
Making your own Cheese

You will need:
Three bowls - Large, medium and small.
Wooden spoon
Cheese cloth or open weave cloth
Sieve
Thermometer
Milk
Ascorbic Acid (Vitamin C Powder) or lemons or Citric Acid. This recipe is made
using Vitamin C Powder as it's always available in the pantry.
Glass bowl
Salt
Before you start, please make sure all your items are clean. Milk contaminates
easily and this will spoil your cheese. I recommend you set up your work space
first as every thing is very hot.
Step one: Pour 2 litres of milk into a saucepan and heat the milk to 75 degrees.
Stir the milk occasionally and gently. When it has reached the desired
temperature hold at this heat for one minute. This pasteurises the milk. Remove
from heat and let stand for one minute.
Step Two: Add one teaspoon of Ascorbic Acid (Vitamin C Powder) to the hot milk
and gently stir it through the milk.
Note: If making cheese from fresh milk more ascorbic acid may be required. I
have found that Goats milk requires half a teaspoon more than Cows milk. It
averages out at, One teaspoon per two litres of milk.
As you stir the ascorbic powder through it should separate immediately and you
can see the curds and whey.
If it doesn't separate add more
ascorbic acid in
small quantities until you can see the whey (light green liquid) appear. Let it
rest for a few minutes.
Step Three: Have a strainer suspended over a large bowl. Ladle the curds into
cheese cloth, if you have some, if not, a soup bag, or open weave cloth will do
just fine. Gently add the curds allowing the whey to run into the bowl beneath.
Don't pour the whey down the sink! Keep it and cook your pasta in it or feed it
to your animals or put it in your compost bin.
When all the curds are collected
tie the cheese cloth up and suspend it over another bowl to allow the rest of
the whey to drain out. This should take about an hour.

Step Four: Remove cheese from cloth and add one teaspoon of salt to the cheese
and mix in well. (You can add other herbs and spices at this stage, lemon pepper
is lovely added at this stage, but try it plain first then you can be creative
with the next batch.) Transfer into a glass bowl and press the cheese down with
a fork. Cover snuggley with cling wrap and refrigerate overnight.
Step Five:
Good Morning! Turn cheese out onto a platter and sprinkle with fresh herbs
or leave as is and serve with hot toast. A couple of turns of black pepper and a
drizzle of olive oil. Enjoy! Best consumed within three days, but is still very
nice after one week.
Tips and Tricks: You can use any milk to make this cheese. Shop bought milk
works just as well as fresh milk. I have found that different brands of milk
make vastly different quantities of cheese and vary in flavour and colour. Cows
milk cheese has a yellow tint where as goats milk always turns out white.
Making cheese at night before bed is a wonderful way to relax. While standing at
the stove stirring the milk I have found that I get a bit sleepy. Must be the
lactic acid, better than a glass of wine!