aging swiss cheese
Posted: 17 August 2018 11:21 AM   [ Ignore ]
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thank you for letting me post, I am brand new to making cheese.  I have two swiss cheeses and a goat milk gouda that I made last weekend in the wine fridge, the question I have is, that for the swiss, the recipe says to keep it at 55 degrees for a week then age it for 3 weeks at 72-78 degrees, then back in the wine fridge for 12 weeks. I bake bread and can so my kitchen is usually in the 80-90 degree range for at least 3 days a week, will this ruin my new cheeses if I keep them in a hot kitchen?  thanks

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Posted: 19 August 2018 11:35 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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Ya that’s to high. I have seen where people have gone to 78-80F. In my experience , I have lost a lot of the fat at that temp. Would also ripen much faster and drop the PH much faster so you will have to watch for that.

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Posted: 24 August 2018 05:32 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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thanks, one of my cheeses didn’t make it, it started smelling very bad.  the one I made from raw milk looks good so far

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Posted: 24 August 2018 07:58 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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If you have access to raw milk, that’s the way to go. You will get a much better flavor profile ( even if you do a vat pasteurization ) at 145F for 30 min. That’s all I use where I live.

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Posted: 24 August 2018 08:34 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
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I wanted to do some pasturized milk cheeses for practice, to get used to the double boiler and temperature rising ect, I belong to an amish cooperative here so I have access to raw cow and goat milk, but it is very very expensive, not sure what I did wrong with the one that went bad, but it was mushy and stank to high heaven so I tossed it.  I have two made from raw milk, a raw goat gouda and a raw cow swiss that I hope keep doing well.

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Posted: 10 September 2018 08:06 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
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You can alwasy use 2% milk and add some half/half batch to practice.

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