MAKING PANEER AT HOME
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| Ingredients for paneer are
simple: milk and vinegar |
This page has been accessed created 15 March 2005 |
Finished paneer ready to use in a variety of Indian dishes |
Making paneer is a simple exercise in acid/heat precipitation of
protein.
The only challenge is not to burn the milk while you heat it to hot but
not
boiling. A thick bottomed stainless steel pot should do, but
lacking
that, try heating the milk in a water bath so that the volume of water
stabilizes the temp. Here is my recipe for panir:
| 1 |
Assemble the
ingredients and equipment: one gallon of fresh milk in a stainless steel pot with a thick, heat dispersing bottom 1/4 cup white vinegar |
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| 2 |
Heat the milk
slowly, with occasional stirring, until it is 85 C. If you do not
have a thick bottomed pot, heat the milk in a double boiler so that it
does not scortch on the bottom. |
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| 3 |
Once you reach
85 C, remove from the fire. Skim the "skin" from the surface of the scalded milk (hot protein, exposed to the air, forms the skin.) |
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| 4 |
Stir in the
1/4 cup white vinegar, making sure to evenly mix it in as soon as it is
added. You should see clabbering within a few seconds, and it
should be fairly complete after a minute. |
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| |
5 |
Cover and
chill to solidify the curds, around 10 C. |
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6 |
At 10 C, the curds will
be firm and well formed. Do not stir the curds and whey! |
| 7 |
Line a
collander with a fine cloth (here, a handkerchief which has been boiled
to sterilize it), place on top of a large pot and decant the whey
through the cloth. After the whey has been decanted, gently move the curds into the cloth. |
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| 8 |
Here, the
curds are ready to be drained. Pick up the four corners of the handkerchief and secure with a double loop of a strong rubberband. |
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| 9 |
Hang the
assembly by the rubberband to drain for several hours or overnight in a
cool place. |
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| 19 |
Open the
drained curds, and rewrap to place in a press. Here is a page describing how to prepare a "Fankhauser" press from materials which may be around your home. |
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| 11 |
The press has
been assembled, and we now wait until the next day to unwrap our
present of paneer! |
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| 12 |
Here is the
round of paneer (the follower from the press in in the background. |
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| 13 |
Place on a
non-reactive plate, and use immediately, or seal in a plastic bag and
use within two weeks. (Fresher is better.) P.S. We used a little of the fresh curds to make Sag Paneer before pressing, so you should get more paneer than this from a gallon (about 1 lb 14 oz or so) |