Ok, so I had some older sheep milk that needed to be used up, this was whole raw sheep milk that ranged in age between six to three days old, it had lovely layers of fresh cream on top, it smelled good and looked normal, I wanted to make 2 quarts of homemade yogurt, I cleaned the jar well, warmed my milk to the correct temp, adding in the starting culture of lovely thick yogurt for the culture and I wrapped the jar with a towel and put it into the deyhrator at the correctly marked temp for yogurt making and left if for its required time per the booklet, when I went back much later that day, was I in for a suprise..
Instead of thick yogurt, I had a bubbling mass of quark like cheese on top of a big old pile of whey.. It was not clabber, it was the start of cheese, and I have never seen it bubble like that, did it get crossed over with some bread making yeast, but the book says that if that happens then it will smell bad and the taste will be off still what the ???
It had a slightly sour smell to it, not bad, but not yogurt either and I could have just strained it right then for a soft farmers creamed cheese but I was not happy about this I hit the books and after reading some, I thought, ok, I will heat it and make cottage cheese..
Wrong again, I did the heating and it did form cheese, a lovely cheese in fact but it was closer to mozza then cottage cheese, I finally drained it and it rolled into a ball and was darn close to stretchable, and I worked it a bit to get some salt into it and then rolled it into a log, rolled the log in fine herbs and wrapped it and into the fridge..
O my, when I cut into it this morning, it was awesome!, I mean amazing, I had a lovely firm white cheese, with a richness of taste, there is some lovely flavour to this cheese, its like a flavourful aged cheese, when it had not aged (well the milk was a bit more aged then normal) It was excellent, and Dh said after eating it, figure out how to make it again..
I can’t even figure out what kind of cheese it would count as let alone know if I can make it again.. it was cultured milk in the sense I added the yogurt to it, but I used nothing else other then time and heat to make the cheese itself..
I will post photos once the battery is recharged..



I’ve never made cheese, so you can tell me if I’m just talking through my hat; but can you inoculate milk with the whey, or something to regenerate the same culture?
Nope, I cooked the whey along with the cheese, so any live culture is now killed, I can go buy the same yogurt brand and get that basic culture back and see if that was what made such a difference , its not my normal yogurt culture starter but I just don’t see how it could have made this much of a difference, it should have made yogurt, not cheese.. I am going to put a temp gage in the dyhrator to make sure the temp was correct, as that is a area that would have a clear effect.
By any chance, do you have any links with good info on yogourt/cheese making?
http://glengarrycheesemaking.on.ca/
http://www.cheesemaking.com/
Here’s one you may find interesting too.
http://nourishedkitchen.com/how-to-make-cream-cheese/
I’m going to check out her other articles as well… (Right now: )
Thought you might enjoy this post – she seems right up your alley; )
http://nourishedkitchen.com/how-to-make-cream-cheese/
Hey FG, not sure what’s going on here – tried posting this comment a couple of times over a couple of hours and it is not showing up…
(Will also send this to you directly – just in case it gets lost again):
Thought you might enjoy this post – she seems right up your alley; )
http://nourishedkitchen.com/how-to-make-cream-cheese/
Pingback: Newest Sheep Cheese… | Just another Day on the Farm