Sunday, 26 January 2014

Making Mozz

What’s Rhianna’s favourite cheese? Mozzarella-ella-ella.

Apologies. Even as cheese jokes go that’s a shocker. I’ve been wanting to make mozzarella for some time and inspired by the gents at Pizzicletta who are chuffed with the results of their own cheese making, I thought I’d give it a go this weekend.

So Saturday morning off I cycled to Stoke Newington Farmer’s market coming home with 2 litres of Hook and Son’s finest. I’m not going to regurgitate the recipe, that’s covered very well, here and here. Instead I wanted to share a few pictures of how it turned out:

All things considered it was pretty straight forward. Two litres of milk yielded 200g of mozzarella so it wasn’t the most economical. The recipe suggested a yield closer to twice that but I suspect at least part of that was down to my own over exuberance in kneading the cheese and my excitement of seeing it come together. The plan then was to make re cook the whey to make ricotta, literally “recooked” in italian, and then make Gjetost, a Norwegian brown cheese from what was left over.

This is where my beginners luck ran out though, the ricotta didn’t come together, and my brown cheese remained white. The Google diagnosis was that my whey was probably too acidic, not surprising given I couldn’t source citric acid powder so had guessed the lemon juice equivalent, one whole lemon proved in this case to be the incorrect answer, but you live and learn.

5 comments:

  1. That's gouda be the worst joke ever ; ) Takes about 80 litres of milk to make an 8kg truckle of stilton, so 2 litres of milk for 200g of mozzarella ain't bad. It's great that you gave it go!

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  2. Whey!

    I'll definitely be trying again, ideally from the curd if I can source some, I know that's what most pizzerias do who bother to make their own and I can see why as I'd need a much bigger pan...

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  3. That looks good to me! My 2 litres of milk yielded a ping pong ball amount and was horribly shiny. Yours looks all moist and lovely and that's a great set to your curd. Oh - and why did it take so long for people to notice there was horsemeat in lasagnes? Because they used mascarpone cheese. I thank you :)

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