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Why I Am Passionate About Cheese Making at Home

12/12/2014 By Gavin Webber Leave a Comment

Why I am passionate about cheese making at home
Gavin Webber – Home Cheese Maker

This post is an extract from my cheese making ebook, Keep Calm & Make Cheese, and adapted from a blog post on www.littlegreenworkshops.com.au.

I have a confession to make.

My name is Gavin Webber, and I love making cheese.  I also love teaching people how to make their own cheese at home.

All right, maybe not so much of a confession, though you could class me as an amateur cheese maker, who is mad about making his own cheese at home. In fact, I like cheese making so much that I make at least 1kg (2.2lbs) of cheese of various forms, once a month, sometime more often.

Sounds a bit excessive, doesn’t it?  But once bitten by the cheese making bug, there is no looking back!

Now that I have whet your appetite, I bet you want to know how I started on this cheese-making journey and how I went from cheese consumer to cheese producer, and then cheese instructor.

All right then, here is my story.

The Dairy Farm

I grew up on a dairy farm where my family managed about 120 milking cows, a couple of bulls, and the odd sheep or two. We also kept chickens and ducks to provide us with fresh eggs. There were even a couple of pigs for meat.

Milk was always in abundance, as you would expect on a dairy farm, and as a child my brothers, sister, and I would drink fresh raw milk by the bucket full.

Dad would also extract cream from some of the milk so that my Mother could make butter, and drink the skimmed milk.

With all this abundant milk, the one thing you would naturally think that we would make would be cheese. Alas, this was not the case.

My parents did not make cheese of any form, not even yoghurt, and we grew up thinking that processed cheese, which came wrapped in tin foil, and packaged in a blue rectangular cardboard box was what cheese was supposed to taste like. You did not even need to refrigerate it. My Dad used to call it ‘soap suds’, but being uninformed kids, we did not know if cheese got any better than that rectangle block.

This was back in the 1960’s and ‘70’s and the Australian palate was a lot different from the multicultural flavours we have in our diet today. The country was still growing in population through immigration from mainly Mediterranean backgrounds. This influx of different cultures brought with it a change in diet from the bland meat and two veg, to an abundance of gastronomic delights that Australia is now renowned for worldwide.

My First Real Cheese

 One such multicultural experience introduced me to a milk product other than butter and ‘soap suds’. I was visiting a friend, whose parents were of Greek origin and they invited me to stay for lunch.  At the meal they served marinated Kalamata olives, fresh flat bread, preserved salami, and best of all, homemade Greek Yoghurt and freshly made Feta.

The memory is still vividly etched into my neural pathways, and I can still taste the sharpness of the Yoghurt and the saltiness of the Feta. It was a taste experience that I shall never forget.

To this day, I still do not know why my parents chose to forgo cheese making with all that lovely raw milk at hand. Maybe it was because they didn’t know how or because the knowledge was not passed down by the previous generation. Possibly the ingredients were difficult to come by. Whatever the reason, I was privileged to live such a wonderful childhood on the dairy farm.

Making My Own

Fast forward to February 2009 which was a momentous month. It was the month that I made my very first cheese.

But why was it momentous?

Well, from the day that I first tasted those Greek dairy products, I had always wondered how they made cheese at home. Most cheeses I knew about were made under hygienic conditions in a factory.

Now was my chance. Our local community centre was hosting a cheese making course, and to cut a long story short, I thoroughly enjoyed the five-hour course. I made some Feta and then purchased a cheese making kit afterwards so that I could make my very own cheese at home.passionate about cheese making - Feta in brine

Finally, my wish came true and I created a delicious feta like the one I remembered all those years ago.

Since that very first cheese, I have gone on to make many more different types including the following;

Feta, Wensleydale, Farmhouse Cheddar, Emmental, Stilton, Camembert, Parmesan, Ricotta, Romano, Pepper Jack, Monterey Jack, Ossau-Iraty with green peppercorns, Caerphilly and Mozzarella, to name a few, all of which are covered in my cheese making book “Keep Calm & Make Cheese“, among others.

Passionate about Cheese Making

I am so passionate about making cheese at home that I try to seek out the freshest milk so that I can make the best cheese possible.

I also teach regular cheese making courses at the very same community house that I first learnt the process. In fact, it was my cheese making addiction that was the spark for this business, which expanded into our online shop.

I field questions during every episode for the curd nerds that take the time to email or record a voice message.  I love helping others on the path to make their own cheese at home.

After the success of Little Green Cheese, Kim and I struggled to find quality cheese making kits to recommend during our classes.  So this gave us the idea to source the best in Australia and to stock them here in our shop and after our workshops.  You can check out our entire range of cheese making kits, equipment, and ingredients on the workshops site that will set you on the right path.

So there you have it.  This is my cheese making, curd nerdy story of why I am passionate about making cheese at home.  I make the cheese and the entire family devours it quick smart!

Do you have any cheese making stories of how you got started making cheese?  I would love to hear from you via comment.

Until next time curd nerds!

Filed Under: Workshops Tagged With: eBook, Feta, Gavin, Workshops

Low Salt Feta

23/08/2014 By Gavin Webber 2 Comments

Ever thought that the Feta you make is just too salty. Does your doctor keep telling you that you need to cut back on salty foods?

Well this version of a Low Salt Feta by John Erdman sounds like it would fit the bill if you want a lighter, less saltier tasting Feta.

Feta in brine made with whey

John has graciously allowed me to reproduce his email in which he shares his technique.

Hi Gavin

I listened today to your podcast about rennet and lipase. When I made my first feta. I shared Deb’s experience that it was way too salty. I needed to reduce the amount of salt. I’m between a rock and a hard place. Cheese biology needs salt and my doctor tells me to be careful with my salt intake.

As soon as the fresh cheese comes in contact with the brine salt molecules immediately begin migrate into the cheese. Soaking it more increases the amount of salt in it. This makes sense because brining is a diffusion process and salt content in the cheese will continue to climb until it’s in equilibrium with the salt in the brine.

I read somewhere salting feta in saturated brine needs only 2-3 hours per inch of cheese thickness to get the salt content high enough. That means, if the smallest dimension is 2”, the fresh cheese needs to be soaked for 2-3 hrs because it’s exposed to brine on both sides and salt is diffusing in from both sides.

That’s the info I started with. I now have the experience of 10 batches of this cheese. Here’s how I salt and age my feta now. After I remove the cheese from the mold after its last pressing, I let it dry for a few hours on a bamboo mat at room temperature. I then use a chef’s knife to cut the block into 25-35 mm slabs which are then submerged in saturated brine for about 6 hours in the fridge. I use a plastic container with a snap on lid. I either turn the slabs over a couple of times or weight them down to keep them submerged and always in contact with full strength brine.

Upon removal from the brine the outside surface is hardened enough that the pieces hold their shape well. Dry it on a bamboo mat for a few hours. Put a folded paper towel in the plastic container, put the dried brined slabs in loosely, and cover them with another paper towel .  Pour vinegar over the towels until they are dripping wet. The vinegar will help keep molds from blooming and will add a little acidity to the finished cheese..

I have used different types of vinegar but it doesn’t make any difference to my taste buds.. The package is returned to fridge for aging for at least five to six days. I keep the unused cheese in the same container until it’s gone. The brine is filtered and saved for later use.

Friends who have sampled cheeses all over the world and family who have never tasted homemade feta rave about this cheese. I tend to make mine smoother and less crumbly that what’s available here locally.

Thanks for all your help. You’ve been my guide throughout my cheese making adventures.

John Erdman
Augusta Maine, USA.

 

Thank you so much for sharing your technique with all the curd nerds out there.

If you want to use John’s technique, follow my Feta recipe and video tutorial, or check out the eBook “Keep Calm & Make Cheese” that I made for you all.  Instead of storing it in a fully saturated brine, follow John’s suggestion instead.

Next time I make Feta, I am going to give this variation a try.  It sounds like it may turn out like a milder Danish Feta, rather than a strong Greek Feta.

If anyone else has a recipe that they would love to share, please send it through via email.

Until next time curd nerds…

Filed Under: Recipes, Workshops Tagged With: Feta, Technique

Keep Calm and Make Cheese Presentation – Ivanhoe Library 22 July

20/07/2014 By Gavin Webber Leave a Comment

Hey curd nerds! For those of you how would like to attend a FREE cheese making presentation, look no further.

I am presenting about home cheese making at Ivanhoe library (Melbourne, AU) this Tuesday evening  22nd July, from 7pm.

I will be bringing a bag of props, and taking the audience through the basic steps required to make cheese at home.

Did I mention that it was free?  How cool is that!

Here are the details;

KEEP CALM AND MAKE CHEESE

TUE
July 22
Time:7:00 pm
Duration:1 hour, 15 minutes
Library Location:Ivanhoe
Where to Meet:3rd floor Ivanhoe Library- no lift access
Audience:Adults, Kids, Seniors, Youth
Event Tags:calm, cheese, cheese making, gavin webber
Type:Guest Speaker
http://yprl.vic.gov.au/calendar/view/1109474–keep-calm-and-make-cheese
Learn about home cheese making and see how easy it is to start with a few basic kitchen utensils.  Gavin Webber has been making and teaching people how to make cheese since 2009, and he has successfully made over 24 different types of cheese in his own home
Gavin will deliver a presentation about the basics of cheese making and help demystify this age-old artisan practice of preserving milk.

If you are a budding curd nerd, or even contemplating the art of turning milk into cheese, then come along!  The more the merrier.

I am really looking forward to the event.  I would love to see some of my blog readers there if they are in the area.

Can you make it?

Filed Under: Workshops Tagged With: Gavin, Workshops

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    I love that this podcast does not just have helpful tips and tricks on cheese making, but also stories and news from the cheese world, as well as nice little anecdotes from the host.A big fan from Thailand!

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    Gavin Webber’s Little Green Cheese is By Far the best podcast I have ever heard! A truly informative and quality production!

  • Great program
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    Very informative and enjoyable podcast. I started at episode 1 and currently listening to 25. I’ll be giving cheesemaking a go in the next week. Mike J from Oceanside CA

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