cellio: (garlic)
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[livejournal.com profile] magid recently linked to this recipe for making paneer, an Indian cheese. I like mattar paneer and generally use soft mozzerella for the cheese, so I decided to try making my own.




I started by boiling half a gallon of milk in an enamel pot (the only non-reactive dairy pot I have). A little milk burned onto the bottom of the pot, but it didn't affect the flavor and it came off after a soak and a scrub, so no harm done. First you bring the milk to a boil:

Then you add the lime juice and stir for several minutes. I thought the curds would get bigger, so when they didn't I added more juice, which was probably unnecessary.

This is what I got for curds. (For calibration, it's a four-quart pot.)

Someone was very interested in the proceedings:

After making curds and letting them sit undisturbed for a while, it was time to gather the curds in cheesecloth. The collander was to keep the cloth from going astray; the bowl was in case it looked like further processing of the whey would be relevant. (It wasn't -- nice and clear.)

Tie loosely and let drain for half an hour.

Wrap tightly to squeeze out remaining liquid and form a ball.

The ball that resulted half an hour later was pretty solid. I'm not sure, but it might have been too dry. The next step was to refrigerate for a few hours.

Now, on to the mattar paneer. The cheese crumbled a tiny bit while slicing, but held together.

Add the cheese to the skillet:

Yum!

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Date: 2007-07-06 05:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cigfran-cg.livejournal.com
I have used animal rennet, but most of the time use vegetable "rennet". It works just as well. Also, in the cheese Dagonell's talking about, I usually add some whey from a previous batch or from yogurt to culture it. Paneer isn't cultured, just coagulated, so I'd use an acid like citrus or vinegar in that case, too (rather than the rennet).

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