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Pressing Cheese at Home

22/06/2013 By Gavin Webber 5 Comments

Cheese presses are an essential item in the cheese makers tool box.  A cheese press is used to expel excess whey and assist in forming the curds into the familiar shapes during the semi-hard and hard cheese making processes.

For the home cheese maker, commercial cheese presses are way too big, so we have to opt for a smaller version.

There are many types that can be bought in kit form, or if you are handy enough, made at home DIY style.  In this post we will be looking at various types of home cheese presses so that you can progress on your cheese making journey by pressing cheese at home.

Firstly, here is the small press that I use.  I purchased it in kit form from Little Green Workshops quite a while ago.  This is what it looks like flat packed.


The instructions are quite simple, and once assembled it looks like this.

pressing cheese at home
I now have three of these presses, and they take cheese baskets from 145mm to 165mm in diameter.

I highly recommend that you buy the spring, which helps you to determine the amount of pressure that is applied to the curds.  You have to use a bit of common sense when you use the spring.  As it requires 22 kilograms or 50 lbs to close the spring, you have to estimate how far you have closed the spring.  For instance, if you need 11 kg of pressure, tighten the handle until the spring is about half way closed. It is a rough guide, but I have never had any trouble pressing any of my cheeses to date.

So that is what I use.  How about other cheese makers?

Fellow home cheese maker Aase from Denmark, uses a home-made press build by her husband that uses water filled bottles as weights.

I believe that this type of press is called a dutch press.  It uses the weight applied via a lever to deliver the right amount of pressure to the curds.  It is also tall enough so that you can stack cheese baskets upon each other and press many cheeses at the same time.  Aase blogs about her cheese making at http://ostepressen.blogspot.com.au.  It is written in Danish, however Google Translator does a good job for those who don’t speak the language.

Another cheese maker, Myron from Colorado USA, made his own press.

Here is what he had to say about it;

“My press has worked well for the (about) 10 cheeses I have pressed in it.
It is only built to accommodate the one ‘hoop’ I had available – a leftover piece of PVC water pipe. I sized it to fill to the top (before pressing) with curd from a 2 gallon recipe. I may build another one for a larger diameter lower profile hoop.
Instead of dressing in cheesecloth, I use a nylon mesh paint strainer. The one gallon size fits well in my press, the 5 gallon size is what I use while draining the curd. Easily washable & reusable.  Cheap from a home building center or hardware store.”

Here are a few more pictures of his press with a Colby cheese that he was making.

You can see the nylon net that he uses instead of cheese cloth.  The round of cheese looks well-formed.

In this closer picture, you can see the drainage holes in the mould that he made.  From all accounts, Myron says that this press works very well.

Here is another home-made cheese press.  This one is built by David Dawson from Manitoba, Canada.  You may remember David from episode 5 of the podcast.

He has this to say about his press;

I made my own press (actually I made four – two for me and two for friends), and I made my own moulds. For these I used a slightly tapered jug, cutting off the top and bottom, and then drilling numerous holes in it.

You will notice that his press has wing nuts that is used to apply the pressure to the curds.  I believe that the wood is maple hardwood and the base is a kitchen chopping board.

Here are some wheels of cheese that are fresh out of David’s cheese press.  They look well-formed, and from what he tells me, they are very tasty.

Another reader, Judy from Ontario sent in this picture of a cheese press that her hubby made her after seeing that she was struggling with her old press.  It look very practical.


Lastly, here is another method of pressing without the need for a press.

In this instance I used two square cheese baskets, which are normally used for pressing feta, and used a 2 litre (2 qt) milk carton filled with water as the weight.  This equates to about 2 kg (4.4 lbs) of pressure.

After four hours of pressing it looked like this, ready for soaking in brine.  This method works well with a smaller amount of curd.

Well there you have it.  Many thanks to all the home cheese makers for sending me photos via email for this post.

Hopefully you now have a little more knowledge about home cheese presses.  You may even be inspired enough to make your own!

Happy cheese pressing, and remember Keep Calm & Make Cheese!

Filed Under: Workshops Tagged With: Cheese Press, Technique

How to Make Emmental Video Tutorial

10/06/2013 By Gavin Webber 8 Comments

After much ado, I finally finished my next production, an Emmental video tutorial.

emmental

The recipe is available in my cheese making eBook “Keep Calm & Make Cheese“, however if you watch the tutorial very carefully, you should be able to make out all the ingredients and steps.

There are also a little more information at my previous Emmental posts.


This is a great intermediate cheese to try.  You will need Propionic Shermanii to create the eyes within the cheese and a few other ingredients, but it is well worth the time taken to create this cheese.  Enjoy the Emmental video tutorial!

Filed Under: Video Tutorial Tagged With: Emmentaler, Technique, Video Tutorial

How To Store Cheese

29/05/2013 By Gavin Webber 4 Comments

Cheese is made to be eaten, but what if you make so much that you don’t know what to do with it.  You can let it age longer if you like, but what if you want a more subtle flavour in your semi-hard cheese?  Well you have come to the right place as this post is how to store cheese!

There are a few ways around this issue.  Once your cheese has reached maturity, it is difficult to eat an entire wheel.  I know.  Trust me, I have tried.

We usually serve up a quarter of the wheel which works out to be about 250 gm (or half a pound) when we have friends over.  If we know that we are going to share the rest in a very short time frame, I wrap up the cheese in greaseproof paper, just like the type you can buy for baking.  This paper allows the cheese to breathe, and stop it from drying out.  I highly recommend that you don’t wrap it in cling wrap (plastic wrap), as the cheese sweats, which spoils the flavour, and it could go mouldy.

Additionally, to stop them from drying out, you should store it in the paper within a sealed container, which helps keep the cheese moist.  It should be stored at around 4°C (39°F) to slow down any further maturation.

If you know that you will not be eating your cheese for at least a month, I recommend another method of storage.  That would be to vacuum pack the cheese.

I mentioned in my last podcast that I had a Caerphilly in the cheese fridge, and today it was ready to eat.  Look at the perfect rind.  I washed this cheese with a brine solution every day to stop mould from growing on the outside.  It was the best Caerphilly I have ever made!

how to store cheese
Caerphilly Cheese ready for storage

As you can see, there is far too much cheese for us to eat in one sitting.  Luckily Kim (my lovely wife) and I had two friends around to help us eat most of one of the quarters!  So it was out with the vacuum machine.

how to store cheese
FoodSaver – vacuum sealing machine

Here it is with the lid down.  A few buttons, one to seal, one to vacuum and seal, and a few adjustments for wet and dry contents.  All in all, easy enough to use.

This model comes with a roll of the plastic.  You seal one side, cut off the size you need, fill it with the cheese, then suck all the air out of the bag.

Here is a bag where I have sealed one side, ready for a quarter of the Caerphilly.

how to store cheese

And here is the finished bags.  Yes there are lots of plastic, but the cheese is so big that you have to make the bag big enough to suck the air out of it and get a good seal.  I then label the cheese with its name, and the maturation date.  Note that these ones have todays date, as that is when the cheese was ready to eat.  This helps a lot when you have lots of these bags in the fridge!

The cheese can be stored like this for over six months as long as you keep them at 4°C (39°F).  In fact, I know home cheese makers that use this method to mature their cheeses instead of waxing them.

I prefer wax because I can’t stand all of the plastic waste that is generated.  I usually make the bags a little bit bigger so that I can wash them out and reuse them for other foods once I have consumed the cheese.

So there you have it.  A couple of ways to store cheese after you have either bought it from your friendly cheesemonger, or made it all by yourself.

Does anyone have other ways of storing their cheese after it has aged?

Filed Under: Workshops Tagged With: Aging, Caerphilly, Storage, Technique

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    Inspirational, motivational, incredible knowledge of cheese history and production, a great teacher with a twist of Aussie humor and an all round nice guy who knows his cheese. I’ve been listening to Gavin for many years now and gained so much knowledge and inspiration from just listening to his podcasts. If you’re interested in cheese, Gavin is your man.

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