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Raw cheese

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  • ? Offline
    ? Offline
    A Former User
    wrote last edited by A Former User
    #3

    I'm lucky because thanks to my fireplace, I can keep the milk at a high temperature (30 degrees) for a long time, and in literally 48 hours without adding anything, it's already ready for cheese.

    If I add a ferment such as old yogurt, it's done in 24 hours.

    The secret is heat; without heat, it can take forever.

    If you don't have a fireplace like me, the best thing to do is to heat your milk to 30 degrees and add some old fermented milk to it. That will speed things up. Of course, you should leave it at room temperature and reheat it from time to time.

    Once the whey is separated from the curds, I put everything in a fine mesh strainer to remove the whey, and I put the curds and cream in cheesecloth to drain.

    I then use the whey to cut vegetable juice (3 liters of juice for 1.5 liters of whey) or hydration formulas.

    20251205_200145.jpg 20251206_220713.jpg 20251207_191430.jpg 20251207_191827.jpg20251207_185604.jpg

    adminA elaE E 4 Replies Last reply
    2
    • ? A Former User

      I'm lucky because thanks to my fireplace, I can keep the milk at a high temperature (30 degrees) for a long time, and in literally 48 hours without adding anything, it's already ready for cheese.

      If I add a ferment such as old yogurt, it's done in 24 hours.

      The secret is heat; without heat, it can take forever.

      If you don't have a fireplace like me, the best thing to do is to heat your milk to 30 degrees and add some old fermented milk to it. That will speed things up. Of course, you should leave it at room temperature and reheat it from time to time.

      Once the whey is separated from the curds, I put everything in a fine mesh strainer to remove the whey, and I put the curds and cream in cheesecloth to drain.

      I then use the whey to cut vegetable juice (3 liters of juice for 1.5 liters of whey) or hydration formulas.

      20251205_200145.jpg 20251206_220713.jpg 20251207_191430.jpg 20251207_191827.jpg20251207_185604.jpg

      adminA Offline
      adminA Offline
      admin
      ✓
      wrote last edited by
      #4

      @Primal-Junkie Working to see what we can do about it!

      ? 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • adminA admin

        @Primal-Junkie Working to see what we can do about it!

        ? Offline
        ? Offline
        A Former User
        wrote last edited by
        #5

        @admin thx

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • ? A Former User

          I'm lucky because thanks to my fireplace, I can keep the milk at a high temperature (30 degrees) for a long time, and in literally 48 hours without adding anything, it's already ready for cheese.

          If I add a ferment such as old yogurt, it's done in 24 hours.

          The secret is heat; without heat, it can take forever.

          If you don't have a fireplace like me, the best thing to do is to heat your milk to 30 degrees and add some old fermented milk to it. That will speed things up. Of course, you should leave it at room temperature and reheat it from time to time.

          Once the whey is separated from the curds, I put everything in a fine mesh strainer to remove the whey, and I put the curds and cream in cheesecloth to drain.

          I then use the whey to cut vegetable juice (3 liters of juice for 1.5 liters of whey) or hydration formulas.

          20251205_200145.jpg 20251206_220713.jpg 20251207_191430.jpg 20251207_191827.jpg20251207_185604.jpg

          elaE Offline
          elaE Offline
          ela
          OG
          wrote last edited by
          #6

          @Primal-Junkie The dimensions of the photo are too big, lower the dimensions by screenshotting and cropping it

          ? 1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • elaE ela

            @Primal-Junkie The dimensions of the photo are too big, lower the dimensions by screenshotting and cropping it

            ? Offline
            ? Offline
            A Former User
            wrote last edited by
            #7

            @ela Yes, I tried that solution, but it doesn't work.

            elaE 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • ? A Former User

              @ela Yes, I tried that solution, but it doesn't work.

              elaE Offline
              elaE Offline
              ela
              OG
              wrote last edited by
              #8

              @Primal-Junkie Hm that's odd, it usually works for me

              RabbiR 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • elaE ela

                @Primal-Junkie Hm that's odd, it usually works for me

                RabbiR Offline
                RabbiR Offline
                Rabbi
                super OG ✓
                wrote last edited by
                #9

                @ela it works because cropping it reduces the file size, there is limit on how big you can upload.

                We want to live!

                1 Reply Last reply
                1
                • ? Offline
                  ? Offline
                  A Former User
                  wrote last edited by
                  #10
                  This post is deleted!
                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • ? A Former User

                    I'm lucky because thanks to my fireplace, I can keep the milk at a high temperature (30 degrees) for a long time, and in literally 48 hours without adding anything, it's already ready for cheese.

                    If I add a ferment such as old yogurt, it's done in 24 hours.

                    The secret is heat; without heat, it can take forever.

                    If you don't have a fireplace like me, the best thing to do is to heat your milk to 30 degrees and add some old fermented milk to it. That will speed things up. Of course, you should leave it at room temperature and reheat it from time to time.

                    Once the whey is separated from the curds, I put everything in a fine mesh strainer to remove the whey, and I put the curds and cream in cheesecloth to drain.

                    I then use the whey to cut vegetable juice (3 liters of juice for 1.5 liters of whey) or hydration formulas.

                    20251205_200145.jpg 20251206_220713.jpg 20251207_191430.jpg 20251207_191827.jpg20251207_185604.jpg

                    adminA Offline
                    adminA Offline
                    admin
                    ✓
                    wrote last edited by
                    #11

                    @Primal-Junkie It's fixed now.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • ? A Former User

                      I'm lucky because thanks to my fireplace, I can keep the milk at a high temperature (30 degrees) for a long time, and in literally 48 hours without adding anything, it's already ready for cheese.

                      If I add a ferment such as old yogurt, it's done in 24 hours.

                      The secret is heat; without heat, it can take forever.

                      If you don't have a fireplace like me, the best thing to do is to heat your milk to 30 degrees and add some old fermented milk to it. That will speed things up. Of course, you should leave it at room temperature and reheat it from time to time.

                      Once the whey is separated from the curds, I put everything in a fine mesh strainer to remove the whey, and I put the curds and cream in cheesecloth to drain.

                      I then use the whey to cut vegetable juice (3 liters of juice for 1.5 liters of whey) or hydration formulas.

                      20251205_200145.jpg 20251206_220713.jpg 20251207_191430.jpg 20251207_191827.jpg20251207_185604.jpg

                      E Offline
                      E Offline
                      e.coli
                      wrote last edited by
                      #12

                      Thank you! I actually forgot about the importance of temperature, I think I should move the milk to the heating radiators!

                      1 Reply Last reply
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