| Mozzarella!
Mozzarella!
You'll want
to shout it from the kitchen window when you discover how ridiculously
easy it is to make fresh mozzarella cheese at home
Fresh mozzarella
made by hand. Sounds complicated and expensive, doesn't it?
Surprise: Nothing
could be further from the truth. You CAN make fresh mozzarella at
home in less time than it takes to make a box cake mix. It isn't
rocket science, and you don't need the computer skills of a 6-year-old
to understand what you're doing.
We're talking
firm, fresh cheese here, with a mild flavor, that can be sliced.
Not at all like aged or ripened cheese.
Actually, though,
ripened cheese starts its life the same way as fresh cheese, only
it goes through a brining process and controlled temperature aging
-- while fresh cheese goes right onto a bruschetta topped with fresh
tomato or a pizza or into a salad, or onto a piece of buttered toast.
And what a delicious way to eat your four glasses of milk a day!
What do you
need to make fresh cheese? A non-aluminum pot that will hold a gallon
of milk, a custard cup to dissolve the rennet, a spoon, a candy
thermometer (or an instant reading thermometer -- I love my digital
one) and a large slotted spoon or a small sieve. A glass bowl and
a microwave oven are handy to further speed up the cheesemaking
process.
Ingredients?
One gallon of skim, 1 percent or 2 percent milk, citric acid, rennet
tablets and regular table salt. One gallon of milk will produce
about 12 ounces of cheese.
Citric acid
and rennet are available by mail order -- or you might check your
local pharmacy. Or you can order the supplies through the New England
Cheesemaking Supply Co., 85 Main Street, Ashfield, MA 01330, phone:
(413) 628-3808, or see the Web site at www.cheesemaking.com. I ordered
their cheesemaking kit for $19.95, which comes with enough supplies
to make 20 batches of mozzarella cheese or eight batches of ricotta
(you'll love the fresh taste of homemade ricotta). One batch and
I was hooked!
First encounter
with fresh mozzarella
``Mozzarella!
Mozzarella!'' is a moment etched in our memories.
Recently married,
my husband, Dick, and I were driving through southern Italy and
the cheesemakers were hawking their fresh mozzarella to passersby
on a narrow country road. Excited to try it, we bought a bucketful
of the soft fresh cheese scooped out of a tank of brine.
We were on
a monthlong drive in our little VW and it would be three weeks before
we'd cross the English Channel to our apartment in Oxford, England.
But in just
a few days, the stench began. The car reeked of sour (rotten) cheese,
and we had to throw our precious mozzarella away.
The lesson
here: Fresh mozzarella is meant to be eaten fresh. Even packed in
a brine, it keeps no more than a few days.
The cheesemaking
tradition
This is the
time of year I think of making cheese. It goes back to my farm heritage.
Cows freshen in the springtime and milk was abundant on our little
farm in Floodwood. As a teen-ager, I made an aged yellow cheese
following the instructions in a St. Louis County Extension service
pamphlet on cheesemaking.
I grew up idolizing
Heidi in Switzerland, who spent her summers in the mountains drinking
``bowls'' of milk and helping to make Swiss cheese. I also heard
colorful stories of Norwegian dairy maids in their mountain settings
making kilos and kilos of cheese throughout the spring and summer.
It was a way to preserve milk. (It takes approximately 10 pounds
of milk to produce 1 pound of cheese.)
It wasn't until
recently that the idea of making cheese in small batches gained
interest across the country. So-called ``artisan'' cheesemakers,
like my friend Paula Lambert, who founded The Mozzarella Company
in Dallas, make high-quality fresh cheeses in small amounts that
are sold mostly to restaurants and specialty shops.
However, if
you make family-sized batches of cheese, like you would bake bread,
you can add a whole new dimension to life in the kitchen. Or you
might discover a rewarding activity to share with your children
or grandchildren. I found that I can start the dough for either
simple French bread or one of my fruit, nut or whole-grain breads
(in ``Whole Grain Breads By Machine or By Hand''), and when the
dough is done, I shape and set it to rise. By the time the bread
is baked, I can have fresh cheese made, too!
I often get
questions about special kinds of baked cheese, the kind that are
traditional in the Scandinavian countries. I describe several in
``The Finnish Cookbook.'' One that those of Finnish and Swedish
heritage remember is called 3ostkaka,1 or ``cheesecake.'' Unlike
the cheesecake Americans are familiar with, ostkaka is made of baked
``colostrum'' milk -- the first milk after freshening.
Colostrum milk,
which has the consistency of firm custard, was always a delicacy.
To make it, we simply poured the colostrum milk into a heavy casserole
dish with nothing more added to it. We used milk from about the
third milking after the cow had freshened. This ``first milk'' is
high in protein, so that when it is baked, it sets as if there's
egg in it.
We'd set the
casserole into a larger pan with hot water and bake until firm.
If it was overbaked, it would get watery, much the same way a custard
might. The custardy result was scooped into a bowl, and we'd sprinkle
cinnamon sugar over the top and eat it for breakfast or dessert.
When colostrum
milk was no longer available, we would make ostkaka or ``uunijuusto''
by adding rennet to fresh milk and then straining off the curds
from the whey. The recipe I'm including here is from my friend Marj
Bergeland, who grew up on a farm in west-central Minnesota. Marj
says her Grandma Swanson always started out with several quarts
of milk plus rennet tablets to make firm curds. She then strained
the whey through cheesecloth. Marj has simplified the recipe by
starting with small-curd cottage cheese.
|