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18 Comments
Tasia M.
February 20, 2013
T.E. thanks for your comments! If you'd like your cheese less creamy, just let it hang for a longer period of time. Sometimes I leave mine hanging at home for the whole day!
T. E.
February 17, 2013
I just made this recipe and halved it. My cheese came out very creamy. I just rolled it and put it in the refrigerator. What I did taste was mildly tangy and will take herbs and spices well. My milk was Ultra Pasturized. I read the posts after I made my cheese so I wonder if it would have a different consistency had the milk simply been pasturized. I'll check it out tomorrow.
Also, Whole Foods sells the citric acid in the vitamin section. I went to Whole Foods and Sprouts and was not able to find a gallon of goats milk only quarts and 1/2 gallons. I used 1 quart of whole milk and 1 quart of low fat.
Also, Whole Foods sells the citric acid in the vitamin section. I went to Whole Foods and Sprouts and was not able to find a gallon of goats milk only quarts and 1/2 gallons. I used 1 quart of whole milk and 1 quart of low fat.
Kate's K.
January 13, 2013
I have made goat cheese using the kit a couple of times. It was not as tangy as I like it but rather a mild creamy cheese that takes well to adding some extra ingredients such as smoked sundried tomatoes and more of the salt (it's just kosher salt)than called for. After emailing the company they suggested I try to find Pasturized goat's milk vs. the Ultra-pasturized that is found in grocery stores. I have yet to find some of the Pasturized but plan to keep looking.
Claire E.
January 2, 2013
Sorry for below comment, it showed up twice for some reason, and not sure how to delete, my apologies!
Esther H.
December 22, 2012
copied this off the web:
almost all commercial dairies now pasteurize at temps so high that the proteins are completely denatured and will not coagulate into anything except rice sized grains. Smiths pasteurizes at 170 deg. Dairyman's at 180. Useless for cheesemaking. In Ohio Hartzler Farms Dairy in Wooster pasteurizes at 140 deg for 30 mins. Makes beautiful cheese. I googled Ohio Dairies and just started making phone calls. Or Contact your local chapter of Weston A Price Foundation and find a local source of raw milk, if it is legal in your state. westonaprice.org
almost all commercial dairies now pasteurize at temps so high that the proteins are completely denatured and will not coagulate into anything except rice sized grains. Smiths pasteurizes at 170 deg. Dairyman's at 180. Useless for cheesemaking. In Ohio Hartzler Farms Dairy in Wooster pasteurizes at 140 deg for 30 mins. Makes beautiful cheese. I googled Ohio Dairies and just started making phone calls. Or Contact your local chapter of Weston A Price Foundation and find a local source of raw milk, if it is legal in your state. westonaprice.org
emily6532n
December 22, 2012
Help! I followed the directions exactly (using a lemon instead of powdered citric acid) and my milk didn't curdle at all after the 15 minute wait. Is there a way to salvage my hot, non curdled milk and still make the cheese? What did I do wrong?
zora
December 17, 2012
I'm puzzled by this recipe for queso fresco made with goat milk, which you call chevre. I make chevre using a bacterial culture/rennet powder that I buy from New England Cheesemaking Co. The milk is warmed and cultured for 12 hours like yogurt, after that the curd is drained for six hours, then mixed with salt. I believe that this method makes the traditional, tangy cheese that most people are familiar with when they think of chevre. I often mix mine with fennel pollen and lavender powder.
Esther H.
December 17, 2012
FYI another common name for citric acid is Sour Salt, it sells during canning season and for some reason Lieber's produces it during Passover (I buy mine after the holiday when it is on clearance- just in time for summer canning).
Can I use my plastic yogurt cheese strainer instead of a towel? Would there be a significant difference?
Can I use my plastic yogurt cheese strainer instead of a towel? Would there be a significant difference?
Jenn@Slim-Shoppin
December 16, 2012
Love it! I am going to make this for my sister and Mom for Christmas. Can you buy goats milk at Whole Foods? Where do you buy it?
douglasalan
December 16, 2012
citrus acid u mean like lemon juice? or no?
advise
Thanks/douglasalan
advise
Thanks/douglasalan
Das_Muller
December 25, 2012
"My recipe includes citric acid, which is what we include with Belle Chevre's new DIY Make Your Own Goat Cheese Boxes. However, if you are without this ingredient at home, you can also use the juice of one lemon."
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