The other night, we were standing around the barn enjoying a beer and some storytelling. The goats were all in their stalls for the night, softly chewing on hay. It was one of those perfect summer moments that you know you will look back on when the snow is piled up outside. We were chatting with the father of one of our daughter's friends who is married to a woman from Greece. It was in the darkness of a summer barn that he shared with us a tradition from her village. Each year in the weeks that garlic scapes appear, the goats are let out to graze on these tasty aromatic flowers. (This helps the farmers because the scapes have to be cut anyway to allow the energy to go into the garlic bulb.) The resulting cheese is a treat that people far and wide wait all year for and come great distances to enjoy. My mouth watered just listening to him. And now it is clear I will have to plant a garlic garden for this sole purpose, but before then, it is time to make Feta! The cheese I would most like to make is a marinated cheese that is a mix between feta and chevre. So this morning after milking I set to work fueled by visions of goats munching on fields of garlic along the Mediterranean Blue sea. Hopefully these visions will add to the success of my feta.
My recipe is an adaptation of Mary Jane Toth's from Goats Produce Too. See link above to get your copy.
Mild Marinated Feta
Ingredients:
2 Gallons Pasteurized Goat Milk
1/2 tsp DCI Supreme Vegetable Rennet (Double Strength) from dairy Connection
1/2 cup cool water
1/8 tsp Mesophilic Culture MA 19 from France (some recipes use 1/4 tsp)
(I want to try other cultures this summer and compare: MT1, MM100 and Dairy Connection Feta A)
Salt
Pasteurize Milk
Add culture at 86 degrees
Let sit for 1 hour
Mix rennet with cool water and add to milk
Cover and let set until you see a clean break 45-60 minutes.
Cut curds (see picture)
Let rest for 10 minutes
Stir curds keeping them at 86 degrees (easiest in a sink of warm water, or I used my pasteurizing vat) for 15-30 minutes
Hang curds for 6 hours
Slice into slabs 1-1.5 inches thick
Sprinkle with salt and let sit at room temp for 24 hours (turn and salt 2-3 times)
|
Most will add brine to feta in a jar and leave for a week (or a few) in the fridge.
I decided to jump to the marinated stage. |
|
cut cheese into cubes and taste |
|
before adding oil |
|
add the things you love to olive oil |
|
admire your creation while it sits for a week or more in the fridge to tasty up even more. |
An added note: I was so excited to try this cheese that only one container made it to the 2 week mark! It was a thousand times better than the ones we ate right away both in texture and taste. I knew this would be true, but next time I will have the patience to wait!Because I was a little too rough on the curds the cheese was hard. Next time I will stir less.
Beautiful pictures. I could never imagine making my own cheese, but it seems like an incredible adventure. Do you sell your cheese or just make it for a personal pleasures?
ReplyDeleteIt is so much fun, like magic. Some day (maybe next summer?) we will sell it. For now we are enjoying it and making friends and family taste a lot of cheese!
ReplyDelete