is ultra high temperature treated milk that has a shelf life of 12 months in its unopened state?Nice touch this comments page.Regards...Rik vonTrense,969033306220
212.26.19.156,Ahmad,16 Sep 2000,topuzdag@usa.net,hi David,969092518330
213.104.100.174,Rik vonTrense,16 Sep 2000,riktrense@ntlworld.com,Hy David I think once people cotton-on to this board it is going to leave some of the others a bit bare....after all its like a parson having a direct line to God (if you will pardon the pun)I know Martin F my midlands collegue has problems and would like your advice.I know you love your lastikband press and I have no adverse comments it does the required job. BUT all my life I have been a perfectionist..striving to better things that I need If I find something doesn't do what I think it should then I get stuck in. It would appear we only have ten lines......Regards...........Rik vonTrense ,969139056470
213.104.100.174,Rik vonTrense,16 Sep 2000,riktrense@ntlworld.com,Hy David Sorry about the duplication I was typing away and did not realise the comments were limited to ten lines.I will email you or post the other half of my comments...can you erase the duplication please Regards Rik vonTrense,969141813340
62.252.64.5,Rik vonTrense,29 Sep 2000,riktrense@ntlworld.com,Hello David Guess you are very busy this fall. I am going public with my website which is http://homepage.ntlworld.com/riktrense it contains the photos of my latest cheesepress should anyone wish to make it themselves. It works very well.Regards....Rik,970260532140
129.137.116.240,David F.,09 Oct 2000,fankhadb@uc.edu,Just a note of thanks to those of you who have left messages‚ and an invitation to the rest of you who have visited the site. Give us a comment! Questions are welcome‚ as are suggestions for additions or corrections.Regards‚ David F.,971109041351
62.252.64.5,riktrense,13 Oct 2000,riktrense@ntlworld.com,David.....Martin F has tried several times to post on this comments page but keeps getting a refusal. I don't know what he is doing wrong.Rik,971472281150
146.235.65.3,Jon Armour,08 Nov 2000,jarmo2@jcpenney.com,When I mold and press my cheeses‚ and then remove them from the molds and cheese cloth‚ I seem to always get a rough finish on the outside and chunks come off here and there. Is there something I am doing wrong? How do you get a smooth rounded edge appearance? No one has done any writing on how to finish out a cheese as far as appearance. Can anyone give some tips on achieving a nice finish on my cheese? thanks‚ Jon,973725621795
146.235.65.3,Jon Armour,09 Nov 2000,jarmo2@jcpenney.com,I have several questions. First‚ What is the best way to apply the wax to a cheese? With a brush or by dipping the cheese in the wax and how thick does it need to be?Second‚ When lining my cheese mold I use a dish towel as David had suggested. My follower always seems to just barely fit and then there is alot of extra material hanging out. Do I cut off the excess material and fold the cloth over the cheese before putting in the follower or put the follower in directly contacting the cheese? And‚ my follower always seems to want to go crooked in the mold because of the weight in the press. ,973800052000
146.235.65.3,Jon Armour,09 Nov 2000,jarmo2@jcpenney.com,Third‚ What are the differences in salting‚ either adding the salt to the curds and mixing them in as in cheddar or brining in a container like gouda and feta. Is the only thing the salt suppose to do is develop the rind and keep the development of bad bugs from happening?Cordially‚ Jon,973800052000
146.235.65.3,Jon Armour,10 Nov 2000,jarmo2@jcpenney.com,This board is great‚ except I have not had anyone respond to my questions. There is no way to tell on the board if anyone is responding to anything. Can this be changed. Thanks. Jon,973895333706
129.137.116.240,David F.,13 Nov 2000,fankhadb@uc.edu,Jon: Sorry for no answers to your questions. Did not check this board since last week.
1: Cheese crumbles when un molded because it was too cool when placed in the mold.
2: The edges will round as the cheese dries.
3: Salt helps to dehydrate the cheese as well as prevent unwanted bacterial growth.
More answers soon! ,974129536920
209.176.65.6,dawn davis,14 Nov 2000,dd44099@yahoo.com,When my family and I purchased our home there was an item that was left in the garage. We still keep in touch with the previous owner and asked what it was. She said it was her grandfathers cheese press. It is rather large and doesn't look like yours. We would like to sell it‚ but I don't know where to begin. Do you have any advice? Thanks‚ dawn davis,974210305250
129.137.118.246,David F.,14 Nov 2000,fankhadb@uc.edu,Dawn: My cheese press is of my own design‚ and I never saw one like IT before... So it hardly matters that a cheese press looks different from mine.
I have seen folks post notices of having equipment for sale (including a cheese press) on cheese discussion boards. I'm not sure how kosher this is‚ but it has been done. Also‚ look up the Artisan Cheese Makers site: they might have folks interested in a press. Buona fortuna...
David F.,974237106580
129.137.116.240,David F.,16 Nov 2000,fankhadb@uc.edu,Answers to Jon's questions:
APPLICATION OF WAX:
As I mention on my page on waxing‚ I melt the wax in a pan‚ and roll the cheese through it. It gives much better coverage and seals completely. The wax only has to be thick enough so that it does not crack and flake off.
PRESSING CLOTH
I let the cloth hang out of the press. I found that if you fold the cloth in‚ the surface of the cheese was very irregular. Don't cut off the excess or the cloth will shred when you wash it. This means you have to carefully cleanse the follower too.,974386163885
129.137.116.240,David F.,16 Nov 2000,fankhadb@uc.edu,Answers to Jon's questions‚ part II:
CROOKED FOLLOWER
This is a continuing problem for me too. I check the cheese in the press every 30 min or so for the first two hours after loading in the curd and adjust the tension on the rubber bands so that the follower is straight. If you get an idea on how to manage this problem‚ let us know.,974386163885
152.163.206.194,Steve ,16 Dec 2000,kuehncourt@aol.com,Awesome!! I love all the information you have on your site. If only my college had intersting professors like yourself!!,976987821540
62.253.0.5,Peter Samsom,27 Dec 2000,p.samsom@virgin.net,fascinating page. I made cheese on a relatively small scale (@80kg/day) for 6 or 7 years to try and earn a living. Looking to have a go at mozzerella now - there's someone milking buffalo nearby (in the north of England)! Best wishes.,977907938940
129.137.229.103,David F.,01 Jan 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,80 Kg/day is WAY beyond MY scale! I take my hat off to you. Please let us know how your experiments with mozzarella go. It is‚ in my experience‚ a challenging cheese to make‚ but one which is very rewarding. I presume you will not try to make 80 Kg on your first try ;-)...,978369241780
38.38.27.192,Max Taylor,20 Jan 2001,diamaxd@hotmail.com,Very interesting site.Enjoyed it very much and will start with making yogurt. Thank you. Max,980034657480
209.208.30.39,Nancy,21 Jan 2001,nlitwa@atlantic.net,Can you supply a simple recipe for making homemade cottage cheese?,980120422370
129.137.116.240,David F.,09 Feb 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,Follow the basic recipe for cheese‚ but do not heat the curd at all in step 11. This produces a soft curd. If you want even softer curd‚ you should heat the milk prior to adding the rennet to only 28 C.,981731938600
216.243.186.199,Bear aKa Mark Digatono,09 Feb 2001,digatono@rorke.com,Thanks for your help and comments thanks to you and rik my first cheeses look to be a success. your page was imensely helpful.,981761756390
129.137.229.88,David F.,10 Feb 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,Thanks for the positive feedback! What kind of cheese did you make? How old is it by now?,981831316650
216.129.66.215,Sam,10 Feb 2001,sxgale@netcom.ca,I made feta cheese -after a couple of days of it soaking in the brine - it started to go soft and the brine started to go milky white. How can I fix this ?,981836185580
216.243.186.199,mark Digatono,12 Feb 2001,digatono@rorke.com,We my wife and I made two batches using your basic protocol for hard cheese one with whole milk the other with skim ,982007377600
129.137.116.240,David F.,26 Feb 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,MARK: What is your initial impression of whole milk cheese vs skim milk cheese. I have found skim milk cheese more inclined to be rubbery and squeeky to the bite? And‚ of course‚ a little less rich and flavorful.,983209401785
132.234.250.7,Liz Ellis,03 Mar 2001,lizmellis@powerup.com.au,I am currently writing a research paper along with a farmhouse cheese maker in Australia about teh virtues of using raw milk in cheese production. Would you please email hte addresses of any sites that would be a useful research tool as well as any books or literature that would also be of assistance. iam currently studying Applied Science in Dairy and Food Technology as well as having completed a degree in International Trade and Business. I loved you web page it was very informativeCheersLiz,983581636180
38.195.134.113,fauna,06 Apr 2001,west5@ionet.net,Drain yogurt over night in frig using coffee filter; add salt & chopped olives -either kind - great spread on crackers & bagles or add powdered sugar to drained yogurt to use on "breakfast" bagles/ raisin toast/english muffins! As a bee keeper‚ I use honey mixed in yogurt by itself‚ for smoothies and over fruit salads. Hard cheese is next for me if I can find the right rennet (liquid drops was all I could find - and I had no results with that!) Great site Mr. F.! Thanks!,986609777170
129.137.116.240,David F.,13 Apr 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,FAUNA: Liquid rennet works fine for making cheese‚ you add (to my recollection) about two to four drops per gallon (one teaspoon per 5 gallons of milk) depending on the type of cheese you are making. (Right‚ Rik?) So full speed ahead on making hard cheese!,987173019662
152.163.204.77,Warren Whittemore,29 Jun 2001,wdchips@aol.com,Am trying your Bleu Cheese recipe as I love Bleu. Using your recipe for Chevre and goats milk... after 24 hrs I got a clean break but curds seem a little soft. ie didn't stay really discrete curds when mixed with innoculant and placed in mold. Does this indicate I didn't let the ripening go long enough ?,993821189650
129.137.116.240,David F.,09 Jul 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,Warren: If you started with "Farmer's Cheese‚" it is a softer curd cheese than others. Did you drain the curds in a refrigerator to remove most of the whey? This should have yeilded a fine-curded product into which you mix the inoculum. There may be no problem with your cheese to this point. Be sure to give the developing blue cheese plenty of air as it is growing the mold both inside and outside.Let us know how you are doing with it.,994703711476
129.137.117.61,Jan,06 Aug 2001,carterjs@uc.edu,Just Testing. I made some changes.,997130160630
152.163.204.182,Warren,07 Aug 2001,wdchips@aol.com,David‚ My Bleu cheese is OK but lacks internal veining. Outside has heavy bloom. Internal lack probably due to softness of curd. On the "official" Stilton site in the production process they mention "buttering" do you know what this is? Also they do not press in molds. Trying again with longer drain time. Will let you know how it turns out. Warren ,997230703290
24.26.108.13,Stephen LeClaire,09 Aug 2001,steve@leclairefamily.com,This is the page I have been looking for. Thanks for the effort.,997393569850
128.252.22.63,Jeremy,13 Aug 2001,jdortiz2@hotmail.com,My comment is really a question: I was wondering if you had tried making a starter culture from an existing chesse like Parmagiano Regiano‚ in a way similar to your method for making the blue cheese starter? I am interested in trying this myself. Thanks‚JDO,997768815450
166.102.225.143,Connie Dana,17 Aug 2001,milkmaid1@alltel.net,Two years ago I was making some simple cheeses and they were turning out well. The next season I seemed to have lost my touch and I gave it up. After seeing this site‚ I am encouraged to get out the old cheese pot and try again‚ now that I know I can "SEE" and read all the wonderful information you have shared! Many thanks! I also have lots of frozen unpasturized goat milk. I haven't tried to do anything with it yet‚ as I am not sure what it will be good for. Any ideas? Thanks again!,998066069640
63.150.119.10,Partho Dutta,27 Aug 2001,partho.dutta@hok.com,Hi Dr. Fankhauser‚I have a great interest in cooking and have always been fascinated by cheesemaking. I have followed your recipe for the mozzarella but I have never achieved a clean break. I am using whole milk from the super market. I get a break when I put in the rennet‚ buttermilk + yogurt etc. ( i always have to add some citric acid)‚ but its not as clean as your photos show. Also‚ when I put the curd into cold water‚ after letting it sit for a while‚ it breaks up. Can you please advise on where I am erring.Thanks and regardsPartho,998927617410
152.163.206.208,Mark Gionet,04 Sep 2001,mgionet@aol.com,Hello thanks for the great site reg: the Ital mozzarella protocol. Recently got gal raw goat milk & pasturized (140Fx30 min then ice bath; note might have hit 160F for 1-2 min). Stuck with protocol except for 1 tab veg rennet rather than junket rennet. Achieved curd‚ washed‚ & let set for 5hr then overnight at rm tmp. Placed in frig during day. Checked acidity at 6pm‚ & still not spinning. Curd was firm out of refr but nearly dissolved in hot water. Going to let it sit out again but wondered if you had another idea to salvage this $14 experiment. Thanks,999654560330
205.188.193.161,Debbi,05 Sep 2001,dlvaughn@hotmail.com,I love your site. I am interested in making my own cheeses but do not know where I can get rennet. Any suggestions?,999740683980
129.137.229.91,David Fankhauser,07 Sep 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,Warren: Sounds like your blue cheese is progressing! Remember that fungi (mold) require oxygen to grow. You could punch additional holes thru your cheese to "aerate" it.,999885234430
129.137.229.91,David Fankhauser,07 Sep 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,JEREMY:Yes! You can use existing cheeses for starters for your own cheese. I got GREAT results using "Saga Blue" as a starter. But don't forget curingj temperature and humidity. They are crucial.,999885234430
129.137.229.91,David Fankhauser,07 Sep 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,CONNIE:Depending on the bacterial count in your frozen milk‚ I would a) only make yogurt with it‚ b) Make a hard cheese‚ c) turn it into farmer' cheese. See my site for all these recipes.,999885234430
129.137.229.91,David Fankhauser,07 Sep 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,PARTHO:Note that you are making a difficult cheese‚ one which still is the Master of me rather than... Make basic cheese first so you know what a clean break is all about.,999885234430
129.137.229.103,David Fankhauser,07 Sep 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,MARK: Please try the basic hard cheese (or yogurt/labneh) first. Mozzarella is a heart-breaker of a cheese‚ sometimes it works‚ but other times... As far as your current cheese: you can still separate the fine curd: pour thru a fine weave towel. Add salt to taste to the resulting soft cheese.,999895895520
129.137.229.103,David Fankhauser,07 Sep 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,DEBBI: Ask your local supermarket manager to order it for you‚ mine in the US Midwest are willing to stock it. Here is the URL to an email I got from the manufacturer: http://Biology.clc.uc.edu/Fankhauser/Cheese/Rennet_Redco.htm. Cut and paste to see it. Also‚ there are mail order houses for cheese supplies. Who has a URL for a good one?),999896452690
129.180.1.204,Tish,15 Oct 2001,lsilberb@metz.une.edu.au,Hi there‚ I made my first ever batch of cheese on the weekend - following your recipe (basic cheese and ricotta). Both cheeses worked perfectly. many thanks!,1003128107050
172.157.34.191,Stefie,17 Oct 2001,kuzmacks@hotmail.com,You say that the curing temperature is crucial‚ but what is the effect of curing blue cheese at a few degrees warmer or cooler? Warmer would make the mold grow faster‚ I assume‚ but how would it affect the taste? Is there an issue of the cheese being safe to eat?,1003295080660
63.149.54.2,Anthony Clark,17 Oct 2001,teclark@crowechizek.com,I have had absolutely no luck with unpasteurized fresh goat milk. I can not get it to set. It cultures fine‚ (12 - 24 hours at 80 - 90 degrees Farenheit)‚ but it will not set. I use Dannon plain yogurt and the milk gets nice and thick but the Rennet will not give me a firm set. Any ideas?,1003341668026
64.91.49.23,brian moran,22 Oct 2001,brianmo@yahoo.com,Am in the process (cheese is draining in the cheesebag) of making the farmer's cheese‚ end goal being blue cheese. Using pasteurized store-purchased milk‚ we couldn't get it to make firm curds‚ only something resembling yogurt. Straining it does yield something that tastes and looks more cheesy than yogurt-y. Could the blue-cheese inoculation be done at the time the curds are being bagged and drained?,1003809126949
10.229.1.57,David F.,25 Oct 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,STEFIE: I do not believe that there is much of an issue of safety when making blue cheese. So long as Penicilium mold is growing‚ pathogens should be inhibited. My impression is that the flavor is affected by the temperature. Too warm‚ and the mold overgrows and flavor is not as good. Too cool‚ and the mold does not grow well.,1004050119673
10.229.1.57,David F.,25 Oct 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,ANTHONY: The milk should still be the consistency of milk after it has had starter added and let sit over night. It sounds to me like it is curdling BEFORE you add the rennet. No wonder if you are keeping it as hot as 90 F. You are making yogurt instead of cheese. No way will that give a clean break. Go back to the recipe on basic cheese: follow directions for proportions of yogurt starter‚ and temperature of incubation (should be room temp). "Nice and thick" it should NOT be when you add the rennet... Good luck.,1004050119673
10.229.1.57,David F.,25 Oct 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,BRIAN: I think it is better to add the blue cheese inoculum just before you place the curd in the molds. Be sure to make holes so that the mold gets air. Won't grow without oxygen. I have successfully made cheese with store-bought milk‚ tho never tried blue cheese with it. Bona fortuna!,1004050755077
24.66.94.141,Judi C,28 Oct 2001,judi.craig@home.com, We found that there were problems making the follower stay straight while pressing We made a follower that is 3" thick by joining two pine boards together now our cheeses are always square.,1004302685310
24.66.94.141,judi,01 Nov 2001,judi.craig@home.com,I was wondering if you could tell me when a cheese is "off"? I made a cheddar and was ready to wax it when it developed mold and an unpleasant smell.I brushed off the mold with salt and vinnigar but it still smells bad! Is my cheese ruined? Thanxs David ,1004649448740
24.208.35.143,Mark Ostrenga,05 Nov 2001,mostrenga@hotmail,I followed the recipe for neufchatel cheese‚ and ended up with a sour tasting but very soft cheese‚I left the pot sit undisturbed for 24 hours‚ but failed to cut the curd(I thought I read it correctly but was thinking of a chevre recipe I had read. anyway‚ I put the uncut curd into cheesecloth and let it drain overnight.I did this over the kitchen counter not in the fridge. the product was like a thick yogurt. I put it in chevre molds that I had made with holes in them and have them sitting in the fridge draining onto a pan‚ they seem to be thickening some but what consistancy should they be .,1005008465170
24.208.35.143,Mark Ostrenga,05 Nov 2001,mostrenga@hotmail,My goal is to make the blue cheese you show on your recipe page‚ I read another recipe that says not to poke holes but let the bacteria start on the outside then poke the holes‚ why is that?I have some maturing under my cupboard at about 58degrees‚it is pretty firm‚ it's only been there 4 days‚ should I poke holes?,1005008465170
24.208.35.143,Mark Ostrenga,06 Nov 2001,mostrenga@hotmail.com,This may sound stupid‚ but‚ could someone make a blue cheese out of say..a feta recipe? I make feta pretty well it seems. The consistancy comes out pretty well. could I just add my blue cheese culture after the curd is cut and then put the cheese into a mold and let it drain‚ then age it?,1005057820780
205.188.192.23,Zack,06 Nov 2001,ZGwingzero@aol.com,I'm a long time reader‚ first time poster(like you haven't read this before. Any way‚ on with the rest of my post)‚ and I think that it would be a good idea to post recipes for Cheddar‚ and Locateli cheeses on your site. I would also like to find out how to make my own butter. Thank you,1005075455970
24.208.35.143,Mark Ostrenga,07 Nov 2001,mostrenga@hotmail.com,Is this site visited by anyone? I was hoping for replies from other cheese people. Someone must have some information to share. ,1005168595840
209.191.195.35,Dave Beaupre,12 Nov 2001,beaupre@paulbunyan.net,I used the recipe for cheddar cheese‚ 1 gallon whole milk purchased from a local grocer. As it turns out the cheese was very good according to several of my family members. I had two observsations however. The cheese was very dense‚ dry‚ and salty. I am wondering if these characteristics were due to the weight that I used to press the whey out of the cheese‚ (5 lbs)? any thoughts on this?,1005621200310
10.24.249.127,David F.,18 Dec 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,DAVE: Dense and dry sounds like you may have left it in the refrigerator too long‚ or over did the salt application to the forming rind. I don't THINK it has to do with the pressing pressure unless you REALLY cranked up the pressure. You should only let it cure in the refrigerator until it forms a rind‚ then wax it. Also--did you double check the amount of salt you added? 1/4th cup per cheese from 5 gallons of milk is the proper amount.,1008689583280
10.24.249.127,David F.,18 Dec 2001,fankhadb@uc.edu,MARK: Sorry if I don't get to this page as often as I would like... sometimes my teaching responsibilities take precident. It sounds like you never got a clean break on your neufchatel. If you don't get a clean break‚ you will never get curd. IF you stir it before you get a clean break‚ you will never get a clean break.
And yes‚ in theory‚ you can make a blue cheese with any curd so long as it has enough moisture‚ air‚ low salt‚ proper temp and humidity.,1008689924310
64.12.107.48,Zack,06 Jan 2002,ZGwingzero@aol.com,I would like to find out how to make cream cheese. I would really apprecieate it if you would tell us how to make it‚ or at least guide us to a web site that will. Thank you.,1010366533270
152.163.197.63,Warren,22 Jan 2002,wdchips@aol.com,URL for Cheesemaking things. Its New England Cheesemaking Supplies. I've had good luck with them. http://users.crocker.com/bigcheez/about.htm Best of luck‚ warren,1011742362260
209.170.162.2,Gabriel McAtee,25 Jan 2002,Sarkhori@megsinet.net,I am having great difficulty finding ANY cans that are not ribbed. Can anyone recommend a product that comes in an un-ribbed can?Failing that‚ I went to the local hardware store to look at PVC water pipes‚ thinking to purchase a 1' section of 8" interior diameter pipe. Of course‚ they (1)only sell it in 8' and 10' lengths (depending on brand) and (2)won't cut it down for me... laugh They want me to buy a fancy saw‚ too...Will PVC pipe work? If not‚ how about any other solution that will do the trick?Thanks!--Gabriel,1011972353885
195.93.65.8,Carole,05 Feb 2002,cskidmore3@aol.com,I love this websiteit is so informativeI am considering cheese-making to sell the cheese at our local farmers markets.I am starting from scratch and not sure of which milk to access. Many years ago I did a course on cheese making‚ so long ago I fear nothing I learnt will be of use today. The milk I would have used then was from an Ayrshire Cow‚ (native of Scotland) because of the high butter fat content.I have access to fresian milk any ideasCarole UK,1012927922430
63.27.81.35,Lisa Reese,04 Feb 2002,reese.lightwriter@highstream.n,This is my favorite site on cheese-making. The Professor has a firm connection to the real world--frugality‚ common sense‚ and utility. I'd love to meet him‚ or hear him speak!Thanks‚ Professor!Lisa,1012875594530
66.25.26.172,shel,09 Feb 2002,skincloset@hotmail.com,hi...i just read something on your website that really interested me..you said you and your wife like to experiment with cheese making and you teach some of the techniques in your biology lab... i find that exciting! i too have just started making a very simple milk cheese (ricotta) with my soon to be husband. i learned how to do this from an indian teacher i work with...and i too am also a biology teacher! ive never emailed anyone like this before...but i felt compelled to email you...thank you for your site..i enjoyed reading from it.shel ,1013292847640
63.27.81.191,Lisa Reese,18 Feb 2002,reese.lightwriter@highstream.n,Howdy! I'm hoping to clear up a question or two here. I cut the first cheese I made when it was 2 weeks old‚ and it tasted a lot like a Monterey Jack cheese--very mild. I cut the next cheese when it was 6 weeks old‚ and it was so sharp-cheddarish that I myself didn't like it! My father‚ who loves that really sharp‚ crumbly cheddar‚ thought it was very good. Here are my questions: 1. I thought it took 6 months to get cheese really sharp? (rest on next posting),1014048077040
63.27.81.191,Lisa Reese,18 Feb 2002,reese.lightwriter@highstream.n,2. Nearly every recipe I've seen says that you have to age for at least 60 days to be sure that the "bad" bacteria have been overcome by the "good" ones. Does that mean this 6-week old cheese isn't safe? Thanks for any help you can give!,1014048372860
209.198.193.55,cc,04 Mar 2002,ccisnado@hotmail.com,hi‚ i made some blue cheese‚ i use roquefort as a starter‚ its been aging in my fridge 3 months‚ and now the mold has some red color in it‚ should i throw it away??,1015277913570
10.24.249.150,David F.,09 Mar 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,Thanks Warren for the URL to New England Cheese making Supplies. To remind all of their URL address‚ it is http://users.crocker.com/bigcheez/about.htm. While I have never used them‚ I see their name with regularity among cheese makers on the web.,1015687546020
10.24.249.150,David F.,09 Mar 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,LISA: How long before a cheese is "sharp?" This is the "art" of cheesemaking‚ not the "science." I love my sharper cheeses‚ my wife doesn't want to even cut them... My suspicion is that the sharper cheeses are less likely to harbor pathogens than fresh‚ but...? If you start with properly handled pathogen-free milk‚ no problem.,1015688373580
24.222.128.65,Liz Breslin,28 Mar 2002,Lizbreslin@hfx.eastlink.ca,Very clear concise instructions and illustrations. Great website.,1017322919980
66.81.17.246,Jude',15 Apr 2002,hey_jude_007@Yahoo.com,I just LOVE this web page‚‚ thanks David F. I just got my kit and am now looking for fresh goat milk‚‚ so I am sure I will be back to this page for questions and ans. I do have one ? how to maintain a temp of 75 degrees to make culture? house cold / crock too hot‚ no pilot lights etc. any suggestions?,1018899128311
24.53.88.164,David F.,15 Apr 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,JUDE: Remember that you can use "store-bought" cow's milk to make any of the recipes on my page‚ so you don't HAVE to wait for goat's milk. Yes‚ the flavor and/or consistancy of the cheese from cow's milk may differ‚ but give it a try. Ironically‚ a warm spot to grow cultures in many American homes is on top of the refrigerator near where the warm air comes up. It would help to know what culture you are trying to grow‚ and how long you need to incubate it. I use yogurt and/or buttermilk for my bacterial starters for cheese‚ and give directions for how to propagate them. Ciao.,1018914254520
141.219.83.206,becca,23 Apr 2002,rebeccaj@mtu.edu,is it possible to home-make unrenneted cheeses with a buttermilk starter culture? i've made simple cheese with vinegar to coagulate the milk‚ but i'd like to try a starter culture now. ,1019595536343
68.68.116.133,David F.,23 Apr 2002,fankhadgb@uc.edu,BECCA: You can make a cheese with buttermilk if you drain the buttermilk through a fine weave sterile handkerchief‚ similar to making Labneh from yogurt (see my recipe on my main page.) It will be a soft‚ tart‚ spreadable cheese to which you may want to add salt. Try mixing with seived mint and olive oil and serving on pita. ,1019608922300
198.94.227.123,Jude',24 Apr 2002,hey_jude_007@Yahoo.com,Never mind the recipe‚‚‚ I found it here on this web page (face now very red! :0 ),1019685828870
198.94.227.99,Jude',25 Apr 2002,hey_jude_007@Yahoo.com,Hi F.‚ I added my buttermilk to the milk last night. The only problem is that I work and can't finish it until this evening. I did not put it back in the Fridg. I left it out at room temp. Is that ok? Or should I throw it out and start over!,1019746071260
68.68.116.141,David F.,27 Apr 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,JUDE': Not exactly sure which recipe you are following‚ but one does have to be careful with buttermilk as a starter. It is quite aggressive. If you know that you will have to leave it for a longer period of time‚ add less buttermilk. On the other hand‚ if you add buttermilk as the inoculum in the early AM‚ you could make the cheese in the later evening. Under no circumstances should the milk appear at all thickened when you add the rennet.,1019928624600
66.81.28.251,Jude',28 Apr 2002,hey_jude_007@yahoo.com,Thanks for last ans.It worked but ended up more like cottage cheese. Tasted ok but will do things different next batch.=learning curve 2nd-? is I only have liquid rennet right now‚ is there a comparison chart for tabs? ,1020016308681
66.81.28.251,Jude',28 Apr 2002,hey_jude_007@Yahoo.com,oops 2 times! #3-? is from my goat lady. She read your info on milk and asked if she puts 1" of milk in a fruit jar and then freezes it. After milking she filters and adds fresh milk to this frozen milk. mixes milk around until she feels the milk cool. She then refrigerates it. She wants to know if this is good system to keep bacteria down. She said she does not sterilize the lids but washes in hot sopy water. good/bad? She liked idea of milking board. Thanks for all your help‚ On other question I was using your recipe.,1020016735965
10.229.1.57,David F.,29 Apr 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,JUDE': If you got a clean break and good curds‚ then it worked! (congrats). If the curd was too soft (you said like cottage cheese)‚ you can firm it up by warming the curds&whey to 35 or even 37 C. (98 F). It sounds like your "goat lady" has the right idea about rapid chilling. Any technique that quickly chills the fresh milk is good. RE: sterilization of jars & lids: As long as the milk keeps for 7-10 days‚ then it is adequate to wash with hot soapy water‚ rinse well‚ and let air dry. Sterilization by boiling is fine too‚ but may not be manditory if all else is very clean.,1020092156631
205.188.199.36,Warren,13 May 2002,wdcips@aol.com,First questions..1) hard cheese pressing pressure is usually given in pounds only. Wouldn't a more reproducible and accurate unit be PSI( pounds per sq inch)? Pounds only could result in much different pressures depending on the horizontal cross section of the mold. (smaller mold=higher press.)2) HOW can I check acidity of Mozzarella curds ? I can use litmus paper for liquids but what do I use for a solid ?Comment ( no offense David)A site with a few good cheese recipes is WWW.fiascofarm.com I have I have made her"Queso Fresca" a number of times and it is excellent. Warren ,1021315836070
10.229.1.57,David F.,14 May 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,WARREN: You are technically absolutely correct. Pounds is meaningless unless expressed in terms of a unit area. To be frank‚ I approximate the appropriate pressure with my homemade press‚ adjusting so that adequate compression and expression of whey is acheived. And yes‚ I have seen the Fiasco site‚ and like the variety of info they have there. One of my principles has been to try ut use materials readily available nearby. So I try to make good cheese without purchasing specialty starters‚ etc. One day I will do the experiment with them,1021392566211
12.162.144.139,Gary J,02 Jun 2002,qltfnish@omniglobal.net,David‚You should come over to www.homesteadingtoday.com and lend them some of your expertise.,1023051548560
24.188.114.166,Clark B,03 Jul 2002,rosclark@optonline.net,In the supermarket I looked at the ingredients of 4 packaged american mozzarellas (Polly-O‚ Sorrentino and 2 others I forget). None of them use citric acid. They all use vinegar. Obviously what's important is getting the proper pH in the milk‚ and vinegar is much easier to obtain then citric acid‚ so what I'm wondering is: what is the equivalent amount of 5% vinegar to achieve the same pH in 1 gallon of milk as 1 and 1/4 tsp. citric acid? Thanks muchly for any help here. ,1025752720660
10.229.1.57,David F.,05 Jul 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,CLARK B: Good question‚ I will have to do a little chemical calculation to answer definitively. Alternatively‚ you might do a Google search for mozzarella + vinegar. I am sure someone out there has that info for you. Let us know if you find out before we do...,1025875957400
216.23.59.69,ward wenstrup,07 Jul 2002,wardwenstrup@yahoo.com,Fantastic site. And wonderfull cheese. Thanks for the samples last week. Your neighbors Ward & Jody,1026066965770
68.68.116.163,David F.,14 Jul 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,WARD and JODY: Thanks for the kind words. Really had me going until I got to your names! Glad that you enjoyed the cheese samples. Wish I could share them with more of these fine folks. When will you take the plunge and freshen your does??? ;-),1026659068124
194.6.84.123,Camilla,12 Aug 2002,camilla.selmi@cw.com,Great site‚ really enjoyable to read.I have tried you basic recipe for cheese and I have managed to produce something that resable cheese in look and taste. As per instruction I left the milk overnight at RT to inoculate with the yoghurt. The morning after the liquid had assumed a certain consistency like very liquid yoghurt‚ is this how it should look?ThanksRegardsCamilla,1029161949750
68.68.116.163,David F.,13 Aug 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,CAMILLA: Sounds like a problem. You should add yogurt starter to room temperature milk the night before. Let it sit at room temperature overnight. The next morning‚ the inoculated milk should still have the consistency of "regular" milk (but will be slightly acid). If is has thickened at all‚ then something has gone awry. I presume that you added the correct proportion of yogurt the night before? If the milk will have problems getting a "clean break." Be careful with the temperatures‚ amounts‚ and times.,1029248055140
136.142.21.148,J.T. Peirce,31 Aug 2002,gbpeirce@ucis.pitt.edu,Great site! I have one suggestion and one question. About two years ago I started making beer in my basement. There is a product called "One Step" that is available at most home brewing supply stores. It simplifies equipment sterilization considerably. Now for the question: I made yogurt for the first time last night and it was delicious. However‚ it turned out too thin. (I used the suggestion of adding the milk powder before the heating of the milk.) I am theorizing that the incubator did not stay warm enough long enough. Does this sound plausible? Any suggestions?,1030848186030
68.68.116.163,David F.,01 Sep 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,J.T.: Too low incubation temperature can cause yogurt to be too thin‚ as can too short incubation‚ too little inoculant‚ deteriorated inoculant‚ and possibly other reasons... However‚ remember that homemade yogurt is always more delicate than commercial. Yes‚ adding powdered milk would thicken it up. Do you have a thermometer to monitor the temp? Let us know.,1030909103452
213.84.9.189,Julia,20 Sep 2002,julie@xs4all.nl,Hi David‚ Nice site. I recently started making my own yogurt. The instructions I originally found and currently follow are like making lebanese cheese‚ however the yogurt is only drained for a few hours. I usually allow mine to drain for 3-6 hours maximum and then it achieves the wonderful thick and creamy consistency of greek yogurt though without any added cream. I do this because I prefer a thick yogurt and didn't really want to add another ingredient (gelling agents). My question is‚ what nutrients are lost from my yogurt from the whey that is dripping off? ,1032513070056
68.68.116.163,David F.,20 Sep 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,Julia: Interesting question‚ and a simple way to thicken up yogurt. Draining yogurt like this will lose soluble vitamins (B vitamins‚ especially riboflavin‚ which you can SEE in the whey as the greenish cast)‚ minerals and any undigested lactose. What you DON'T lose is the protein. Of course‚ these same losses occur when one makes cheese.,1032558254374
150.176.170.26,susan b. miner,26 Sep 2002,pioneers_miner@yahoo.com,i really liked your web site. even though i know somewhat about cheese making‚ i really felt your site was so informative and interesting. it's about time there are recipes for goat milk without all the ingredients that can't be found locally. god bless:),1033078612224
68.8.20.59,Juan Junos,01 Oct 2002,tbonedavinci@hotmail.com,have you ever looked into the non-dairy cultures of coagulated proteins? like bean cheezes - the active agent is a fungus call Koji - used to make fermented bean cake and sake and tempeh- but I can't seem to find koji anywhere- thanks for the cheeze info tho- got 26 gal milk yesterday and successfully clabbered half - don't know if it will be cheddar or what? got some Ideas for cheeze equip that might be easier & cheaper - I'm using cheap Rubbermaid storage bins and a heating pad keeps perfect 36 deg C at low and 145f and 170f at med and high- gonna try mozarella too.,1033493232250
10.229.1.57,David F.,09 Oct 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,JUAN: I am quite interested in making‚ for instance‚ tofu‚ but have not tried it yet. If anyone hears of a tried and true recipe‚ I am interested.
FYI‚ "cheddared" cheese merely means that the curd is turned several times to remove more whey before it is pressed into wheels or blocks.,1034173216956
24.164.17.66,Lisa,18 Oct 2002,Hale@tampabay.rr.com,Great site. We are going cruising on our boat and will enjoy the "fresh" dairy products we make while sailing on a skimpy budget in costly exotic islands. Thank you.,1034980959610
68.68.116.163,David F.,18 Oct 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,LISA: Tell us more about your sailing adventure. And what dairy products will you be making? Will you have cultures‚ or keep culturing your starter? Where will you get your milk? Or do you plan to make cheese before you go and eat it along the way. Good plan.,1034993727263
68.68.116.163,David F.,18 Oct 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,FOLKS: Sorry about the double posts (and sorry Lisa). I need to work on the posting system. It does not clearly indicate that the post has been received. Will try to clarify.,1034993880482
206.172.135.35,Lucille,22 Oct 2002,cila@sympatico.ca,Fantastic site! I've been making "Portuguese style" cheese with my mother for a number of years‚ but was concerned because we use the Junket tablets. Many cheesemaking books tell you not to! It was reassuring to find that you also use the tablets with success. Your cheesepress was incredible! All of a sudden I'm not having to worry about how much a press would cost. I really appreciate the simplicity‚ and the use of readily available items. Thanks from Guelph‚ Canada,1035340926050
216.83.64.235,Brenda Brice,30 Oct 2002,bbrice@pmt.org,I was wondering about making a cheese called farmers cheese its a white mild cheese kind of like mozerella‚ do you have access to any special hints? We are a small dairy in Idaho (34 cows) and want to make cheese curds for local home delivery. Your mozerella reciepe has worked out really well. I use rennet from the store and some yougrt mixed in makes it have a little more taste than before. Im still profecting the process. We will have to set up a building here on the farm to sell cheese (inspected) Our local kraft plant is going to close down and we are looking into selling our milk proc,1035973890530
68.68.116.163,David F.,02 Nov 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,BRENDA:
I believe what you are describing is an uncured version of my basic cheese recipe (5 gallons). (That assumes that when you say it is like mozzarella‚ you primarily mean that it is white and moderately soft‚ not that it has the melting properties of mozzarella?) Try the basic cheese recipe‚ and see if the fresh product is not what you are looking for. Curds are a different story. Ask. Congrats on passing inspection (no easy task).,1036253185046
68.68.116.163,David F.,07 Nov 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,LUCILLE:
Please tell us more about "Portuguese style" cheese. Is this a white semi-soft cheese eaten fresh? Want to share your recipe and what you like to use it for?
P.S. Rennet tablets work just fine. Don't let the "rennin snobs" get you down! ;-),1036725052859
217.37.38.154,Bob Greaves,10 Nov 2002,robgreaves@hotmail.com,After successfully making hard cheese with whole milk. I have just tried1gallon of dried skimmed milk and 1 pint of double cream.. Not turned out sogood. I am sure its me (not the milk) The problem occured at the "cut andstack " part of the process. Normally I get a nicely consolidated curd thatcan be cut.This latest attempt seems to stay almost like a paste.I would welcome any thoughts please.bob,1036957949293
68.68.116.163,David F.,11 Nov 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,BOB:
Perhaps you cut the curd too early before it had time to firm up. If it is then stirred (for instance‚ during "cooking") the curd falls apart. Was the curd VERY delicate?
Should I ask why you used dried skimmed milk plus double cream instead of whole milk? It is possible that the powdered milk is a problem. In my experience‚ once milk is powdered‚ it no longer behaves like regular milk. I have not had good luck with it either for cheese or yogurt. But there are those who say they have had some luck using it.,1037048524842
12.211.67.139,Bob Jordan,12 Nov 2002,bobjordn@attbi.com,What a great little site! Thanks for your time and efforts. We'll try out most of the things this winter while it rains here in Seattle.(even the ice cream!),1037114203331
217.37.38.154,Bob,12 Nov 2002,robgreaves@hotmail.com,David‚ thats right the curd was delicate. Longer time needed. I can only get homogenised milk‚ so I wanted to try with dried adding the fat as an extra.I will try again. Thanks for your help.Bob,1037139871058
207.218.205.225,Michael Clay,07 Dec 2002,x@TheClays.com,Howdy from Texas -- GREAT STUFF! Found out about it from a Portuguese buffalo e-mail list. Plan to try some of your recipes with milk from our water buffalo. THANK YOU! http://www.TheClays.com/buffalo/,1039272684740
216.209.137.3,Lucille ,09 Dec 2002,cila@sympatico.ca,I'm back! Yes‚ the "Portuguese style" cheese is a white semi-soft cheese that we eat fresh. I'll have to track down the actual recipe‚ but basically you press the curds into molds‚ salt the top with coarse salt‚ let it drain for an hour‚ flip the molds‚ salt again‚ let it sit‚ then slide the cheese out‚ and it's ready to eat. I've also mixed black pepper‚ fresh parsley etc in the curds before pressing. It's really good. By the way‚ we make our "molds" by cutting 2 inch long rings out of a length of white PVC piping. I get about 12 -15 individual size cheeses. ,1039439760060
68.68.116.163,David F.,09 Dec 2002,fankhadb@uc.edu,MICHAEL CLAY:
I would LOVE to try making Italian mozzarella with buffalo milk! Unfortunately‚ I know of no water buffalo here in SW Ohio. Please let us know your progress. You may know that some (incorrectly) say that mozarella can't be made with goat's milk. However‚ WB milk is the real thing! I'll never forget my confusion in Naples‚ Italy when I saw on the sign on a shop "mozzarella di bufalo"‚ thinking of our bison...,1039444816671
142.167.38.29,Mary R.,11 Feb 2003,cntryfolk@ime.net,Okay. This year I want to be able to make some good cheese. I have been making yogurt and soft cheeses for years. I have had limited sucess with parm and gouda. I make montery jack and cheddar but they end up tasting the same and are very dry. What am I doing wrong?,1045008577740
68.68.116.163,David F.,16 Feb 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,Hmmmm... Not enough info here‚ but "very dry" suggests you may be: 1) warming the curds to too high a temp‚ causing them to be too hard‚ 2) pressing the cheese with too much force‚ or 3) curing the cheese too long before waxing.
However... Being successful at making Parmesan‚ then the problem is probably not your skills‚ but the application thereof. What recipes are you using? Let's try one at a time‚ say the cheddar‚ which is very similar to my "Basic Cheese",1045418913203
64.228.8.160,Kim,16 Feb 2003,kimberlyanne@sympatico.ca,I am totally amazed at how easy this is. I have made yogurt in the past but it was very tart. This yogurt is "THE BEST". Thanks for sharing it with us. I have passed it on to many!!Thanks againKim TaylorNapanee Ontario Canada,1045427811400
10.229.1.81,Jan,18 Feb 2003,carterjs@uc.edu,David‚
I just made a couple changes in the JavaScript. See if it works any better for you‚ now.,1045596285529
63.157.99.172,Nancy,Sun 23 Feb 2003,nanperk@hotmail.com,Loved your carefully illustrated and wonderfully detailed instructions on cheese making. Thank you for this information. We are getting away from cow's milk and hope to use more goat's milk and it's products as we go along. I did have a question about using Bifidum Longum Acidophilus capsules as a yogurt starter in place of already established yogurt. The capsules contain Lactobacillus acidophilus‚ Bifidobacterium bifidum Bb-12 and bifidobacterium longum in a 460 mg capsule. Do you think it would work and how many capsules would it take? Thanks in advance. N,1046023281340
68.68.116.163,David F.,Wed 26 Feb 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,NANCY:
I have never used capsules as an inoculum. What I KNOW is that the bacteria must be alive and well‚ sufficient numbers must be added to overcome competing bacteria‚ and proper yogurt protocol must be employed. For a start‚ I would use a cup or two of milk‚ and try one capsule per cup‚ carefully following yogurt protocol. If that makes yogurt‚ you can scale up‚ and try more milk per capsule. If it doesn't work‚ use two capsules/cup.,1046307566468
192.150.10.150,Thach Nguyen,Mon 10 Mar 2003,thach@adobe.com,Hello Dr. Fankhauser‚I am fascinated by your cheesemaking pages.I understand from your blue cheese recipe that you created the inoculum from a "Saga Blue" that is uncontaminated. Does this method work for other type of cheeses? For instance brie‚ camenbert‚ or Stilton?Many thanks.Thach,1047369058258
67.3.26.106,Richard the K,Tue 11 Mar 2003,modeler@sinclair.net,A fine site‚ Dr. Fankhauser. Thank you. I'm just getting started‚ but here are some comments. I did the initial heating in a non-stick dutch oven‚ IN THE OVEN‚ figuring a non-point source of heat would eliminate any scorching problem. It did‚ but it took 4 hours @ 200. I'll try higher temp next time. I also use my (electric) oven for all kinds of low temp things by changing the lightbulb. 40W yields 80-90 for proofing bread‚ 75W gives appx 110 for keeping yogurt snuggy‚125W for jerky and like that.,1047420593920
67.3.26.106,Richard the K,Tue 11 Mar 2003,modeler@sinclair.net,Now a question or three. You mention freezing buttermilk. Can you also freeze yogurt and have it maintain its "starter" properties? How about freezing whey 'til there's enough for a sizable batch of ricotta? I just threw out a couple of pints of whey.,1047425082760
198.199.209.77,Juan Torres,Wed 12 Mar 2003,juan.torres@tampagov.net,Mr. David:I have been in a lot of sites reading about "home making cheese". Your site is the most complete . I feel confortable now to start trying. I will let you know how it goes. Thanks.JuanT,1047502993260
10.229.1.57,David F.,Mon 17 Mar 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,THACH NGUYEN:
I believe that using existing cheeses for an inoculum should be possible for a variety of cheeses‚ but not all. Stilton should work‚ since like other blues‚ the mold is introduced after the curds are formed. Brie and camenbert are a different story‚ but could plausibly be used if added at the milk stage rather than the curd stage. These latter require more careful attention to temp and humidity. ,1047944844849
24.92.234.67,Janis Graham,Wed 26 Mar 2003,grahamj@twcny.rr.com,Hi. I write a monthly women's health column for Redbook Magazine. I am reporting on a study from the University of Oulu in Finland‚ which found a link between consumption of fermented cheeses as well as yogurt and a reduced risk for urinary tract infections. I was hoping you might be able to tell me which cheeses commonly consumed in the US are fermented. Is it correct to assume that most cheese is fermented? Much thanks‚ Janis,1048694804210
170.215.218.80,anne cuozzo,Fri 11 Apr 2003,acuozzo@citlink.net,Hi. I tried your Italian mozzerrella‚ and it came out great! I had to make some changes to it. I have just come off chemo for the 2nd time and have to be careful what I eat. I used pasterized‚ homogenized whole milk‚ added 1/4 cup heavy cream‚ but I had to use 3 rennet tabs to get it to come out right. I think this was because of the milk I used. With this success‚ I am going to try some of the other cheeses. Thank you for making it easy to follow. Sincerely‚ Anne Cuozzo,1050107649654
200.168.56.242,roberto markulin,Mon 14 Apr 2003,rmbaires@yahoo.com.ar,Hello David‚The cheese & home page are excelent.It will take a while for me to read all.I live in Buenos Aires‚ Argentina.Greetings‚Roberto.,1050341316033
68.170.100.248,David F.,Sat 26 Apr 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,JANIS GRAHAM:
You are correct that most cheeses are fermented. This is because‚ as a rule‚ a bacterial starter is added to acidify the milk so that the rennet enzyme will work well during coagulation. This acidification is a result of fermentation. Would you let us know the citation to the Finish study? ,1051367887827
68.170.100.248,David F.,Sat 26 Apr 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,ANNE CUOZZO:
Thanks for the feedback. Interesting that you had to use 3x the rennet. You DID add bacterial starter‚ right? It is especially impressive that you succeeded with the mozzarella since that is a more challenging cheese.
Brava for concentrating on eating healthfully in a time of chemo (and afterward). We are pulling for you.,1051367887827
68.170.100.248,David F.,Sat 26 Apr 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,RICHARD THE K:
(Sorry for the delay in answer.) You can certainly freeze whey until you have enough to make ricotta. I think it would be better to let it sit at room temp for 12-24 hours first‚ then freeze‚ then thaw and heat to near boiling. If you wait to acidify until after freezing‚ the bacteria might not be as active. BTW‚ you can make about 6 ounces from a gallon of whey.,1051367887827
130.76.32.20,Brian,Wed 30 Apr 2003,brain_solenoid@yahoo.com,David‚Just a quick question......just about every other source for cheesemaking states that "Junket" Rennet tablets are not adequate for making cheese. I realize you do well with it. Any comments / theories as to why the prevalent negative opinion on Junket? Thanx!,1051757008697
130.76.32.21,Brian,Wed 30 Apr 2003,brain_solenoid@yahoo.com,David‚Another quick question......there is a lot of documentation out there on Calcium Chloride use in cheese recipes that are based on store purchased homogenized milk. Is this an improvement? I realize with any hobby‚ there are those who will try to sell you anything and everything stating that you "must have this extra thing here...".Sorry for the comparisons as to what "others" are doing‚ I'm just trying to understand the differences.BTW - Beautiful website! Great job!,1051757008697
68.170.100.248,David F.,Sat 03 May 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,BRIAN:
I have never understood those who look down their noses at Junket tablets. I have never had problems with them. They keep better than liquid‚ are perfectly measured for 5 gallons of milk (1 tablet)‚ and are readily available at my local Supermarket. Check my page on rennet.
CaCl2 apparently makes a firmer curd‚ and may improve cheese made with pasteurized milk. I have never used it‚ and have not felt the need. Reports are that the taste is affected by CaCl2‚ not necessarily for the better. Anyone else have experience with CaCl2?,1052001379998
205.188.208.71,Elmo,Sun 04 May 2003,Anele@aol.com,IT'S ALL SO CONFUSING!!!WRITE A KID VERSION FOR THE KIDS NEXT YEAR THAT HAVE TO WRITE AN ESSAY ABOUT CHEESE OR OTHER FERMENTED STUFF!,1052077711150
24.136.212.155,Yolanda,Sun 04 May 2003,justtobeme2@aol.com,Just want to say I love your site. I have spent all afternoon reading over it. I am excited to start "trying" my hand at making some cheeses other than yogurt and yogurt cheese. Uh oh could this be the beginnings of a new hobby? Thank you for such an informative site!,1052084667317
200.71.129.68,Rick,Mon 05 May 2003,katelsa@hotmail.com,I had use your Mozzarella recipe and it's work great‚ but I am getting less than 1/2 Lb 1 Gal of milk. Why ?.,1052144994830
68.161.193.58,Anne,Tue 06 May 2003,ninebyninesquare@yahoo.com,Thank you so much for your beautifully documented recipes and instructions. You are very generous to provide such a resource. I can't wait to get to work.,1052238279859
68.100.191.134,Farid,Sun 11 May 2003,soulimani@hotmail.com,Thank you very much.,1052640672760
66.169.228.236,Lisa Almarode,Mon 12 May 2003,lisamaciver8@yahoo.com,Thank you so much for this great site! I'm new to goat milking and new to cheesemaking‚ and I just made my first 1lb. of basic hard cheese and 6oz. ricotta from 1 gallon of milk. Your instructions were clear and wonderfully detailed. (you're missing a farenheit conversion in a spot or two) Question: for feta‚ on step 7‚ is there no heating involved to contract the curd?,1052765491509
171.75.221.54,Connie,Tue 13 May 2003,west5@ionet.net,
Thank you SO much for the time you take to maintain you web site! It gave me the courage to try!>
I began making yogurt with your method "a long time ago" (? 3 years or so). My family says mine tastes better than store-bought and they can make it the flavor they choose.>
I often drain the yogurt and add powdered sugar (rather than salt) - we use this with fresh fruit and graham crackers - it tastes a bit like cream cheese.>
Question: is there a cheese that can be made from whey drained from the yogurt? (with no rennett) or do we just feed it to the dogs?.>,1052875915150
68.170.100.248,David F.,Sat 17 May 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,CONNIE:
I have made ricotta many‚ many times‚ but never with whey from yogurt. Check out my page on making ricotta‚ and see if it might satisfy your request for something to do with the whey from yogurt.,1053207875014
68.170.100.248,David F.,Sat 17 May 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,LISA:
You are very observant. Yes‚ in my experience with feta‚ there is no warming (some call 'cooking') of the curd for this cheese. If anyone else out there has experience with feta‚ we would love to hear it.,1053207875014
68.170.100.248,David F.,Sat 17 May 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,RICK:
Tried to respond to your post last week‚ but the cyber gods were not favorable... I do not know why you might be getting less cheese with your moz‚ but two ideas occur to me. One: What milk are you using? Commercial skimmed milk might make less curd. Second‚ are you getting a firm 'clean break' before you cut your curd? This would increase your yield. ,1053207875014
200.71.129.100,Rick,Wed 21 May 2003,katelsa@hotmail.com,I use raw cow milk for my moz and getting a good firm 'clean break' but when I make my moz pizza why it's get so yellow and grease‚ that because of to much fat in the milk if it's so what can I do?,1053537600540
208.59.156.96,Suzanne D,Sat 31 May 2003,gsdeardoff@yahoo.com,I have been struggling with making a good hard cheese for almost a year using direct cultures (MA). In each batch I experienced more failures. I just waxed my first batch using your your basic recipes and I think it will be a great success. Thank you for your simple‚ step by step recipes that seemed to take much of the mystery out of cheese.I wanted to share a great whey cheese recipe. Take the whey from 2 gallons of cheese. Boil to 200 degress‚ add 1/4 cup vinegar. Strain through fine cloth and weight (20 lbs) for 24 hours. Flavor for 4 days in 1 quart of wine and 1 quart of salted wa,1054421365984
209.197.0.23,Kris,Sun 01 Jun 2003,kriswb@yahoo.com,Thank you for this site-have made yogurt and first 1 lb. of cheese from your very clear directions and my fresh goat's milk! Have a couple of questions though. I live in high altitude (nearly 5000 feet above sea level) and wonder if I need to adjust tempuratures accordingly. So far‚ I have had success using the same temps. as suggested in your directions. Also‚ my block of cheese was dry and with a yellowish rind after only 24 hours after pressing. Could this be because I live in a dry climate? Can I go ahead and wax the cheese now? Thanks!,1054478092250
209.197.0.23,Kris,Sun 01 Jun 2003,kriswb@yahoo.com,One more question‚ please. I want to try the larger recipe with 5 gallons of milk‚ but to get that much milk I would need to use milk 2 1/2 days old. Do you think that will be fresh enough‚ or should I just make the smaller batches with the freshest milk? THANKS!!,1054478092250
10.229.1.57,David F.,Thu 05 Jun 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,SUZANNE:
It is GREAT to get good feedback on my cheese pages! You are correct‚ the essentials of cheese making are not difficult‚ once clearly understood. Let us know how it tastes once you cut it open.
Your "Whey Cheese" is a kind of flavored ricotta. You got cut off at the end of your recipe by the 'post length police...' Please repost! Thanx,1054827211962
208.59.156.66,Suzanne D,Fri 06 Jun 2003,gsdeardoff@yahoo.com,Finish for post on whey cheese. Float cheese in combination of 1 quart of white wine and 1 quart salt brine for 4 days. I also added lemon verbena to this. Eat immediately. My husband has flipped over this cheese.,1054919611406
68.158.191.140,Ruby,Fri 13 Jun 2003,ruby@danebytes.com,I will soon be able to acquire raw water buffalo milk and will be trying the Buffalo Mozz recipe. If you ever get to Italy‚ i invite you to see‚ do‚ assist my sister in law in making ricotta on her farm in the mountains...plus‚ this is the same area of the world that makes Italian Buffalo Mozz‚ and i am certain that you would be welcome to watch‚ as they do it behind glass for the public to see‚ also ... my other brother in law knows the family and could get you in‚ if you wished.Please save my email address.....just in case. I will visit again‚ after i get my milk and make your recipe.,1055492046936
68.170.100.112,David F.,Sat 14 Jun 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,RUBY:
I am excited to get your email on Mozzarella di bufallo‚ as we learned to love it in Naples‚ Italy. I presume you are in Italia? I eagerly look forward to my next visit to Italy‚ and will take you up on your offer!
An assignment for you: would you ask the folks that make the mozzarella (where you live?) what bacterial starter they use for their mozzarella? I use a mix of buttermilk and yogurt‚ but am uncertain what is used traditionally in Italy.
Grazie mille‚ David F.,1055599958577
68.170.100.112,David F.,Sat 14 Jun 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,KRIS:
If you have handled your milk carefully (see my page on "Proper Handling of Milk")‚ you can use milk as old as a week if it tastes sweet. I often do this when the goats are tapering off‚ since it takes that long to accumulate 5 gallons of milk. An advantage of milk this old is that the cream has separated enough that you can make a batch of ice cream (see recipe). I responded separately that I don't think your altitutude would seriously affect cheese making.
David F.,1055599958577
68.38.96.71,Howard Cohen,Sat 21 Jun 2003,hcohen@comcast.net,Having a great time. Have made several soft cheeses and have started to build my own cheese press. Only problem is a milk intolerance that requires a bit of self control,1056206350065
24.164.178.202,Laura,Thu 03 Jul 2003,harveytex2@hotmail.com,I'm making goats milk cheese and I'm not getting alot of curds and whey. What can I do?Thank youLaura,1057260921640
68.170.100.112,David F.,Fri 04 Jul 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,LAURA:
"Not getting a lot of curds and whey?" Perhaps you mean you are not getting a lot of curds? By definition‚ one gallon of milk makes exactly one gallon of curds and whey. Depending on which recipe you are using (which one ARE you using?)‚ you should get at least a pound of curds per gallon of milk. Give us more info for a diagnosis.,1057325639420
205.188.208.71,Brian D.Young,Sun 13 Jul 2003,brijanyoung@aol.com,Fantastic site. I'm also curious to the temp. differences at higher altitudes as another persons has asked. I'm at 5-6000ft. My wife said she doesn't want to get sick and die from my cooking experiments! Is there a concern about eating something not done just right? Also‚ if something comes out weird can you salvage it by putting it into somthing else? Thanks- BDY,1058125304828
209.216.169.39,Eva Hughes,Sat 12 Jul 2003,wacko@gorge.net,Everything went fine until I went to drain off the whey. All the curds started sticking together and got stringy. By the time I drained off the whey it was one glob of cheese. I salted it the best I could and put it in the press. Where did I go wrong‚ and is the cheese going to be any good? Should I toss it out? I need some help here? Thank you for your help.,1058067673750
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sun 13 Jul 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,EVA:
Which cheese were you making? Did you follow the directions explicitly? Curds will naturally meld together if left unstirred in warm whey. By "stringy‚" do you mean that the curds stretch and pull like taffy? This occurs when the whey is quite acid and too warm. (This trait is much sought after for mozzarella.) The cheese may be OK even with these unexpected results.,1058105392045
209.216.168.245,Eva Hughes,Sun 13 Jul 2003,wacko@gorge.net,I made the cheese in the video. The biggest stainless pot I have holds 4 gal‚ so I used 3-gal milk‚ 1 cup live cultured yogurt‚ 1/2 tablet Junket rennet. I had no problem with clean break. I might have cooked it to long. The curds were floating on top of the whey. Yes the curds stretch and pull like taffy. I tried not to do that to it‚ but then they all stuck together. It was the consistency of bread dough when I put it in the press. Thank you so much for all your help. I think your web site is the best I have found. It is so nice to have you share your knowledge with others. ,1058116416660
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sat 19 Jul 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,BRIAN:
The concern about high altitude cooking is that water boils at a lower temperature. Therefore‚ steamed or boiled foods cook at a lower temp and require a longer cooking time. There should be NO problem if you use a monitoring thermometer because it is in fact the TEMPERATURE at which foods are cooked which is the key factor.
There is little problem with aged cheeses in terms of pathogenic bacteria. With fresh cheese‚ you must have good quality milk and starter.
Many is the cheese project which‚ altho it did not turn out as expected‚ became a delicious 'something else...',1058647864780
193.128.114.66,Kay,Tue 29 Jul 2003,kaystead@hotmail.com,Firstly - Thankyou! I've had a great deal of fun lately trying out all your recipes :) - Cheddar all waxed and in the fridge‚ ricotta great‚ feta just about ready to eat‚ and last nights magical mozzarella spinning was the highlight so far - and tastes gorgeous!Your recipes really do work first time for dummies (biggest case in point of all: ME) - and the video's are really valuable to watch (and a good laugh ;)) Do you think it would be possible to culture some mould from store-bought brie and use it to make a brew to coat a cheese with? Any guesses on how you'd tackle this?Thanks again -K,1059481772508
68.170.101.16,David F.,Tue 29 Jul 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,KAY:
Indeed‚ it IS possible to subculture mold from fungally cultured cheeses to make you own version of these expensive cheeses. For how to do it‚ look at my recipe for blue cheese linked to my main cheese page. Essentially‚ you collect a sample of the desired mold‚ suspend in water‚ and lightly wash the curds with the suspension before pressing. Brie is a CHALLENGING cheese‚ requiring carefully controlled temp‚ humiditiy and turning. Blue cheese is easier.,1059501110821
67.74.41.21,MGG,Wed 30 Jul 2003,mggilbert@earthlink.net,This is a very interesting site‚ thank you!I am planning to make all the soft cheeses. I live in an urban area and can only access a dairy case of a local supermarket. Any advise on what I should expect in terms of taste?,1059586958840
68.170.101.16,David F.,Wed 30 Jul 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,MCG:
One can make very fine cheese from store bought milk. If you make it with whole milk‚ the flavor will be richer. Partially skimmed less so‚ and skimmed milk may be very mild. I have not had good luck with reconstituted powdered milk.
Also‚ (although I have never resorted to this) some say that addition of lipase to store bought milk improves the flavor. (See the link to New England Cheese Supplies.) Keep us informed!,1059596568327
67.74.45.179,mgg,Wed 30 Jul 2003,mggilbert@earthlink.net,Thanks‚ I will be using whole milk.David‚ when making Neufchatel do you test for a clean break in the curd?Also‚ I assume that the temperatures specified in your recipes should not be adjusted for the garden variety supermarket milk‚ is this correct?,1059616615920
67.123.236.89,Evelynn,Sat 02 Aug 2003,SierraE01@hotmail.com,Ok tried making the italian mozz cheese. Everything turned out OK. I ate some and it tasted like mozzarella. Thirty minutes later... Explosive trip to the restroom. I did sterilize the pot but only used a dishwasher on the utensils.What possibly types of "bad" bacteria might I have met?,1059831318634
67.74.41.56,mgg,Sat 02 Aug 2003,mggilbert@earthlink.net,I made my first renneted cheese - Neufchatel! It tastes very pleasant‚ slightly tangy‚ added 1.5 tsp kosher salt. I followed the recipe and it took 26 hrs to get a clean break; the curd was very fragile‚ though‚ and as I started laddling it my little cubes disappeared. I assume‚ that is what I should expect with cold renneting. I used grocery purchased whole cow's milk and buttermilk.Now‚ that I am on a roll‚ what should I try next? (I like fresh unripened cheeses). May be Feta? ,1059839433050
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sun 03 Aug 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,EVELYNN
I presume you are referring to 'explosive' diarrhea (and possibly vomiting)? If this occurred within 30 minutes of eating any food‚ it would be because of a toxin (or allergen) in the food (an intoxication)‚ not a bacterial infection. The most likely culprit would be Staph. aureus (which makes enterotoxins) in either the milk or the inoculating cultures.
Pathogens do not multiply well in acid conditions such as acidified milk. The first thing would be to check the expiration dates on your materials. [Text size limitation require a second submission: see post below.] ,1059946105389
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sun 03 Aug 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,(Evelynn‚ pt 2): It is also possible that it is 'coincidental.' You ate something else toxic during the same time frame. For 'explosive' diarrhea‚ it would have had to be eaten within just a couple of hours‚ not the day before.
Finally‚ I presume that you are not allergic to milk products? Did you eat unusually large quantites of the cheese? Did anyone else sample them with you? Did they have the same effect on them?I have never heard of this kind of reaction to fresh cheeses. There are diseases which can be passed thru raw milk‚ but they usually develop within 30 minutes. ,1059946105389
67.123.236.89,Evelynn,Sun 03 Aug 2003,SierraE01@hotmail.com,I design point of sale systems for pizza restraunts‚ and sample the food on numerous occasions :P I can assume that I am not allergic to milk products. All of the products (yogurt/buttermilk/whole milk) were purchased that same day from a large supermarket chain. (checked expiry dates)I had approx a 2 inch diameter portion of the cheese‚ as did my boyfriend. He also felt very ill afterwards. (30min - 1h). ,1059967044529
67.123.236.89,Evelynn,Sun 03 Aug 2003,SierraE01@hotmail.com,Pt 2. In retrospect the only thing that did not turn out like the pictures was when I cooked the curds I might have cooked them too long. Because they were almost too hot to handle. ,1059967044529
206.222.209.236,Anita,Mon 04 Aug 2003,rfranssen@inebraska.com,Hello David‚I would appreciate some advice on what I did wrong with a batch of large curd cottage cheese I just made. I used 4 oz. meso culture‚ 1/8 liq rennet in 1 gallon of skim milk. I believe I followed the temp fairly close but it turned out rubbery‚ and only produced 1/2 the amount the recipe said it would. It doesn't taste bad‚ it's just that it's like eating little erasers! I know you don't use the liquid rennet or meso culture but it's what I have on hand. Maybe I should switch. Thanks Anita,1060032332670
67.74.45.166,mgg,Mon 04 Aug 2003,mggilbert@earthlink.net,David‚ will whole cow's milk from the grocery work for your Feta recipe and how long should I brine it?Someone told me that hers disintegrated in the brine - she thinks it is due to using supermarket milk. Please let me know your experience with Feta.,1060050039860
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sat 09 Aug 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,ANITA:
High temperature during the 'cooking' of the curd will make the curd rubbery. Check the accuracy & precision of your thermometer by measuring temp of ice water and boiling water. IT sounds like the curd got to hot.,1060453654249
206.222.209.16,Anita,Mon 11 Aug 2003,rfranssen@inebraska.com,Hi David ‚ you were right‚ I checked my thermometer and it inaccurately read 208 at boiling. Am anxious to try again after I recalibrated it. Another question‚ please...can we use the whey left over from making cheese to lacto-ferment vegetables??Thanks for all your help,1060645340460
216.67.203.24,donna,Sun 17 Aug 2003,zaklan2000@yahoo.com,do you know how to make cheese with soymilk & no casinate?,1061182960360
68.170.101.16,David F.,Wed 20 Aug 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,Making tofu is on my list of projects to which I look forward. Finding a good source of soy beans is the first prerequisite (or using soy milk). A search on the web will turn up recipes for how to make tofu. I have been in communication with a Japanese woman who makes it‚ and as soon as I make it‚ will publish on the web.,1061396622217
65.151.229.165,Robert Peters,Sat 23 Aug 2003,rjpeters@hotmail.com,Dear Dr. Fankhauser: I want to say‚ "superb job on your website." It's very informative and concise. From cheese making to homemade root beer‚ it's wonderfully educational!,1061624603790
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sat 23 Aug 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,We are going to Turkey 11 Sept thru 18 Sept! We are eager to meet people there‚ especially if they are cheese makers‚ are dairy people‚ or are interested in connecting with Americans with those interests. Anyone have friends in Western Turkey or have any pointers in the above topics? If so‚ you can either post an answer or click on the blue "David F." to send me an email. Thanks in advance‚ David F.,1061658063998
169.199.155.65,Cassandra,Tue 26 Aug 2003,enchantedflame16@yahoo.com,I NEED HELP!!!IF SOMEONE CAN HELP ME PLEASE EMAIL ME AT enchantedflame16@yahoo.com,1061933402120
209.92.60.42,Helen H.,Sun 31 Aug 2003,wx_straycat1@yahoo.com,Thank you for sharing your work‚ your interests‚ and family with us. What an interesting and educational website. I found a wonderful buttermilk in Ohio and want to culture more of it here in PA. Thanks again. Helen H. in PA.,1062353635100
12.110.38.140,Sandra Douglas,Wed 10 Sep 2003,all4him@air-internet.com,Thanks for all the information. I have only started making cheese a week or two ago and enjoy it very much. I am hoping that my daughter will use you web page for her history this year. Thanks again Sandra (Samm) Douglas,1063249013155
4.7.120.207,Rick,Tue 16 Sep 2003,rokyt@gte.net,Thanks David for all of your help. I have managed to get curds‚ but only with the addition of calcium chloride. However‚ the cheese comes out so bitter that you can't stand to eat it and it winds up going to my pot bellied pig. She loves it. Is this due to the use of the calcium chloride‚ if so. How do I get store bought milk to made firm curds without it? I have no way to get milk that has not been homogenized. Thanx Rick,1063732883051
66.178.36.85,Ertugrul,Sun 21 Sep 2003,interfix@netone.com.tr,Hi David‚ Thanks for your page. I'm trying to make Feta cheese but now this two times its coming like yoghurt. Before the Feta I finished very well Neufchatel Cheese and Farmers Cheese. I am living in Suriname / South America and room temperature is naturally 35-30 C. Where is Im making mistake ? I am using cow's milk. I know the temperature is little bit more than your suggest. Could you please help me ?Regards‚Ertugrul,1064144174720
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sun 21 Sep 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,RICK:
I have not used calcium chloride in the past‚ but speaking with friends in Turkey this past week‚ they use CaCl2 to firm up curd. I don't know if it could make it bitter. Check the web for quantites to use.
Often bitter is due to milk that is off‚ or starter that is not pure. It should not be a problem to get good curd with store milk. Follow the temps carefully.,1064194396921
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sun 21 Sep 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,ERTUGRUL:
Check my page on problems getting a clean break (http://biology.clc.uc.edu/Fankhauser/Cheese/Problem_getting_a_clean_break.html) . Also‚ never disturb the milk after the rennet has been added. It sounds like you may have stirred the milk during the coagulation phase?
I do not think your temperatures would cause the problem you describe.,1064194933250
66.178.36.192,Ertugrul,Mon 22 Sep 2003,interfix@netone.com.tr,Thanks David. I will check the items. Could you plaese inform us about your travel to Turkey ? Did you meet any cheese producer ? And have a new cheese receipt ? :)) Regards,1064239678147
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sat 27 Sep 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,ERTUGRUL:
Although I did not learn any new recipes for cheeses‚ I did eat white peynir (cheese) for breakfast every day with our olives‚ got to see a cheese factory in Selcuk‚ and spoke about Turkish cheeses with some wonderful friends in Istanbul who supply material to cheese makers in Turkey. Click to see some pictures I took in Turkey. It was the richest seven days of our lives!,1064671185405
68.50.215.45,Pamela,Sun 28 Sep 2003,bacherp@ix.netcom.com,This site exceeded my highest hopes for what I'd find on the internet. Thanks! Q: I'm writing a murder mystery and want to plant potassium nitrate at a suspect's house. I've read it has been used as a preservative for cheese. If it were you‚ dear cheese guru‚ at what point in the (blue) cheesemaking process would you add this chemical‚ and do you have any comments on this?Why add preservatives if aging is good for cheese? Does your blue cheese (from recipe) have a shelf-life? Thanks again!,1064775921400
10.229.1.57,David F.,Thu 02 Oct 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,PAMELA:
I must preface by saying that I aim for cheese which has NO additives except milk‚ inoculum and rennet. But apparently KNO3 can be added to inhibit certain unwanted bacteria from growing. It can be added to the milk before making cheese‚ or to the curds before pressing. C&P the following URL for a brief description: http://www.finestkind.co.za/ingredients.htm
Let us know when your novel is published se we can see the reference!,1065107143973
68.50.215.45,Pamela,Thu 02 Oct 2003,bacherp@ix.netcom.com,Many thanks! I'll be happy to make reference to this cheese page.,1065093865530
165.166.211.96,Dave Cole,Sat 01 Nov 2003,daveemc2@yahoo.com,Incredible site.Absolutely amazed at the depth of your knowledge!I hope you keep the site up forever!,1067737226371
141.156.139.52,robert chambers,Wed 12 Nov 2003,titochambers@verizon.net,Thanks very much for the information. The cheese came out pretty good and we all enjoyed. ,1068688549810
65.27.176.90,Robert,Thu 13 Nov 2003,walleye@cinci.rr.com,I found your site to be interesting as I had stumbled across it while looking for another Ohio Cheesemaker that I cannot locate on the internet.. I am indeed a lover of cheese in general but a good strong / aged swiss is something that seems to be elusive to me. I would be very interested to hear from you about how swiss cheese becomes strong andor more flavorful. I may not be describing the taste I like well enough though. and...... I had seen a sticker somewhere mentioning a" Carr Family Cheesemaker " in Ohio for over 100 years and i am not familiar with them; might you be ? Thank,1068775033730
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sat 15 Nov 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,ROBERT:
While I have not yet made swiss cheese‚ it‚ like most other cheeses‚ has bacterial starter added to it to acidify and add flavor. Bacteria unique to swiss makes propionic acid which gives swiss its bite. I imagine this is the taste to which you refer. Assuming that the swiss cheese you have has not been pasteurized‚ let a block of it age at 50-55 F for a month or two. See if that does not kick up the bite a notch or two. There is a web site for Carr Valley Cheeses in Wisconsin: http://www.carrvalleycheese.com/InTheNews.asp ,1068908783951
12.219.66.231,Perry Fielder,Wed 19 Nov 2003,fielder98@earthlink.net,Thank you for producing this site. With your instructions it is as close as I have come to making cheese after 4 trys. I got through it all and the mozarella looks like mozarella and acted like you said it would while making it. But my wife said it had no taste. (I lost my tongue and other stuff to cancer) I can't figure out what happened. I had a clean break‚ it strung out and balled up ok.Do you have any ideas?,1069304924000
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sat 22 Nov 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,PERRY:
Fresh mozzarella is a mild tender cheese. While "no taste" may not be accurate‚ it should never be strong flavored. The part that most often gives people problems is getting the "spin." You GOT IT! Mozzarella takes on flavors of the dishes into which it is cooked. It is especially good in lasagna! I presume you have had fresh Italian mozzarella to compare it with?,1069530982418
68.54.38.158,Bill,Tue 25 Nov 2003,wgp12073rd@cs.com,Dear Dr. Fankhauser:I purchased some Bulgarian Feta Cheese and the carton leaked. I lost all the brine. Reviewing your recipe‚ ph. 11 it would appear that all I need to make a replacement brine is 20oz water and 5 tbls salt. Is this correct? I thought i needed to heat some milk and add salt. what do you say?Thank you.,1069792354091
68.170.101.16,David F.,Tue 25 Nov 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,BILL:
You don't need much brine to preserve feta‚ only enough to cover. If there is any of the original brine‚ you could put the cheese and remaining brine in a ziplock bag‚ close out the air‚ and seal it. Yes‚ replacement brine as specified would work‚ but you may not need it as strong since the cheese is already fully brined. I would try 1/2 cup water and a tablespoon and a half of salt. Don't save it TOO long... ,1069811487140
205.188.208.168,Dean Logan,Tue 09 Dec 2003,dinologano@yahoo.com,I'm interested in making cheese‚ but have not been able to find a source for raw milk or just pasteurized milk(not homogenized). My only source is homogenized milk I buy in the store. Do I need to perform any additonal steps when using homogenized milk and what kind of end product will result‚ i.e. quality‚ etc.?Since I believe this is a problem in many states now I think it would be informative if you would address this on your website.Thank You,1071005901850
10.229.1.57,David F.,Fri 12 Dec 2003,fankhadb@uc.edu,Look on my page on Beginning Cheesemaking under the discussion of milk. The short answer is that one can make cheese with most any store bought milk.,1071259666686
64.85.15.247,Glenn L.,Thu 01 Jan 2004,galange@plix.com,Your Cheese Page has inspired me to try making cheese myself (today‚ in fact). I am thinking that commercial cheeses still contain useable cultures‚ I.E. swiss cheese‚ jarlsberg‚etc. Am I correct or crazy?,1072969899230
68.170.101.16,David F.,Thu 01 Jan 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,GLENN:
I do not recommend that anyone new to cheesemaking attempt Swiss cheese. (See my page on Beginning Cheesemaking.) Swiss cheese is quite complex‚ requiring an additional specific bacterial culture not used in other cheeses (Propionibacter shermanii) plus a complex series of temps‚ humidities and salt baths‚ taking up to a year to complete. To answer your question‚ it is plausible that live cells of this bacterium survive in mature Swiss cheese. However‚ to attempt this cheese the first time‚ I would purchase the culture from New England Cheesemaking (see my links).,1073000636171
68.170.101.16,David F.,Thu 01 Jan 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,MAKING SWISS CHEESE:
Dean‚ you motivated me to post the Swiss cheese recipe I have had for a while. It is at Making Swiss Cheese. You will see that it is a challenge...,1073004926265
64.85.15.243,Glenn L.,Thu 01 Jan 2004,galange@plix.com,OK no swiss yet‚ but I did get a lively culture from a small amount of Jarlsberg today...perhaps cheddar or gruyere. They can't kill the culture without ruining the cheese is my theory.,1073008991130
155.91.6.71,Ann,Fri 02 Jan 2004,ann_hutchinson@merck.com,I love your page and I believe it has given me the courage to try making cheese. But I have a question...when you say "milk" as in your yogurt or basic cheese receipe‚ do you mean fresh‚ unprocessed COW's milk? Your other recipes (like feta) say "goat's milk." I will have goat's milk‚ so does that mean I can't use your recipes that just say "milk"? Obviously‚ I'm new to this...your thoughts would be appreciated! - Ann,1073077900711
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sat 03 Jan 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,ANN:
While there will be differences in a given cheese based on which milk source is used‚ to my knowledge‚ the recipes I have posted will work with any untainted milk. I use goat milk because that is what I have‚ but have used store-bought cow's milk with success. I know from experience that store milk works fine for yogurt and many cheeses. However‚ reconstituted powdered milk may not be satisfactory‚ in my experience.,1073153742092
68.226.107.216,thomas bricker,Mon 05 Jan 2004,tjbricker2002@yahoo.com,i have made a blue cheese and a farmhouse chedder and am ageing them both in the same cooler. now the farmhouse chedder is getting a blue mold on outside and was wondering if it is taking on the blue mold and flavor. you can age them together cant you with out hurting them ,1073354379125
68.170.101.16,David F.,Thu 08 Jan 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,THOMAS:
Whether you "hurt" the cheddar by aging it in the same container as blue is a matter of taste‚ but you will certainly get Penicillium growing on the cheddar‚ and get a bit of the blue 'tang' in its flavor. If you want to preserve the cheddar nature of your cheese‚ it should be aged separately from the blue.,1073613623530
205.188.208.168,Bobbi Harris,Wed 21 Jan 2004,Blkschndog@aol.com,David‚ you should really write a book on Cheese Making for Dummies! This place is great! I had made cheeses with my aunt years ago when she had a small dairy goat herd‚ we now have our own small farm and yes that includes our dairy girls! I now make goats milk soaps and cheese. Your recipes break things down so nice‚ that I can't wait to get my kids into the cheese making! Even tho they don't eat much of it! Mom does!!! Thank you so much!!!!,1074689837478
67.60.4.244,Anvah,Sat 24 Jan 2004,anvah@yahoo.com,Dear David‚How do you maintain proper humidity and temperature at home? I'm making my first Mozzarella from your page. I'd like to try Cheddar eventually. But the aging has me worried since I have no room to maintain the proper temperature or humidity. (Fridge is the closest I can think of. )Thanks‚Anvah,1074999634568
10.229.1.57,David F.,Mon 26 Jan 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,ANVAH:
We live in a 150 year old house with a stone (unheated) basement. I can age cheese quite nicely there in the winter (about 45-50 F) If I need higher humidity‚ I age in an unpluged refrigerator in the basement. In the summer‚ I use a refrigerator with the thermostat turned as high as it will go. I adjust the humidity with a pan of water of the diameter which yields desired humidity.,1075135198930
66.125.215.160,W. D. Bathgate,Tue 03 Feb 2004,wdbath@pacbell.net,I'd like to know if Lemon juice can be substituted for tartaric acid in making cheese.If so‚ what is the conversion?,1075849009484
68.170.101.16,David F.,Fri 06 Feb 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,W.D.
I rarely make cheese with exogenous acid (I prefer acidification by fermentation)‚ but I am certain that you can substitute lemon juice for tartaric acid. There are vinegar cheeses too‚ but these don't seem appetizing to me. Calculating the conversion factor for tartaric acid to lemon juice is a good challenge for a student of chemistry... anyone?,1076124417890
202.56.198.158,moazam azam,Sun 08 Feb 2004,moazamazam@yahoo.co.uk,After searching for a week and viewing different sites i found your site most intertesting and easy to follow.However i havent yet started actually making cheese.The Measures and weights are given in Gallons and pounds which are rarely used in India.If litres and KGs is used it is easy to follow,1076178905770
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sat 07 Feb 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Moazam:
I strongly endorse the use of metric system for measuring. I try to include both English and Metric on my pages. At home I would like to metric (esp. temperature)‚ but often use Tbl‚ tsp‚ cups‚ etc... Please let me know which pages do not include metric measurements.,1076186708890
202.56.198.158,moazam,Sun 08 Feb 2004,moazamazam@yahoo.co.uk,how do i get the colour of kraft cheese (yellow),1076250338460
205.200.33.59,Diana,Mon 09 Feb 2004,terrdia@hotmail.com,Thank you!! Do you know how difficult is‚ first of all‚ to find cheesemaking instructions at all? If there are some‚ they often assume we know more than we really do. Your instructions are wonderful! I was especially impressed with the fact that you actually tell what rennet is‚ and WHERE IT CAN BE FOUND. WOW! That wes my biggest question. Maybe I'm unusually dim-witted‚ but I don't think so. I'm getting fresh farm milk this morning‚ and now at least I know where to get rennet. Wish me luck.,1076337142180
67.113.198.33,W. D. Bathgate,Mon 09 Feb 2004,wdbath@pacbell.net,Thanks David. My next question is two fold. First‚ How much liquid rennet to tablet rennet?And second‚ What happens when you use too much or too little rennet?,1076376454390
67.113.198.33,W. D. Bathgate,Tue 10 Feb 2004,wdbath@pacbell.net,OK‚I found the rennet liquid to tablet equivalent on your pages. Thanks much. I still need to know what happens when you use too much/little. Also I can't find citric acid powder anywhere but the net and I don't like ordering. Can ascorbic acid be used to make mozzarella?,1076427828578
66.125.213.249,W. D. Bathgate,Fri 13 Feb 2004,wdbath@pacbell.net,Ok‚ I have another one.Does using cream of tartar have the same affect as tartaric acid?They do differ somewhat in composition.Thanks‚Wes,1076717762296
66.125.213.249,W. D. Bathgate,Fri 13 Feb 2004,wdbath@pacbell.net,By the way‚ sorry for so many questions I've become VERY inspired.,1076717762296
68.170.101.16,David F.,Fri 13 Feb 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,BATHGATE:
You answered your own question re. liquid rennet equivalence vs tablet (1 tsp = 1 tablet).
Re. chemical acid use in cheese making: I already mentioned I prefer bacterial acidification. If you want to use chemicals‚ purchase pH paper and add sufficient acid powder to reach the desired pH. Tartaric acid (a crust formed during wine fermentation is used in air bags and cosmetics) is more acidic than cream of tartar. (I.e. use more "cream" than "acid."),1076723231609
66.125.213.249,W. D. Bathgate,Sat 14 Feb 2004,wdbath@pacbell.net,THANK YOU! :>) After only two tries I got a clean break and made my first cheese with your 1-gallon recipe!And on the third try I actually made CHEESE!:>).I was able to find a Beer makers supply store that had Tartaric acid and made some of the best tasting Mascarpone Ive ever had.I cant get it in my local store either which made it a REAL treat.Anyway‚ thanks again. Youve really made may year.Wes,1076780135500
24.215.147.80,Jonathan,Sun 15 Feb 2004,jo@yetidesign.com,i notice you use frozen buttermilk in one of your recipes...does freezing kill the milk's culture? is frozen buttermilk interchangeable with fresh? ie can you still make buttermilk pancakes with thawed buttermilk...with the same effect? love your cheeses!,1076873748839
68.170.101.16,David F.,Sun 15 Feb 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,JONATHAN:
Yes‚ frozen buttermilk is interchangable with fresh buttermilk if it is kept fozen solid (0 F or below) and tightly sealed. The bacteria are relatively unaffected by the freezing (but they do not like repeated freeze/thaw cycles). And yes‚ it would work perfectly in pancakes. However‚ I only freeze it so that the culture remains pure over several months.,1076898390281
65.27.94.141,Eric,Wed 18 Feb 2004,no@email.please,What is the proper way to store yeast and for how long can it be stored? I have some leftover yeast for my breadmachine that I put in the freezer but its been sitting in there for about a year so its probably not good anymore‚ right?,1077130598560
68.170.100.197,David F.,Wed 18 Feb 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Eric:
Freezing yeast is good for storing for long periods (maybe even a year)‚ but several cycles of freezing/thawing is a killer. You should perform the classic test: 1 Tbl yeast‚ 1 tsp sugar‚ 1/4 cup warm water. Mix thoroughly. If it doesn't foam up in 15 minutes‚ it will do a poor job of raising bread.,1077154558203
195.229.241.167,Steve Sykes,Fri 20 Feb 2004,ssykes@eim.ae,I am quite impressed with your cheese pages. Do you have a recipe for Icelandic Skyr?,1077255130437
65.58.128.125,Rose,Sat 21 Feb 2004,solarranch@ispwest.com,Thank you Thank you Thank you! As a true homesteader wanna be‚ I am seeking all info related to dairy and cheesemaking. I needed some true basic information. I will try this prior to my moving south to the ranch after retirement.,1077398051652
68.122.10.86,Ingrid,Sat 21 Feb 2004,goesnar@msn.com,Dear Dr.Fankhauser‚I just love your website‚ it gave me a lot of information on the chemistry of cheesemaking.I currently residing in Indonesia‚ went to school in United States before and also a cheese lover.In Indonesia‚ it is so expensive to purchase cheese and fresh mozzarella is just not available.Now I will test on making the cheese.I am wondering if the humidity (temperature) and the type of milk will affect my cheese making process?Thank you‚Ingrid,1077407220796
68.170.100.197,David F.,Sun 22 Feb 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,STEVE:
Officially‚ skyr needs a special starter from previously made skyr‚ but an approximation is:
1) Scald 1 gal skim milk‚ cool to 100 F.
2) Stir in 2 tsp cultured buttermilk (should be skyr for starter).
3) Dissolve 1 rennet tablet in 1/4 cup cool water‚ stir into milk.
4) Let sit at 80 F for 4-5 hours until soft clean break.
5) Cut curd‚ drain in cloth like labneh.
Here is a web site for skyr. Or cut and paste: http://www.isholf.is/gullis/jo/Miscellaneous.htm#thet,1077479533125
68.170.100.197,David F.,Sun 22 Feb 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,INGRID:
Temp and humidity especially affect the curing of cheese. Yes‚ the type of milk affects the taste and consistency of cheese. For instance‚ the best mozzarella is made from water buffalo milk. (Do you have that available in Indonesia?) But a cheese can be made from any milk. Go to my page on Beginning Cheese Making for suggestions for first projects. Moz is a bit of a challenge.,1077479533125
67.31.178.113,Sandy,Tue 24 Feb 2004,kkshoe@mfire.com,Your directions are wonderful! Thanks so much for the detailed information. I have a housefull of children..all were excited and even the non readers could check if I was doing it right. Thanks again,1077677357250
194.165.156.65,mazin marji,Sat 06 Mar 2004,mazin_marji@hotmail.com,I like your web site and I would like to ask a question: is it OK to make white cheese by mixing milk from cow‚sheep and goat and what is the best way to do that? Thanks,1078606827842
68.170.101.8,David F.,Sun 07 Mar 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,MAZIM:
I am sure there should be little problem mixing a variety of fresh high quality milks‚ though the precise times for a clean break‚ and the quality of the firmness of the curd will vary. Pay close attention at each stage (see my page on basic cheese)‚ and make the slight modifications necessary. Please keep us informed about your findings.,1078686196328
67.70.82.128,al,Sun 14 Mar 2004,al@yahoo.com,thank you,1079313021639
62.2.239.2,U.Curjel,Wed 17 Mar 2004,ucurjel@hotmail.com,Great site! This week I'll try making yoghurt. I have access to farm fresh (cooled) cows milk. Is it necessary to pastureize it or can I use it "raw"?,1079548403128
68.170.102.48,David F.,Thu 18 Mar 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,U. CURJEL:
Because one scalds and cools milk before making yogurt‚ the scalding is actually MORE than pasteurizing it. So‚ no need to pasteurize. Use the fresh milk (even better‚ use it immediatelty while still warm). Pay attention to proper cooling to below 55 C before adding the starter.,1079624847874
64.161.226.183,W. D. Bathgate,Sun 21 Mar 2004,wdbath@pacbell.net,DAVID:I did make some good mascarpone but it never really developed any "tang" to it before it started to smell like bad milk. How do I get the aged flavor out of it?,1079925564968
68.170.101.160,David F.,Wed 24 Mar 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,W.D.:
Mascarpone‚ according to the recipe I use‚ is acidified with tartaric acid‚ not bacterial fermentation. Thus‚ it will not get any more tart than it is immediately upon preparation. "Aging" it will only encourage contaminating bacteria to grow‚ and can cause off flavors.
Two solutions: 1) use a little more tartaric acid than the recipe currently calls for‚ or 2) try inoculating the cream with 1/8th part buttermilk just before you add the tartaric acid. The buttermilk will cause continued fermentation with "good" bacteria.,1080139365703
66.50.2.137,Carlos Bauza,Sat 27 Mar 2004,bauzace50@yahoo.com,Looking for buttermilk in the internet‚ your site came up! Thanks! Is it possible to purchase cultured bacteria for making buttermilk? I cannot get any sort of buttermilk in Puerto Rico.Please help.,1080425113093
68.170.100.128,David F.,Sat 27 Mar 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,CARLOS:
Check out New England Cheese Making Supply (http://www.cheesemaking.com/) for the precise cultures for buttermilk if you do not have fresh cultured buttermilk available.,1080427567421
64.9.86.158,Kathy Fick,Thu 01 Apr 2004,katnjack@yahoo.com,I try to make a different type of cheese each year. I found your page this year and I'm going to try 2 or 3 this year. Thank you.,1080829428610
64.161.225.14,W. D. Bathgate,Fri 02 Apr 2004,wdbath@pacbell.net,Thanks very much. I'm trying the buttermilk approach as we speak. SO‚ I gather that acidic cheeses are a "now" sort of thing where bacteria cheeses are the ones that age and become hard? I appriciate your help‚Wes,1080968771000
24.124.3.1,Teenager,Mon 05 Apr 2004,Neuralize@hotmail.com,Haha‚ these site is awesome‚ for some reason I'm compelled to make cheese. Even though I'm onl 17 and I should be typing up a paper >.>,1081182164371
69.161.219.83,David F.,Tue 06 Apr 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,TEENAGER:
I loved your comment! Thanks. I know exactly where you are coming from. Never are new projects more interesting than when you have a deadline task weighing on you. Please don't leave us hanging! What cheese will you make? I suggest either labneh from yogurt‚ or neufchatel. Did you see the page on Beginning Cheesemaking linked to my main page?,1081298092234
65.50.24.63,Mark Bulger,Wed 14 Apr 2004,markbulger@rogers.com,Thank you‚ for this wonderful website. I am a big believer in making it at home and have always had a strange love of all things fermented. I feel we are losing our touch with making the simple things in life and taking the time to learn and make cheese or beer or anything else‚ gives us a connection to life that is so important. Thanks so much.,1081989962870
67.172.176.17,chris larson,Sun 18 Apr 2004,c.larson02@comcast.net,tried to make your american moozzarella and when I got to the microwave portion it really failed it would not come together tried mic for longer worse? can you help? thank you chris,1082307628540
10.230.100.27,David F.,Wed 21 Apr 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,CHRIS:
Measure quantities very carefully. The times in the microwave vary according to the wattage of your microwave. Try pouring 1/2 gallon 80 C (175 F) water over a pound of curds to see if it spins better than using the microwave technique. (Don't know what "for longer worse" means.),1082562385354
80.200.215.172,Laurent,Wed 28 Apr 2004,laurent.cazalet@easynet.be,Hi guys‚
this line just to thank you. I find your site amazing‚ being an amateur cheese maker myself (using a french book)‚ I found lots of additional explanations and new techniques to experiment.
Congratulations for this fantastic work.Hope you'll keep the site alive long enough to give me a chance to try everything.
Cheers
Laurent,1083153120152
24.225.12.177,Joyce in KS,Thu 29 Apr 2004,adze17@gbta.net,Hi David! Just wanted to let you know that I'm still out here making lots of cheese & yogurt in Kansas‚ but with 4 children to homeschool now‚ I just haven't had much time to talk about it!! Glad to see the site is still here and going strong!,1083300691156
24.225.12.177,Joyce in KS,Thu 29 Apr 2004,adze17@gbta.net,to Chris Larson---It is possible that there is a little too much citric acid in the mozzarella cheese that you were making. Different amounts seem to be needed in different parts of our goats' lactation‚ and I have to adjust during the milking season. What kind of milk are you using? Even if it doesn't come out really smooth and melty‚ the cheese is still useful in cooking--like in lasagna. Also‚ this mozz. can be frozen and used later. I've got a 4 1/2 gallon batch finishing up on the stove right now‚ but I have "failures" occasionally even after 4 or 5 years of making it.,1083300691156
69.161.217.147,David F.,Sun 02 May 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,LAURENT:
Thanks to the support of the University of Cincinnati‚ this site has been up since before 1999‚ and‚ depending on their continued support‚ will be up for the foreseeable future. (Ah‚ the fragility of the web world. It worries me.) Let us know how your cheese projects go‚ and how we can improve this site. The French are master cheese makers--what is your connection with the French?,1083512166171
69.161.217.147,David F.,Sun 02 May 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,JOYCE IN KS!!!:
Old friend--Thanks for the feedback on your recipe for American Mozzarella (you are famous!). Yes‚ the stage of lactation makes a big difference in the process and it the quality of the cheese. I attribute the "failures" I have had in recent years to rich milk shortly after freshening.
I still occasionally see references to old Lactobacillus Board contributers Dominic and Ric.,1083512166171
63.80.99.3,Ginger,Mon 17 May 2004,Bontemps6@sbcglobal.net,Love your site‚ thanks for all the work and info. WHERE DO YOU FIND THE TIME!? I have goats; since finding your site I have been anxiously waiting for milk production to exceed demand (we drink ALOT of milk!)...I anticipate my first cheesemaking attempt in the next few days. Wish me luck‚ and keep up the good work!,1084774718470
64.222.83.216,Kris,Wed 02 Jun 2004,ksalber@msn.com,I love your website! I have a couple of questions‚ though... what size handkerchief do you use‚ and what do I do if I can't find a handkerchief? Unfortunately‚ they are not as widely sold as they used to be.Also‚ one cheesemaking tutorial said NOT to use Junket brand rennet‚ that it's "not the same thing as cheesemaking rennet"‚ not that it matters since I can't seem to find it anyway.I tried Labneh‚ but it didn't drain off the whey hardly at all‚ it was just as liquidy as when I started‚ even though it had long since stopped dripping. used walmart 'ladies' handkerchief & yogurt.,1086181057839
10.230.100.27,David F.,Thu 03 Jun 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,KRIS:
Can't imagine that plain white handkerchiefs aren't in your local variety store‚ but any fine weave cotten cloth will serve as a milk filter. Some folks turn their noses up at Junket tablets‚ but they are the same as rennet. In fact‚ the tablets have a longer shelf life than liquid rennet. (Do NOT use flavored Junket pudding with rennet‚ obviously.)
How long did you let your yogurt drip? I hope you used homemade yogurt; artificially thickened commercial yogurt may not separate as well.,1086297987508
64.222.108.161,Kris,Fri 04 Jun 2004,ksalber@msn.com,I let it drip overnight‚ but I was using commercial yogurt..the cheap generic brand since I can't afford to use regular bottled milk (too expensive and my boys go through 3 gals/wk!) to make yogurt. I happened to have some plain yogurt in my fridge and thought I'd give it a shot‚ but it barely did anything. Next time I get a chance‚ I'll try making some homemade yogurt first‚ then make labneh. I've also got to do some running around to try to find rennet...,1086357478600
200.79.67.88,DON,Wed 16 Jun 2004,YNMX@HOTMAIL.COM,GREAT INFO...JUST ONE QUESTION FOR NOW....CANNOT FIND RENNET LOCALLY‚ IS THERE SOMETHING ELSE I COULD USE?,1087437633330
69.161.219.153,David F.,Fri 18 Jun 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,DON:
In the US‚ most large supermarkets have Junket Rennet tablets in the pudding section. There are many beer and wine supply stores which also sell cheese making supplies. Or ask the managers at either of these stores to order it. There are numerous web-based supplies as well. Finally‚ herbs like Lady's Bedstraw or Stinging Nettles are reputed to have rennet activity. Will let you know after I do the experiment...,1087565624515
139.133.7.38,Ada,Fri 25 Jun 2004,ada_ma2001@hotmail.com,Hello. I learnt how to make yoghurt and buttermilk using the information on your webpages. So lots of thanks to you for putting them up. I have a question - what make greek yoghurt greek? Are there any special tricks that one must know if one is to make greek yoghurt? I am very curious. Please share your thoughts.,1088165935620
69.161.218.37,David F.,26 Jun 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,ADA:
Thanks for the interesting question. According to the info on http://www.ochef.com/257.htm‚ "Greek yogurt" is made with ewe's milk‚ which is about 5% butterfat. So two important differences:
type of milk (hard to adjust for this one since ewe's milk is qualitatively different from cow's) and
% B.F. ("whole" milk in the States is 3.5%‚ so you would have to add cream to bring it up to 5% B.F.),1088270597140
198.26.122.13,Bill Outlaw,30 Jun 2004,outlawfarm@earthlink.net,This is one of the best web pages I've ever come across!!,1088611743887
24.196.82.93,Fred in Wisconsin,30 Jun 2004,none@wisc.edu,Thank you for maintaining this page! I've referred to it many times now. The directions are remarkably clear and complete. I do appreciate it!,1088620404937
66.171.223.127,kwaku brown,02 Jul 2004,kwaku004664@Yahoo.com,why is american cheese orange‚ yet bwe call it yellow. Moreover‚ what is it that makes it orange. The "Gerat American Dupe".,1088819241731
69.161.219.125,David F.,03 Jul 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,KWAKU:
Ah‚ yes... Sounds like you suspect the answer (Great American Dupe...). Americans especially add bright orange annatto dye (http://www-ang.kfunigraz.ac.at/katzer/engl/generic_frame.html?Bixa_ore.html) to make commercial cheese "yellow." Puzzling over this‚ I suspect the origin is that long-aged cheese becomes creamy yellow‚ so the yellow suggests more flavorful cheese??? Anyone else have an idea?,1088864869312
69.161.219.125,David F.,03 Jul 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,NOTE: The link in the previous post must have a "squigle" after the / and in front of the katzer to work... Apparently my server doesn't recognize and display it in this context. Sorry. DBF,1088865511234
67.64.148.22,David E. Samara‚ M.D.,05 Jul 2004,davidsamara@sbcglobal.net,I have referred to your site many times! I make yogurt and labneh a lot since I am Lebanese. I am lactose intolerant and always have lactose-free milk at home. My question is whether or not the yogurt starter bacteria will be "happy" in a low lactose environment. I currently use regular 2% cow's milk and a very good starter from YOGOURMET (when I have no fresh yogurt.) Also‚ You and your readers with a scientific bent may be interested in "On Food and Cooking" by Harold McGee which addresses the chemical properties of food during cooking‚ baking and processing.,1089051721421
69.161.219.125,David F.,06 Jul 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,David E.:
You raise an interesting question to which you may have at least a partial answer. The bacteria in yogurt convert lactose to lactic acid by fermentation. If one used a low lactose milk as the starting material‚ I would expect the acidity of the product to be lower. Have you made yogurt with milk you know is low in lactose?But‚ as you know‚ 2% refers to the milk's butterfat content‚ while the lactose remains the same. I predict that "acidophilus" milk would not work well for yogurt. Anyone try it? Thnx for the McGee reference.,1089150990468
207.218.200.60,Barb,09 Jul 2004,bmfindley@ev1.net,I learned "how to" with this site and it is still the one I come back too.,1089391384370
207.218.200.60,Barb,09 Jul 2004,bmfindley@ev1.net,I made a batch of yogurt (2 gallons in pint jars) and incubated in two ice chests. The ice chests are identical and I have used them both for making jogurt. One batch turned out perfect; the other turned out with the consistancy of milk. The water I filled the chests with came from the same source and the temperature (120 degrees approx) was within about 3 degrees of each other. The only thing I can figure out is that the second batch got jostled too much.Question: Can I take the 'bad' batch and run it through the whole process again or do I need to throw it away?Thanks‚Barb,1089392210780
69.161.217.246,David F.,10 Jul 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,BARB:
Interesting experiment you have performed‚ the only problem is we don't know the variable! I suspect (as you mention) that the temperature difference was the culprit. It sounds like you estimated rather than measured the temp? Precise temps are very important for yogurt. Jostling would cause it not to firm up‚ but it should still be thickened like buttermilk. I doubt you can start over on the liquid batch. I would add rennet to the liquid portion and make cheese from it.,1089469589875
206.65.72.53,Liz Lirette,18 Jul 2004,lizlink@usa.com,Your web site is great.Attempt #5. 1gal milk(powder)1 qt cream‚ 1/2 cup bulgarian buttermilk‚ 1/2 rennet tab. warmed the milk to 80 added culture‚ 3hrs later the rennet. This set in laundry overnight. I made a yogurt but it was very stringy or drippy. I could not even strain it. Could it be the bulgarian style? #6 1gal. milk‚ cream I used the Mesophilic starter and 1/8 cal.chloride. After several hrs. I added 1/2 rennet to set for 18 hrs. My clean break cut the curds but then the whey got milky. I have another bag cheese draining as I write. Thanks for all the help and courage you've given thr,1090178005462
216.106.102.17,Helene & Gary,25 Jul 2004,gary@superaje.com,you have brought us back to our roots in prairie saskatchewan...we have finally found junket in ontario (nicastro's in ottawa) if anyone local is looking)...am making feta first time...am about to add the junket...whooohoooo...cheers from perth‚ ontario,1090782651616
216.106.102.17,Helene & Gary,29 Jul 2004,gary@superaje.com,...thank you !!! the feta is wonderful...we are surprised with both quantity and esp. quality......we could not have done this without your remarkable website...again‚thank you !!!,1091159822990
69.161.222.77,David F.,31 Jul 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,HELENE & GARY:
Thanks so much for feedback from our friends from the North! Did you use store bought or farm fresh milk for your cheese? I too love the pure flavor of the home made feta. As you say‚ "Whooohooo!",1091283364406
69.161.222.77,David F.,31 Jul 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,LIZ:
The recipes your are using are not from my pages? Two points right away:
1) I have not had much success making cheese with powdered milk‚ and do not recommend it.
2) Stringy yogurt is contaminated with unwanted bacteria. For successful Yogurt‚ use a fresh starter‚ I recommend Dannon Plain. See Beginning Cheesemaking to refine necessary skills for successful cheesemaking.,1091283651406
204.102.9.17,Glenn,04 Aug 2004,glenn.moeller@owp.csus.edu,Does the prohibition against using aluminum for acidifying milk also apply to anodized aluminum such as calphalon? Thanks.,1091656331610
216.106.102.17,Helene & Gary,04 Aug 2004,gary@superaje.com,our apologies to Glenn and Liz for jumping back in...we used store bought cow's milk for our feta...i don't believe this is forum for ranting about local dairy regulations...we can only imagine how good this would be with fresh goat's milk !!!,1091665563167
69.161.218.25,David F.,08 Aug 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,GLENN:
My problem with aluminum is that acid dissolves the metal‚ and the metal ions become soluble and dissolve in the milk‚ perhaps increasing the risk of Alzheimer's (and possibly other problems?) I don't think anodized makes any difference. Teflon coated would provide a barrier‚ but you don't want to overheat it (which wouldn't be a problem if you are only heating milk in the pot).,1091990003171
67.173.213.136,Micky,08 Aug 2004,mrs_micky@hotmail.com,I love your website! I have made jogurt before. My problem is the stainless steel pot which invariably scorches in a ring at the bottom. May I ask the brand name of your expensive but super efficient milk boiling pot? Thank you so much.,1091999743086
69.161.218.165,David F.,10 Aug 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,MICKY:
Any stainless steel pot with an added thick bottom (usually 1/8 - 1/4 inch pad of aluminum‚ but copper is even better) will do. The pad of metal distributes the heat preventing the hot spots you are having problems with. The one I currently use is made by "Morgan Ware" and specifies that it is 18/10 stainless‚ and carries the words "Sandwich Bottom" on its bottom.,1092148824734
63.163.194.200,barrett,11 Aug 2004,barrett@toomanychefs.com,What a great site! I'm going to annoy my wife for month's with these recipes.One other really easy cheese to put on for beginners (and the only one I've ever made) is the Indian paneer‚ found in sag paneer and other dishes. A decent recipe for it is here - http://1stholistic.com/Recipes/recipe_panir.htm,1092259606307
202.191.104.213,Aris Bakas,14 Aug 2004,aris@bakas.com.au,Do you have any suggestions on how to dry ricotta?thanks,1092469920156
216.106.102.17,Helene & Gary,17 Aug 2004,gary@superaje.com,Ooops Cheese Cake:Use Feta Cheese Recipe:1. Wait until curds have almost drained.2. Sample April's wine.3. Trip‚ catch bottle and dump curds back into whey.4. Strain again.Note: Cheese should not resemble anything close to Feta...It should have consistency of a cream cheese.5. Use cheese instead in any basic cheese cake recipe.Cake was wonderful‚ covered in Strawberry preserves. We have actually named it Fankhauser Cheese Cake....would love to know what happened...is this 'double straining' a known technique ?,1092799747826
168.8.164.246,cordarral,20 Aug 2004,cordarral16@yahoo.com,This is a very good page to learn about the makeing of cheese from.,1093018241740
4.156.102.240,Lore,23 Aug 2004,chowderpatch@prodigy.net,This page is great because it has good pictures and good instructions. I have a question‚ though. My curds fall to the bottom of the pan. Am I doing something wrong?,1093267464360
195.128.38.180,Polat Karlidag,24 Aug 2004,industry@sarkuysan.com,Dear Sir‚I thank you it's realy great.I will try to do home cheese if I can do that I will make my cheese factory after that I will invite you to see it.,1093355405110
69.161.221.15,David F.,28 Aug 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,ARIS:
How dry do you want your ricotta? Two suggestions 1) Let it hang an extra day or two in the fridge‚ 2) freeze it and thaw it (forces out water). If you want it DRY‚ I have no experience‚ but you will have to salt it and press it.,1093709521655
69.161.221.15,David F.,28 Aug 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,CORDARRAL:
Thank you for your comment. Let us know which cheese you make! May we ask where you live?,1093709521655
69.161.221.15,David F.,28 Aug 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,LORE:
The curd is SUPPOSED to sink after you cut the curd. If it floats‚ that means it is contaminated with CO2-producing bacteria. Sounds like you are succeeding.,1093709521655
69.161.221.15,David F.,28 Aug 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,POLAT:
I recommend you start your cheese making journey with the cheese projects on my Beginning Cheese Making page. I hope to be able to visit your cheese factory some day! Where do you live?,1093709521655
209.143.46.49,ken roark,02 Sep 2004,kroark@horizonview.net,hello 1st of all thanks for the great page on making cheese........but i need some help! i used raw whole milk to make NEUFCHATEL for the first time.........i left the cream in‚ instead of skimming it off.....after adding the rennett i let sit undisturbed for 12 hours (overnight)‚ the next morning it seemed to be set but i was unsure.........so i let it set for another 12 hours... then i did the clean break test again and i noticed that under the surface approx 1/2" it was set very firm‚ but the top was not.........i proceeded to cut and ladle out when i noticed that what was on top was t,1094125143157
216.86.72.65,Jenny,02 Sep 2004,sagehill@provide.net,question about innoculating milk... on your "Critical factors in getting a clean break" page‚ you state that inoculated milk should sit undisturbed overnight; yet most of your recipes say to let it sit 1-2 hours.when should it sit longer? Thanks‚ ,1094178477109
69.161.217.171,David F.,09 Sep 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,JENNY:
The "DO NOT DISTURB" sign is up only after the rennet is added. It does not matter while the inoculum is "ripening" them milk. Some recipes add rennet with the inoculum. These should not be disturbed from the beginning. Others let the inoculum work for hours before adding rennet. No problem aggitating these prior to adding rennet.,1094738096921
69.75.83.26,grant grider,19 Sep 2004,gnc@bak.rr.com,enjoy your site.Have been brewing for years‚just started making cheese.Am looking for info on "longhorn cheese"Any info you have would help.Again‚great site.,1095614298734
62.180.53.220,Gareth,20 Sep 2004,Castaway_Robinson@yahoo.co.uk,Thanks for the great informative website. Just a short question. I made Stilton a couple of days ago‚ it is now drying‚ but I am not sure about the exterior texture. It seems to not be very bound together (as it is not really pressed much). It his correct (or should I have pressed it harder)? THanks,1095671190369
64.222.106.195,Kristin,20 Sep 2004,xphish@msn.com,For those looking for Junket Rennet Tablets‚ it is avaiable online (and in person) through the Vermont Country Store: http://www.vermontcountrystore.com/shopping/product/detailmain.jsp?itemID=6152&itemType=PRODUCT&iMainCat=39&iSubCat=173&iProductID=6152 In the store‚ one box is under $3‚ but online you can buy 3 boxes for $8. This has been one of the only places I have found it.,1095702421768
64.136.26.228,Michael Newsome,25 Sep 2004,newsomething@hotmail.com,Do you have any recipes / instructions on making burrata cheese?,1096147696265
198.234.102.127,kim lewis,30 Sep 2004,klewis@mail.gsn.k12.oh.us,We are going to make the ginger ale and root beer but I was curious if anyone knows the amounts to use if you are using splenda and sugar for diabetic students.,1096551487718
69.161.218.101,David F.,30 Sep 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Gareth:
In my experience‚ the reason cheese does not bind together when pressed is two fold:
a) the curd was too cold when placed in the press‚ and
b) there was not enough pressure in the press.,1096558370015
69.161.218.101,David F.,30 Sep 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Grant and Michael:
I do not have recipes for either longhorn nor burrata (tell me more about the latter). If anyone DOES have recipes for these‚ please post!,1096558370015
69.161.218.101,David F.,30 Sep 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Kim:
In order to have carbonation in home made rootbeer or ginger ale‚ you must add sugar. Pasteur discovered this connection. So‚ no‚ you cannot make carbonated drinks using fermentation with splenda or other artificial sweeteners.,1096558370015
64.223.81.18,Kristin,01 Oct 2004,ksalber@msn.com,Question: I have a bottle of Cola syrup (kept around for cases of nausea). Can I make carbonated cola with that the same way as the root beer?,1096650928043
69.161.218.101,David F.,02 Oct 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Kristin:
Presuming that cola syrup is THE major flavor in cola drinks‚ then you certainly could use it just like root beer extract in my recipe for making home made root beer. Let us know how it turns out! Where did you get cola syrup?,1096724794705
64.223.81.18,Kristin,02 Oct 2004,ksalber@msn.com,I bought it at the Vermont Country store. Their online store is just as good as their in-person store. Lots of old-time remedies.www.vermontcountrystore.com It's difficult to find cola syrup anymore (as I found out when I was pregnant 3 yrs ago)‚ and when you do find it it's usually in a tiny bottle. Vermont store has it in a nice big‚ like 10 oz bottle‚ I think. Costs $10 at most.,1096726217640
64.223.118.4,Kristin‚ Again,04 Oct 2004,ksalber@msn.com,I made basic hard cheese (it is ripening in the fridge now). After adding the rennet and letting it sit for 3 hours (I think?)‚ the milk separated‚ but the curd sank to the bottom in one large lump. I couldn't tell wether I had gotten a clean break or not‚ so I went and cut the curd. I ended up with the tiniest curds‚ almost as if the curd had shredded rather than been cut. What did I do wrong? Took me much longer to drain and press‚ but it's finished...unsure how it turned out though‚ taste wise.What happened?,1096919404229
62.180.53.220,Gareth,05 Oct 2004,castaway_robinson@yahoo.co.uk,Kristen‚ It sounds to me like you let it sit for to long before you cut the curds. Obviously it depends what cheese you are making but I always leave it at 90F for about 90 minutes (but you can ckeck it before this). You should not have to leave it more than 5 or 10 minute more than this before you cut the curd. I suspect that your cheese will now come out very dry. What were you making? Hope this helps.,1096978045840
69.161.218.101,David F.,05 Oct 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Kristin (and Gareth):
I agree with Gareth. You probably should have cut the curd earlier (as soon as you get a clean break). But this is not serious. Sinking curd is good (floating curd has bubbles which could be bad). It sounds like you cut the curd too small: should be 1/2 inch cubes. I believe your cheese will be fine‚ if hard and dry (as Gareth mentioned).,1097021657184
80.180.161.151,lejahnke@lycos.com,06 Oct 2004,lejahnke@lycos.com,Dear David f. I found your site yesterday and read so much that I had a nightmare about you last night. You and cheese. I am in Italy at the moment and preparing to return to the States. I am not sure I can live without tomini and fresh mozzarella. I found the recipe for fresh mozzarella but do you know how to make tomini? If the answer is on your site‚ I am sorry I did not find it yet. For the moment‚ a short answer will do until I return. Should I try to bring back a chunk of tomini or is that irrelevant? I guess another question is should I bring back gorgonzola? ciao//lori,1097040629780
64.222.108.58,Kristin,06 Oct 2004,ksalber@msn.com,When I cut the curd‚ I cut it into 1/2 inch cubes as your tutorial described (I had it printed out and stuck to the range-hood above the stove). When I cut it‚ though‚ it fell apart...not liquidy‚ but fell apart. I can't remember how long I let it sit...my parents came over right then and I was interrupted for awhile.,1097064393549
69.161.219.63,David F.,09 Oct 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Lori:
Gorgonzola: If you are premitted to bring in gorgonzola‚ that would be an excellent choice because in the States it is of lower quality and higher cost. I am not sure whether USDA will permit it‚ but because of its long cure time‚ it should be OK.
Tomini: As I recall‚ these are like tiny flavored mozzarella balls? I do not have a specific recipe how to make them. I KNOW they are fresh cheeses‚ and doubt that USDA will let them into the country.,1097337530421
193.158.186.81,Gareth,10 Oct 2004,Castaway_Robinson@yahoo.co.uk,David‚ I hope you did not mind me jumping in there a couple of days ago with the response to Kristin! Now for my question. Friday was the GRAND OPENING DAY (1 month maturing) for my first cheddar. A little crumbly‚ and needs more time for the favour to develop more fully‚ but not bad. My question though‚ is when I tried to melt some cheese‚ it did‚ it just kind of browned on the surface. The favour and the texture seems to be OK‚ so any ideas why this should happen ? I am using whole cows milk‚ and 50 Pounds of pressure in the mold. The cheese was air dried for 4 days then waxed,1097443575445
193.158.186.81,Gareth,10 Oct 2004,Castaway_Robinson@yahoo.co.uk,Sorry‚ that should read...it did NOT melt.,1097444171762
219.88.24.79,Vanessa,11 Oct 2004,vanessa1nz@yahoo.co.nz,Hi There! This is a great site! Well done :) I have been successfully making yogurt for a few months now without a thermometer‚ in the hotwater cupboard... But I will definitely get a thrmometer now so I can try making some of your cheeses. One I make at the moment: You heat raw cows milk until it starts to rise‚ then add lemon juice‚ stir and strain thru cheesecloth. Rinse in water‚ then press (I use a good sized rock) for a few mins‚ then eat! Even the kids love it‚ esp with a little rock salt and olive oil to dip it in. What do you think? Is this real cheese? Cheers from NZ,1097482768970
12.218.73.162,Liz,13 Oct 2004,;izlink@usa.com,Yea. I have finally succeeded in making a clean break. I kept some of the whey to drink which is quite good. What is the calorie‚ protein‚ and other nutritional info. Please guide me. Thanks. L,1097705780320
10.230.100.27,David F.,15 Oct 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Gareth:
Cheese that is more acid will melt more. Two ways for this to happen. The most effective is to let the curds sit several hours in a warm place (some recipes call for leaving it in the whey) to acidify before pressing. The other is curing. Acidification will continue in a cheese that is aging. I believe your cheese will melt better after it is several months old. Also‚ my experience is that goat cheese does not melt as well as cow's.,1097856687641
10.230.100.27,David F.,15 Oct 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Vanessa:
Cheese is essentially the protein separated out of milk and either eaten fresh or preserved. So yes‚ what you describe is a simple cheese. It will be very mild‚ and will not age well (lacking bacterial starter which helps acidify the cheese).,1097856687641
10.230.100.27,David F.,15 Oct 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Liz:
I have added a line on my page on the nutritional content of milks to include whey. Also on that page‚ I have placed a link to the USDA Composition of Foods data base that you can use to search what ever food product you are intersted in.,1097856687641
24.159.179.58,Steve Chastain,15 Oct 2004,src@utk.edu,I've read several pages calling for Chymosin as part of making cheese. Please tell me where I could purchase this or if I really need it.Thank you very much for your website..I have been wanting to learn to make cheese for years and your page has given me the confidence to give it a try.Thank You‚Steve R Chastain,1097890334978
69.161.217.204,David F.,17 Oct 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Steve:
Chymosin is another name for rennet‚ the enzyme which coagulates milk. Yes‚ you need rennet (chymosin) for most cheeses. I have used Junket Rennet tablets successfully for years‚ and get them in the pudding section of my local supermarket. Look at my web page "Beginning Cheese Making" for suggestions for first cheese projects.,1098024024265
169.229.123.27,Tim,23 Oct 2004,tim@cleves.net,There is an interesting article in todays NY Times(http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/23/nyregion/23mozzarella.html though I don't know how long you can read the archive)about how the state health inspectors are stopping all the small Italian cheese stores and dairys from making the traditional mozzarella! Apparently nowadays cheese made this way can be bad for you! What a pity. Thanks for creating a site that will allow me to try making my own cheese (until the inspectors close us all down).,1098570170407
69.161.219.33,David F.,24 Oct 2004,fankhadb@uc.edu,Tim:
Thanks for the post. (One has to be registered with NYTimes to see the article.) The article points up the legal US prejudice which favors corporate interests and slams the small family producer. Most artisan cheese producers have struggled to satisfy obsessive/compuslive regs which want us to trust only corporate foods. Rather than clean up and humanize corporate meat and dairy production‚ they want us to overcook meat and eggs‚ and give up the unique delicious home made cheeses etc. Cost to gormet taste in the US? Just taste cheeses and real salamis in Europe.,1098628651046
208.61.158.154,Domenic Abitino,28 Oct 2004,domenic@abitino.com,I want to thank you for the extensive info you provide on your website.i am from napoli Italy (now reside in central Florida)and my da as been making fresh mozzarella for the last 40 years and that was the only cheese I was tought. through the years I have developed a passion form this milky substaince. I am dyeing to try you recipe for bluecheese. I will let you know the results. I must tell you I have tried to make ricotta and let me tell you I got it down and tasting really good. Wish you could try it. Well once again thank you for all yur Info. Domenic Abitino,1099022308437
208.61.158.154,Domenic Abitino,28 Oct 2004,domenic@abitino.com,PS I am a chef and owner of an Italian restaurant here in Melbourne Florida.www.abitino.com,1099022308437
216.228.163.40,Dianne Crampton,30 Oct 2004,tigers@uci.net,What a wonderful site for the beginner. I have been looking for a cow farmer's cheese through our local stores for over a ye