Recipe
Sweet Dreams Are Made of Cheese (Like Homemade Fresh Mozzarella)
Cheese has this incredible, therapeutic, magical ability to make life better and to make everything alright – I know this. You know this. Vegans know this, which is why they replicate it with those #hip cheese substitutes. Babies probably know this, and they don’t even have object permanence. Why else do we always reach for and obsess over those godly, cheesy comfort foods (mac-n-cheese, pizza, mozzarella sticks and grilled cheese sandwiches) when we’re dying on the inside while stressed over finals? Consider, for instance, the following tweet:
In the previous chapter of our cheese-making adventures, Jackie and I made homemade ricotta, which was probably one of the most Adult™ things I’ve ever done besides filing my own taxes, and it was at least 5,000 times more fun (and delicious). In this installment, we decided to tackle a cheese that was a little more difficult, but just as yummy–homemade fresh mozzarella!
Recipe inspired by the New England Cheesemaking Supply Company.
Easy Homemade Mozzarella Cheese
- Prep Time: 10 mins
- Cook Time: 2 hrs
- Total Time: 2 hrs 10 mins
- Servings: 4
Ingredients
- 1 gallon Whole Milk
- 1 1/2 tsp Citric Acid
- 1 cup cold water
- 1/4 tsp Liquid Rennet
- Salt to taste
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Step 4
Step 5
Step 6
Step 7
Step 8
Step 9
All in all, this was definitely more challenging than the previous recipe we tried, homemade ricotta, but no less rewarding. Stretching the cheese was an ethereal, otherworldly experience. I never thought I would experience something so beautiful as that decadent cheese pull.
It went more smoothly this time with the addition of our newly adopted child: a talented, brilliant, incredible, amazing instant-read cooking thermometer that has made our cheese-making adventure more precise with less work trying to guess what temperature the milk is.
We used liquid rennet in order to achieve a more dense cheese texture, unlike the soft ricotta. Rennet is used to thicken and coagulate the cheese curds and is made of the enzyme chymosin. Traditionally, it is derived from the stomach lining of cows or goats, but it can also come from plants such as artichokes or nettles. And do not fear, it can easily be purchased at your local food co-op or on Amazon!
The homemade fresh mozzarella was amazing in a bright, colorful Caprese salad made with locally grown heirloom tomatoes–one of the many perks of going to a school in a farm town! This experiment fostered an even deeper love of cheese and the people who make it, within my finals-battered heart. I owe so much of my cheese-dedicated life to them.
Don't forget to stay tuned for our next cheesy adventure, paneer cheese!