Failing to make mozzarella

Failing to make mozzarella - Content female customer with long curly hair wearing casual outfit sitting at wooden table with netbook in classic interior restaurant while making online order

So i've taken it on me to make fresh mozzarella. I've read up on the task in some articles and with multiple recipes but for some reason I never succeed. The seperated curds always stay little crumbs and never take up the shape of solid blocks/curds/strands.

This is the recipe i'm following:

I use 1L pasteurized organic non-skimmed milk. It's non-homogenized milk but I don't know the pasteurisation temperature. I've used different brands. I dissolve a teaspoon of citric acid into 5 tablespoons of water. Adding this to the milk brings the pH to around 5.8. I've measured the amount of citric acid necessary to lower the pH of the milk to this acidity.

I then heat the milk to 30C. (i've also tried adding the citric acid to the milk at 30C instead of from the start). Once it has reached 30 degrees I take the pan off the stove, add 10 drops of microbiological rennet. The rennet is around 200 IMCU. Stir for 30 seconds.

Put the lid on, wait for 5 minutes.

Drain with strainer.

Result: poor crumbly curds, some even so fine they slip through the strainer. Cutting the curds is something i can't even think about.

Any mozzarella specialists here who could help out with this one? I don't want to give up on this endeavour but not sure if I want to keep wasting all this milk.



Best Answer

The problem is the organic milk. Or rather, the fact that organic milk available in grocery stores is high-temperature pasteurized, rather than conventionally pasteurized. That helps it keep a lot longer, but it disrupts the proteins so that they don't coagulate well enough for cheese.

I'm told that there are brands of conventionally-pasteurized organic milk, but I've never seen one. You might try it with plain old grocery store milk, and it should work. Or you could try to find a local producer, who won't use HTST pasteurization. (You might even be able to find unpasteurized milk, though the USDA definitely frowns on that: even though you're cooking it you won't have aged the cheese long enough.)




Pictures about "Failing to make mozzarella"

Failing to make mozzarella - Close-Up Photo of Person Holding Pizza
Failing to make mozzarella - Shallow Focus Photography of Several Pizzas
Failing to make mozzarella - Unrecognizable crop African American female pouring essential oil in glass bottle while making liquid incense at table



What can I do with failed mozzarella?

This is most commonly caused by the temperature being too cool at the fermentation stage. If you have let your cheese ferment for 12 hours and there is no firming up or change in the texture of your milk (normally soft cheeses), move the cheese to the oven and turn on the light.

Why is my mozzarella not setting?

Low Yield After StretchingOr, if your curds were not firm enough, you may have lost butterfat to the whey. Another thing to notice is the amount of cream in your whey. Let the curds set until the whey is clear, both before and after cutting the curds.

Why is my milk not curdling for mozzarella?

My mozzarella cheese won't stretch! Jerri's answer Acidity is the key for the stretch in mozzarella. Not enough or too much acid will result in hard curd floating or disintegrating in the water. The pH of your slab needs to be between 5.0 and 5.2 for it to stretch well when kneaded in hot water.



Homemade Mozzarella Cheese | EXPERIMENT!!!! WENT WRONG? | Olpers Milk




More answers regarding failing to make mozzarella

Answer 2

There's a couple things I think might help.

I think GdD is right, it sounds like your method is rushing things too much. After you add the rennet, you need to wait for the curd to set until it breaks cleanly - it might take longer than five minutes, try waiting at least ten... but mainly, go by the actual results not by time. Then you need to slice the curd into chunks, and let it sit again (5-10 minutes, I think), and then gently heat it up again for a bit to 105 or 110 degrees - all of which steps allow for the curd to release more whey (visually, the curd shrinks but also becomes firmer and easier to work with).

It doesn't sound like your method covers any of these steps - and actually it sounds like you're draining before you would be thinking about cutting the curd? or did I misunderstand? And, even if it's very fine and brittle curd, you can strain it through a fine cloth, and make a soft creamy cheese even if it isn't what you expected so the milk and time isn't quite wasted.

It would also probably be worth checking your milk for high-temperature pasteurization, as Joshua mentions in his answer. You might try regular milk, or even dehydrated milk if you can find any that isn't ultra-pasteurized, and if it makes a difference you can go looking for organic milk that isn't given the extra treatment.

Also, the recipe I've seen specifies the water must be un-chlorinated - you don't mention it either way, so I'm not sure if it is a relevant factor. If you don't have access to bottled or distilled or even filtered water, you can let the (plain) water sit overnight for the chlorine to evaporate. chlorine can stop the enzyme action of the rennet, interfering with the setting of the curd (the info is here but the question and answer is halfway down the page, sorry).

You might also try looking into additives, if nothing else is working. Calcium chloride is supposed to help curd set up more firmly. It's usually used more in making hard cheeses where the curd needs to set up pretty stiff to stand up to pressing, and it isn't recommended in making stretchy cheese like mozzarella because it can interfere with the stretching step, but you might try a moderate addition to see if it will help your curds, if absolutely nothing else is working.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Yan Krukov, Ragga Muffin, Narda Yescas, Anna Shvets