Camembert is one of the more trickier cheeses to attempt to make. It is not for the faint hearted, even if you have a bit of experience under your belt.
I can honestly say that I have only gotten this cheese to taste right two times out of the four times that I have made it, so you can take this post with a grain of salt if you like.
However with that said, one of the two attempts of making this cheese that I did get right, I lucked-in and recorded this session via a video tutorial of the process, and have some photos of the aging process.
Here is the video to begin with so you understand the process of how to make Camembert. It is quite different to semi-hard cheeses and does not require a press.
How to Make Camembert
- 7.6 litres (2 US gal) full cream milk
- ¼ teaspoon Calcium Chloride (if using homogenized milk), dissolved in ¼ cup (60 ml) cool unchlorinated water
- ¼ teaspoon mesophilic direct set starter culture
- 1/8th teaspoon Penicillium candidum
- ¼ teaspoon (2 ml) liquid rennet dissolved in ¼ cup (60 ml) cool unchlorinated water
- Cheese salt
Utensils
- Cheese hoops
- 4 sushi mats
- Stainless steel ladle
- 8 litre stainless steel pot
- Small saucepan to use as a double boiler (as per video)
- Cafe Thermometer
- Curd knife
- Stirring spoon
- Cheese paper/wrap
- Heat the milk to 32°C (90°F), then stir in the starter culture, and the Penicillium candidum. Cover and allow to ripen for 90 minutes.
- Whilst maintaining the target temperature (32°C), add the rennet and stir for two minutes top to bottom. Cover and let sit at target temp for 60 minutes or until you have a clean break.
- Cut the curds into 1.25cm (½”) cubes, and gently stir for 15 minutes at target temp.
- Let curds settle for 15 minutes, maintaining temp, then drain off the whey to the level of the curds using the ladle.
- Place the all four hoops on two of the sushi mats, and gently ladle the curds into the hoops until you reach the top. Cover both pairs with the remaining sushi mats.
- Let drain for one hour at room temperature. As in the video, you will notice a fall in the cheese as the whey expels.
- Flip over the cheese, using the mats, holding top and bottom to ensure that the curd does not come out of the hoops. Make sure the curds do not tear. Flip the cheeses every hour for 5 hours.
- Gently pull off the hoops and lightly sprinkle with cheese salt and gently rub all over, and allow to rest for 10 minutes for the salt to absorb.
- Place cheeses, which will still be on a mat, into your ripening box, and store at 7°C (45°F) at 85 percent humidity, and into your cheese fridge. The normal fridge will work at a pinch, but maturation will be slower and will take usually take about 8 days for the mould to form.
- After 5 days mould should appear on the surface. Turn the cheese over, put back in the ripening box and back into the cheese fridge. Continue to age for another 7 to 10 days. The cheese should have a good layer of mould on the surface.
- Take the cheese out of the ripening box and wrap it in cheese paper/film/wrap. Allow the cheese to continue to mature at 7°C (45°F) for another 3 weeks. Test one cheese to see if it has a mild flavour. If so, then store the remainder at 4°C until consumed. If not, wait another week, as the flavour gets stronger with age.
Camembert aging in ripening box. |
Tips and Tricks
One point of difference from the video. You may have noticed that I kept filling up the hoops with curd as it drained away. I would not recommend this any more Fill it up once, and maybe top it up once more after 15 minutes, but no more, because the cheese will be too heavy and will collapse in on itself during aging. Get extra cheese hoops if necessary. I was quite lucky that these ones turned out okay.
You must keep the cheese separate from all the other cheeses in your cheese cave. So to do that, you can use something like this nifty two layer box. In the bottom layer, I put a sushi mat and a little bowl of water to increase humidity.
If you can source a fine weave food safe plastic mat, you will find that the cheese will not stick as readily to it, as it may to sushi mats. I find that the plastic stand that I use in my cheese ripening box helps to avoid sticking.
Camembert in ripening box (top view) |
Drain any water that collects at the bottom of the container, making sure that the cheese does not come in contact with it. The water will inhibit mould growth, which at this stage is a bad thing.
Your cheese should look something like this before you wrap it in cheese film. A consistent white mould all over the cheese. There should be no black mould. If there is, just pick it off with a sterile knife. Don’t wipe with brine or vinegar as this will destroy the white mould layer. Then make sure you use the cheese wrap. It helps to slow the mould so that it doesn’t ripen too quickly. I made it once without the cheese paper, and the Camembert was far too ripe for my tastes.
If aging in a normal kitchen refrigerator, the cheese will take a little longer to form mould and age. Make sure that you check it regularly until you get an even mould all over the surface. Then use cheese wrap as mentioned above. It may take until week 4 to fully mature, but still check at the 3 week mark.
Also, if this cheese is matured above 7°C, the flavour will be overpowering and stink to high heaven! Make sure you keep it below the this temperature.
Summary
Hopefully, I have given you enough information to successfully make Camembert. This cheese is worth the perseverance if you do not get it right the first try. The taste is amazing once you master the skill of making Camembert.