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How To Make Ricotta From Leftover Whey

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  • Опубліковано 13 сер 2024
  • Making whey ricotta is a lot easier (and tastier!) than I thought it would be. As for what to do with the ricotta, the options are endless: stuffed shells and baked lasagnas, cheesecake, add it to pancake batter, canolis, mac and cheese, berry ricotta cake, etc.
    Get the printable recipe PDF here: milkslinger.com/shop/whey-ric...
    To get Splashed!, my weekly newsletter, sign up at: milkslinger.com/ New episodes every Friday!
    RECIPES and LINKS
    Whey Ricotta Recipe: bit.ly/3jEG05f (blog)
    Ricotta Pancake Recipe: bit.ly/3ObGHBb (blog)
    Ricotta Basket Molds: bit.ly/3x2ha6q (New England Cheesemaking)
    CHAPTERS
    00:00 The big mystery
    00:43 Heating the whey
    01:35 Add the vinegar
    02:11 Rest the curds to firm up
    02:30 Scoop the ricotta into the molds
    03:55 The yield
    04:30 Lush it up!
    04:51 How does it taste?

КОМЕНТАРІ • 388

  • @jmilkslinger
    @jmilkslinger  5 місяців тому +2

    Are you curious about what goes on behind the scenes in my kitchen? Then sign up for Splashed!, the weekly Milkslinger newsletter: milkslinger.com/ See you there!

  • @toryellis73
    @toryellis73 Рік тому +38

    I’m so impressed by how it didn’t boil over 😳

    • @Sandy-fy7oy
      @Sandy-fy7oy 29 днів тому +1

      I was anxious the whole time 😂

  • @markecgazda3880
    @markecgazda3880 7 місяців тому +18

    Im from Croatia and work in cheese factory. When we make this kind of cheese what we call it skuta we add on 61° milk and salt and at 89°-91° vinegar about 4 litres od vinegar goes on 1300 litres of whey. Try to mix ricotta with cottage cheese and then add honey (I do not mix iz evenly to have somewhere more and less honey for better taste) this 3 ingredients makes wonderful delicious healthy meal!!!

    • @tillybinkieking7258
      @tillybinkieking7258 6 місяців тому +3

      How interesting. Thank you from London, England. X

    • @adamfreeman5609
      @adamfreeman5609 5 місяців тому

      Just out of curiosity, how much milk do you add to the 1300 litres of whey. Is adding milk necessary?

    • @markecgazda3880
      @markecgazda3880 2 місяці тому

      ​@@adamfreeman5609 hey I only now see you comment! We add about ccc 30 litres of milk on 1300 litres of whey. If you do not add milk skuta will not be produced or will be not much as you will except it to be.

  • @cydrych
    @cydrych Рік тому +126

    If you salt, press and age the cheese you get ricotta solatta. It’s like Parmesan.

    • @jessieallen1894
      @jessieallen1894 Рік тому +5

      I'm curious how u make it!

    • @Menuki
      @Menuki Рік тому +12

      Or the Mexican equivalent…cotija

    • @crazyprophet3276
      @crazyprophet3276 Рік тому +2

      I found Sporendonema Casei on my whey curds

    • @raynarks
      @raynarks Рік тому +17

      @@jessieallen1894 wrap it in cheesecloth, rub some salt over it then put it in the mould with a pot of jam or something on top as a weight. Resalt it once a day for five days, turning it over each day. Then leave it in a container in the fridge for two to four weeks. If it starts to get a mold on it, wipe it off with some salt water kitchen towel. Probably won’t get a mold though.

    • @thegirl9759
      @thegirl9759 11 місяців тому +1

      @@raynarksyou’re amazing, thank you!!!

  • @saveyourselves5923
    @saveyourselves5923 Рік тому +58

    To think other UA-camrs were advising me to feed leftover whey to my plants! Thanks so much for this video, you're a lifesaver x

    • @monicasmall9252
      @monicasmall9252 Рік тому +6

      Altho the calcium from the whey is super good for your plants. Will help with flowering and fruit production like tomatoes

    • @lidiawithani6883
      @lidiawithani6883 Рік тому

      @@monicasmall9252 but it can spoil the earth

    • @ironagentm544
      @ironagentm544 Рік тому

      @@lidiawithani6883dude how

    • @lidiawithani6883
      @lidiawithani6883 Рік тому +2

      @@ironagentm544 it’s milk and it goes bad. I mean for house plants, for the outside ones its probably ok

    • @ironagentm544
      @ironagentm544 Рік тому +5

      @@lidiawithani6883 it’s not milk, it’s whey which has different properties, such has less fats and sugars, which make it safer than milk. The only problem with whey is it’s acidity

  • @thelittlethingskate9567
    @thelittlethingskate9567 9 місяців тому +15

    Hey! I wanted to share that I accidentally made a TON of ricotta today. I had 2 1/2 gallons of whey left over from making terrible cheddar. I had been storing it in the fridge for a few days. I was boiling it down to make whey caramel, but it looked chunky. I decided to strain it through a synthetic cheese cloth, and almost THREE POUNDS of ricotta emerged from that 2 1/2 gallons! No added vinegar, no added milk, just simmered the whey for about 45 minutes. What the heck!!

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  9 місяців тому +5

      That's fantastic! (And I guess that means the whey was quite acidic...!?)

    • @thelittlethingskate9567
      @thelittlethingskate9567 9 місяців тому +6

      @@jmilkslinger Maybe from sitting in the fridge for a few days? 🤔

  • @seamus6994
    @seamus6994 2 місяці тому +7

    Holy Smoke, why didn't I know this before. I've been wasting my Whey. I don't actually throw it down the sink. I use it on my garden. But now I can make a second batch of cheese. How cool is THAT!? Liked and Subbed......

  • @Levi-he6nj
    @Levi-he6nj Рік тому +12

    I've never been soo excited to watch someone make cheese of leftover Whey

  • @beelinekhan460
    @beelinekhan460 10 місяців тому +9

    You are one of a few who makes proper ricotta 🙌🏻

  • @enadiedericks2006
    @enadiedericks2006 Рік тому +10

    I"m a novice and learning. I appreciate this presentation. I'm left with some whey and realizing it is still nutritious, I'd like to put it to use for the table before feeding our pig or our plants or bathing my face 😀

  • @redknight3439
    @redknight3439 8 місяців тому +7

    Hi, Thanks for this vid, my first attempt at making mozzorella, I ended up with cream cheese instead, then used this vid to make this ricotta, and mixed it together,
    I have to say the Cream cheese turned out Delicious, the Ricotta mixed in with it was Very nice as well.
    I made the mistake of not scooping it out and poured it straight into a catcher, so it broke up but still good anyway.

  • @iltubo5902
    @iltubo5902 Рік тому +7

    I make yoghurt than cream cheese than ricotta out of same milk.

  • @daVinciJane
    @daVinciJane 6 місяців тому +3

    Omg…finally in the fourth try, magic happened. I realized I had to watch for the boiling, curd change rather than the temperature heat and voilá…success. My whey was at 207 degrees, just for anyone who has trouble with this like me. Newbie cheesy queen.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  6 місяців тому +1

      Look at that sparkling crown!!! 🤩

  • @beelinekhan460
    @beelinekhan460 Рік тому +5

    You are the only one doing it the right way!

    • @MackerelCat
      @MackerelCat Місяць тому +1

      You mean, the right whey 😅

  • @judithlehman6533
    @judithlehman6533 2 роки тому +14

    It's so unexpected as far as the weight you got. I always imagined it wasn't worth it in the end, but this is very exciting.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +2

      I know! Every now and then I don't get enough to make it worth while, but most of the time I get loads. Too much, really (ha!).

  • @stabzatvisionz
    @stabzatvisionz Рік тому +19

    Thanks for this.. I make Greek yogurt every week and I need to use your method to make use of the whey instead of discarding it. Very much appreciate it.

    • @spence8056
      @spence8056 Рік тому +9

      I use the whey from Greek yogurt in place of buttermilk. Buttermilk biscuits using whey instead of buttermilk us incredibly delicious.

    • @helenekema6220
      @helenekema6220 6 місяців тому +1

      Thanks for the video so what did u do with the leftover water? Did you discard it?

    • @homeismyvacation
      @homeismyvacation 4 місяці тому +1

      Can you use wheyfrom kefir cheese?

    • @patis3305
      @patis3305 Місяць тому

      I'm wondering if this worked. I've always assumed that whey from yogurt would be different than whey from say mozzarella or farmers cheese because it cultures. Am I wrong?

  • @NicolaiAAA
    @NicolaiAAA 2 роки тому +16

    Dangit! I wish I'd found all this info about making ricotta from whey the other day when I made cottage cheese for the first time. I could have had ricotta, too!

  • @HBrooks
    @HBrooks 2 роки тому +12

    at christmas and a couple other times a year, i'll make ricotta after making cheese to use in 72 hour lasagna. i do 4 gal cheese batches, so i usually end up with almost 3 gallons of whey . that gets around 2 lbs of ricotta - perfect qty for my needs.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +1

      What is 72 hour lasagna?

    • @HBrooks
      @HBrooks 2 роки тому +2

      @@jmilkslinger sauce that takes 72 hours in several cycles of cooking/cooling, plus homemade pasta, mozz, and ricotta. there are 96 hour versions out there, but some go to extremes, heheheh

    • @adamfreeman5609
      @adamfreeman5609 5 місяців тому

      Hi there, just wondering what sort of cheese you make for your lasagna? And is it easy

    • @HBrooks
      @HBrooks 5 місяців тому

      @@adamfreeman5609 I make "quick" mozzarella and ricotta. neither is really difficult, nor do they take a long time. both are fresh and can be eaten right away. tasty!

    • @adamfreeman5609
      @adamfreeman5609 5 місяців тому

      @@HBrooks well in that case I don't think you will be successful as you cannot use whey from acid coagulated cheese making. I made a farm cheese and tried to re cook the whey to make ricotta and got zero

  • @DrIngo1980
    @DrIngo1980 Рік тому +6

    Nice. That's a great tip. I actually did this by accident the first time I tried making my own cheese. And the taste! It is amazing!

  • @Passionforfoodrecipes
    @Passionforfoodrecipes Рік тому +11

    Great video. Trying to develop my cheese making skills and I'll be trying this with my next pot of whey!

  • @serenity9633
    @serenity9633 Рік тому +3

    I have been freeze drying my whey and it is amazing how much solids are left behind.
    I'll get a full compressed half gallon of dried solids out of 2 gallons of whey. Im hoping it will also be good for culture stock. Max temp in my freeze dryer was set low, at 85F.
    I've dried yogurt culture stock as well.
    It has worked great for new batches

  • @MadgeJamison
    @MadgeJamison 2 роки тому +7

    Great video! For the remnants that settle, I gently scrape the bottom of the pot, then fish the rest out with a metal strainer - like cleaning a fish tank. It only adds another 10% or so, but I hate to waste any.

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae Рік тому +1

      See, id just pull out the cheese cloth, but id do that regardless cuz i prefer a dryer texture to my cheeses heh.
      Totes gonna do this tho, saved the whey from a gallon of milk i turned into cheese the other day; that i flavoured up with garlic dill and parsley. Was probs gonna use it in a bread instd (i love that it provides all the benefits of milk but doesnt make the bread too cakey like milk wud do) but more cheese sounds even better... And i can still use whats left in bread xD

  • @Timinator62
    @Timinator62 Рік тому +7

    Adding more Milk/Cream to the Whey increases the flavor and a higher yield of the Ricotta curd.

    • @evelyny7037
      @evelyny7037 11 місяців тому

      Is it possible to use lemon juice instead of the white vinegar? A lot of white vinegar from corn and I don’t have a problem with corn.

    • @Timinator62
      @Timinator62 11 місяців тому

      @@evelyny7037 Yes, Lemon Juice is fine...I've NEVER heard of a reaction to Corn from Vinegar... but these days I DON'T doubt it.. do you have Group Therapy or a Safe Space where others can join?

  • @nerofl89
    @nerofl89 Рік тому +4

    Ricotta only means "recooked" if you use whole milk and add acid and cook you will produce the same type of cheese, a soft curd. The primary differences are that the whey method slightly increases protein, the traditional Italic cheese making (the method used since the bronze age with whole milk) has a higher fat content, and ricotta if left to ferment for the night can have a slightly different flavor profile however that is highly dependent on what type of milk was used.

    • @Mrsbrazilnuts
      @Mrsbrazilnuts 11 місяців тому

      Yeah, but this is a great way to use the when left over from making Yougurt, I'm saving mine só I can make ricota 😜🥰

  • @johnbarleycorn7845
    @johnbarleycorn7845 4 місяці тому +1

    Just waiting the 20 mins for the curds to form.... hopefully ive got ricotta 😁 thank you for your easy to follow recipe 👍🏻

  • @charlseygibson1537
    @charlseygibson1537 2 роки тому +6

    It really is like magic once you add the vinegar. Neat!

  • @highroad3580
    @highroad3580 Рік тому +2

    Thank you! I have thrown out so much whey that could have been ricotta!!

  • @WolfsToob
    @WolfsToob 3 місяці тому +1

    Wow, you really like living on the edge! Like literally! 🤣 Anytime I have a pot of ANYTHING even remotely as close to the edge like you have in this video, it’s absolutely going to make a GIANT MESS all over my stove! 😵‍💫

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  3 місяці тому

      I make huge messes ALL the time.🤣

  • @Luke-Emmanuel
    @Luke-Emmanuel 13 днів тому

    Norwegians been doing it for quite sometime now. Its a staple in houses.

  • @cassandrahuskey8866
    @cassandrahuskey8866 2 роки тому +3

    Albudercust? Trying go figure out the cheese your saying. What was the culture you used for the cheese? Can you do a video on that main cheese you made?

  • @bethm1448
    @bethm1448 Рік тому +3

    Have you considered making Mysost Cheese after the Ricotta? My family started cheesemaking when a family member got heart issues and can't have any milk fat-we make mozzarella with 0% milk (organic), then ricotta, and just discovered that we can cook down all the whey that is left to make the mysost! Nothing wasted :)

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +2

      I've made Mysost once, and hated it, ha! But that could be because I maybe did it wrong? I know some people really love it, and I haven't tried it since, so I'm pretty sure my first impressions aren't exactly fair.
      I don't think it would be practical for me to make regularly, though, considering the length of time it takes to cook down the whey and the amount of whey I have to use. For me, it's more efficient to feed it to the pigs....

    • @bethm1448
      @bethm1448 Рік тому +1

      @@jmilkslinger That makes sense....we are stuck in the city, so no pigs to convert the excess whey into something useful. It has a unique taste...I was nauseated from the smell of whey and didn`t have a good first impression either, but my husband loved it and said it belongs in a dessert-it had distinct caramel salt and sweet overtones-so might try a cheesecake or some meat marinades. But it will have to wait for the next batch....I underestimated how fast it cooks down at the end and burnt the whole lb and a half. Lesson learned :S

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +1

      @@bethm1448 Yeah, I didn't much care for the smell of the cooking whey, either. Maybe Mysost is an acquired taste? I know lots of people adore it.

    • @Mrsbrazilnuts
      @Mrsbrazilnuts 11 місяців тому

      How do you make the Mozzarela?

    • @brendamcneely940
      @brendamcneely940 10 місяців тому

      Maysot cheese

  • @mikejw58
    @mikejw58 5 місяців тому +2

    Tried it twice and I don't get that foam at 180 degrees. I added the vinegar and Nothing. Doest work for me

    • @kristasahlin
      @kristasahlin Місяць тому

      Me too. I don't know what I'm doing wrong

  • @jurrutia4173
    @jurrutia4173 Рік тому +1

    We tried it, and didn’t get anything. But maybe because when first making cheese we read the °C instead of °F so we had already gotten to the high temp when making the cheese 🤦🏼‍♀️

  • @suzyb.6234
    @suzyb.6234 Рік тому +2

    So I made ricotta the other day and noticed that the leftover whey still looks quite white in color. Can I reheat it, add vinegar and get more out if it?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +2

      You can always try, though I doubt you'll get much. Also, it's best to try to make ricotta with whey that's only a couple hours old. Run some experiments and see what happens!

  • @horebeliot7090
    @horebeliot7090 Рік тому +2

    Wow, thanks for this! I wonder what else can I do with the whey from making kefir cheese and yoghurt.

    • @margaretbrown2604
      @margaretbrown2604 Рік тому

      You can make caramel sauce from whey. I just made it yesterday. It's tangy a bit salty (just right) and sweet. If you Google it, there is a recipe, the only recipe out there.

  • @lisamariereilly9080
    @lisamariereilly9080 2 місяці тому

    You have changed my life.

  • @joeb2309
    @joeb2309 Рік тому +1

    Hells yeah lady! Great job.

  • @user-gt4dy7ob9k
    @user-gt4dy7ob9k 8 місяців тому +1

    Hi there! Loved your video and it thrills me to see you enjoying making your own cheese. I'm on a beginners cheesemaking journey myself and came across your video when hunting for ways to use up the leftover whey from my very first attempt. Can I ask what you added to the milk for the first cheese you made that resulted in all that whey.... (the one you show in your press at the end)? I made a very simple paneer cheese yesterday by adding vinegar to hot milk and after scooping the curds out, I have loads of whey left over. Here we see you adding vinegar to yours and making ricotta but will this work if I've already used vinegar making the paneer?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  8 місяців тому +1

      The cheese in the press is a Butterkäse, which is a thermophilic cheese. I don't recall which kind of culture I used, but probably Kazu (a freezedried culture) or homemade yogurt.
      I have not tried making ricotta with whey from making a vinegar-based cheese because, yes, it seems redundant. But maybe it would work? I'd have to do some research...

  • @garrycarter8485
    @garrycarter8485 2 роки тому +3

    HELLO JENNIFER. I HAVE A COUPLE OF QUESTION I HOPE YOU CAN ANSWER. COULD YOU ALSO DO THIS WITH LEMON JUICE INSTEAD OF VINEGAR AND WOULD IT CHANGE THE FLAVOR OF THE RICOTTA. ALSO CAN YOU AGE THIS RICOTTA CHEESE IN A CHEESE CAVE. I AM JUST STARTING ON MAKING CHEESE AND YOUR VIDEO ON MAKING RICOTTA IS VERY SIMPLE TO MAKE. I ENJOYED YOUR VIDEO.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +1

      Yes, you can use lemon juice. (I haven't done that, though, but I don't think it will affect the flavor...in a negative way.)
      As for aging, I have no idea! Since ricotta is practically boiled, a lot of the good stuff has been killed, so I'm not sure what the point of aging it would be. (I freeze my ricotta.)

    • @garrycarter8485
      @garrycarter8485 2 роки тому +2

      @@jmilkslinger THANK YOU. I DID NOT REALIZE YOU COULD FREEZE IT

  • @gclaerbaut
    @gclaerbaut Рік тому +2

    I made mozzarella using vinegar vs the rennet. I tried this with the leftover whey and it didn't work for me. We also run a dairy farm, so have raw milk on hand. Heated it to 195, vinegar...no ricotta. 😭

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +1

      I've never tried making ricotta from the whey leftover from mozzarella --- unless you're making a cultured mozzarella, I don't think the whey is well suited for ricotta.

  • @TheHighlanderGirl
    @TheHighlanderGirl 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you for this! What do you do with the leftover liquid AFTER you’ve scooped out the ricotta?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +3

      We feed it to our pigs or use it to water plants.

    • @TheHighlanderGirl
      @TheHighlanderGirl 2 роки тому +2

      @@jmilkslinger thx!

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae Рік тому +3

      You can also use that liquid in breadmakin to give it near sourdough notes with hints of sharp cheesiness. It also provides a lot of the nutrients of the milk, but doesnt have so much of fats so as to make the bread overly cakey.
      Similarly, it makes a wonderful soup stock base and rly prty much any cookin where you may use water or milk or vinegar or wine normally.
      Its less creamy than milk, bcuz that creamyness became all the cheese, but its still very much akin to milk

  • @Homegrown_Hillary
    @Homegrown_Hillary 7 місяців тому

    Imagine my surprise when I searched for “make ricotta” and I saw a very familiar thumbnail! (Was it from a Nate mastermind?) Thanks so much for all the tips!!

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  7 місяців тому +1

      Yes!!! We were in the same zoom call. (I miss those!)

  • @fennecbesixdouze1794
    @fennecbesixdouze1794 6 місяців тому +1

    Sorry, just to be clear: this is using "sweet whey", the kind produced from making cheese using rennet. It won't work if you made fresh cheese by just directly curdling milk using acid, right? (I.e. it won't work using sour whey).

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  6 місяців тому

      Yes, that is my understanding.

  • @angelasantucci1506
    @angelasantucci1506 Місяць тому

    So cool! The less waste the better. :) I just made ricotta from whole milk and am excited to try and get more. How many times can you do this process with the whey?

  • @sarahberlinghierikrawczyk1276
    @sarahberlinghierikrawczyk1276 2 роки тому +4

    What do you do with the whey after making the ricotta? Can you make more ricotta?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +2

      (I think you saw my response over on Smitten Kitchen, but I'm posting it here, too, just in case.)
      We use our leftover whey to feed the pigs and dogs, water the plants, etc. Or I just dump it down the drain… Oh! And you can always use it in baking or popsicles and smoothies….but since I only use a fraction of the leftover whey in other food, it hardly seems worth it most times.
      I don't know if you can make ricotta from the whey leftover from making (whole milk) ricotta, but you can certainly try. My hunch is that the yield, if there's any at all, would be so slight that it wouldn’t be worth it.

    • @sarahberlinghierikrawczyk1276
      @sarahberlinghierikrawczyk1276 2 роки тому +3

      @@jmilkslinger thank you for replying to me here, as well, and for remembering me!

    • @SylviaRustyFae
      @SylviaRustyFae Рік тому +2

      @@jmilkslinger You cud try boilin down the extra whey to make a reduced stock from it that wud contain much stronger notes of the whey even and probs be even tastier in cookin; while also grtly decreasin the amount of whey you have.
      Like a demiglace whey.

  • @kt7855
    @kt7855 2 роки тому +2

    I am a beginner at cheese making. I have some equipment but I don’t have a cheese press. I just found a local dairy farm with Jersey cows fresh. What would you recommend to make with a gallon of milk

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +4

      Yay for finding local raw milk!! My blog jennifermurch.com has a handful of fresh, no-press cheeses (go to recipe index and scroll down to cheesemaking). People always go nuts for yogurt cheese, so that's a winner. Quark is the milk-based version of cream cheese. Cuajada is a salty Nicaraguan cheese that goes great with beans and rice. And Belper Knolle is a garlicky, black pepper cheese that lasts for months and months. And remember, you can always jerryrig a press by wrapping the curds in cheesecloth and then pressing with a jug of water or some books! Good luck!

  • @lucindasutt7365
    @lucindasutt7365 5 місяців тому

    That is something I have never heard of, much less seen. Quite a surprise. To think of throwing out all that whey.

  • @maeb7280
    @maeb7280 Рік тому +2

    Can you use the whey after making ricotta

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      Not for cheese (I don't think) --- we feed it to our pigs.

  • @K-Bcreates
    @K-Bcreates Рік тому +2

    I have tried this twice this week and failed both the times, both times I did it immediately after making cheese one. I was doing a traditional cheddar and the other Monterey jack. I've tried temping and not, adding a bit more vinegar, just nothing is happening! Both the times I had 2 gallons of fresh whey. I don't know what I'm doing wrong! I've watched the video like four times!
    This week I used store bought milk, in the traditional cheddar. I used a commercial mesophilic culture, and for the Monterey Jack I used homemade buttermilk.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +2

      Oh, that's disappointing --- I'm so sorry! Wheys from those cheeses should both yield good ricotta, but I've also had wheys work one time and not the next --- I'd probably have to spring for a pH meter if I wanted consistant results. Storebought milk MAY be the problem, though I can't say for sure. (I've only used milk from our cows.) It sounds like you're doing everything right. So frustrating....

    • @mrs.sloffee6359
      @mrs.sloffee6359 Рік тому +1

      I tried making this after making mozzarella. I’m wondering if it’s because I used the vinegar method instead of citric acid and rennet. So I was just adding more vinegar to vinegar….

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +1

      @@mrs.sloffee6359 Yes, it seems this method works best with sweet whey from cultured cheeses, not the acid-cultured and coagulated cheeses.

    • @jurrutia4173
      @jurrutia4173 Рік тому +1

      Same here, but we used the remnant when making the cheese. But we did heat it to high. It’s in the press so we will see if we didn’t just make ricotta from the start!

    • @joevalencic5275
      @joevalencic5275 9 місяців тому

      Made Greek yogurt from store bought whole milk, and used the whey after straining the yogurt. Fail! Glad I saved 1/2 pint of the whey for my next batch of yogurt. Oh, well! Nothing ventured…

  • @coyotedreams3902
    @coyotedreams3902 5 місяців тому

    Thank you! This was a very helpful video!

  • @trinitybungert8256
    @trinitybungert8256 2 роки тому +2

    Will this work with the whey from store bought milk? I used skim milk for milk chews for my dogs and have a ton of whey leftover. The acid is lime juice. Do I need to add more/vinegar once it's heated?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +3

      Ooo, I really don't know. Since it's skim milk (one strike against it) and storebought (two strikes), I kinda doubt you'll get very much. But it's certainly worth a shot! Just heat the fresh whey (make sure it's only a few hours old) to 180 and see what happens. If it's not forming any curd at that point, glug in some vinegar and see if that helps. If it's a bust, then you only lost the cost of the heating the whey, and you gained a lesson, so you come out even. Good luck!

  • @laurenwoods5496
    @laurenwoods5496 2 місяці тому

    Should I add more vinegar if I used some to make cottage cheese where the whey came from?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 місяці тому

      If you used vinegar to make the cottage cheese, then the whey isn't considered sweet (the cheese needs to be from cultured milk in order to get a sweet whey), so I don't think it will work. But you can always try!

  • @jacwindsor5552
    @jacwindsor5552 2 роки тому +2

    I tried to heat the whey but the bubbles were tiny and there was no curd. I tried to make the acidic whey ricotta cheese. Help!

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +1

      This sometimes happens to me, too, and it's so frustrating! A couple things to consider: Is the whey fresh? (Like, only a couple hours old.) Did you heat the whey to 180 degrees before adding the white vinegar? How much vinegar did you add? (I don't measure, but I think I use roughly 2 tablespoons of vinegar per gallon of whey.) Did you only stir it briefly and then let it sit, undisturbed? Aside from these things, I'm not really sure.... It's not an exact science (for me, anyway) --- thus the reason it feels like magic, ha!

    • @jacwindsor5552
      @jacwindsor5552 2 роки тому +1

      @@jmilkslinger Oh good to know, it is not just me. I think the whey was about 5 hours old (I did it at night time), maybe that is too long. I have heard you had to do it quickly. I probably added the vinegar earlier than you mentioned. I think I added 2 table spoons of vinegar. I stirred it but didn't get it sit. Yes, I had hoped it would be like magic but I will have another go next week and see what happens. It looks a lot of fun when it works.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +1

      @@jacwindsor5552 It's definitely not just you --- keep trying!

  • @ronaldcastillo414
    @ronaldcastillo414 Рік тому +1

    Great video I’m definitely going to try it!
    Just curious how long does it last in the fridge?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +3

      If it's unsalted, then 3-5 days, probably. Salted, a couple weeks.

  • @etm567
    @etm567 Рік тому +1

    What kind of milk do you use when you're making cheese? I've made yogurt and kefir for years, and I just made my first fresh cheese. And I want to learn to make cheese. There's just nothing better than good cheese.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +2

      Congratulations on making your first fresh cheese! Cheesemaking is addictive, so watch out!
      I use our raw milk: Holstein and Jersey.

  • @annabesel3188
    @annabesel3188 Рік тому +1

    Great Video! Thank you for your work. How long can I store the ricotta in the fridge?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +2

      If it's salted, about a week. Unsalted, only several days. (And you can freeze it, too! Though the texture won't be quite as tender....)

    • @annabesel3188
      @annabesel3188 Рік тому

      @@jmilkslinger thank you so much! 🙏 Greetings from Germany ❤️

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      @@annabesel3188 You're so welcome!!

  • @DeeKru
    @DeeKru 4 місяці тому

    Love this. I've always cringed when letting whey go down the drain. No more!

  • @Hulkmaniac49
    @Hulkmaniac49 15 днів тому

    Do I need to let the whey from fridge get to room temperature before heating it?

  • @BobbieGWhiz
    @BobbieGWhiz 7 місяців тому

    Does anyone know if this will work from yogurt whey, which I believe is a sour whey? Thanks

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  7 місяців тому +1

      I've never done it, so I can't say, sorry!

  • @marykeswanepoel7033
    @marykeswanepoel7033 8 місяців тому

    Hi, I tried this, but got no curds... could it be because the whey was frozen before? Or because the previous cheese I made was only made with vinegar, not Rennet. Would that make a difference?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  8 місяців тому

      Yes, both those things could negatively impact the outcome.

  • @maryschermerhorn3893
    @maryschermerhorn3893 Рік тому +1

    Can you use the whey from making yogurt?
    My chickens like drinking the whey, but I would like to get ricotta made.🇨🇦

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +1

      I have never done this, but according to this website, you can . . . in a sort of roundabout way. bit.ly/3dRwyML

  • @whimsyandme3679
    @whimsyandme3679 6 місяців тому

    Thanks for sharing. Can I please ask if the whey is from making cheese using the vinegar/lemon method? And if so, does it make the ricotta extra sour to further add more vinegar to create the ricotta? I'm super keen to make my first ever batch of cheese using lemon juice and would love to make ricotta from the whey.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  6 місяців тому

      The whey I use for ricotta is sweet whey, from making a cultured, rennet-coagulated cheese.

  • @marciabaxley1959
    @marciabaxley1959 3 місяці тому

    Then you make the cheese what do you do with the left over whey? Mine didn't turn out

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  3 місяці тому

      Feed it to the pigs or water plants!

  • @Hulkmaniac49
    @Hulkmaniac49 15 днів тому

    Can I re-use the whey again after making cheese the first time?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  15 днів тому

      You can not reuse the whey after you've used it to make ricotta.

  • @tillybinkieking7258
    @tillybinkieking7258 6 місяців тому

    I may have missed something or, in ignorance of recipes not realised which kind of whey you used. Is your whey from Cultured Cheese making (using live bacteria) or from using a coagulator such as vinegar, lemon juice or rennet.??? (My curd cheese is with rennet).

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  6 місяців тому

      Sweet whey, from a rennet-coagulated cheese.

  • @ChanAdeline-id9dv
    @ChanAdeline-id9dv Рік тому +1

    It doesn’t work for me. I follow exactly the steps and temperatures but it doesn’t work.😢

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      Are you using whey that's no more than a couple hours old? Is the whey from a hard-pressed cheese (not whey from a yogurt cheese or a quick mozzarella)?

  • @BlackBird-mv8wg
    @BlackBird-mv8wg 5 місяців тому

    Hi Jennifer. You mentioned you made this ricotta from your butterkase whey (I saw the video - Excellent and very informative btw) . So on this ricotta, does the whey include the 1/2 pot of full whey you removed, plus the diluted remaining whey (with the water to wash the curds)? So you essentially had 2 parts whey and 1 part water?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  5 місяців тому

      No, I just use the undiluted whey for ricotta and feed the diluted stuff to the pigs. . . or plants.

  • @chastaelaine76
    @chastaelaine76 11 місяців тому +1

    So what can I do to fix it if the curds do not set?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  11 місяців тому

      You mean if no curds rise to the top? That happens to me, and I think it means the pH was off or something. It's not uniformly consistant for me, mostly because I'm not testing pH and such.

  • @BigPeter1313
    @BigPeter1313 8 місяців тому +1

    Could you please point me to the Butterkäse recipe? It's one of my favorite cheeses. Thanks Jen!!

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  8 місяців тому +2

      ua-cam.com/video/LyvHwVn5Oe4/v-deo.html

    • @BigPeter1313
      @BigPeter1313 8 місяців тому

      Thank you so much!! I truly look forward to more of your instructions for the beginner.@@jmilkslinger

  • @ravenbrown74
    @ravenbrown74 Рік тому +1

    It doesn’t work for me I’m using goat milk I have tried if from the whey of mozzarella cheese Chevre and farmers what am I doing wrong

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      Since I use cow's milk, I can't vouch for whether or not this method works for goat's milk...

  • @VivekAnandJ
    @VivekAnandJ 7 місяців тому

    Thank you so much for this video! I make very less cheese at a time ( 1 litre max). Can I freeze the whey and then boil various batches together?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  7 місяців тому

      Everything I've read has said that it's better to use very fresh whey to make whey ricotta. However, I've never tried freezing and then boiling the whey myself. I kinda doubt it will work, but I always encourage people to experiment for themselves. You never know what you might learn!!

  • @liviamon
    @liviamon Місяць тому

    Hello!, thank you for your recipe.
    This morning I made some cheese (used a gallon of whole milk store bought and white vinegar) and had left a lot of whey. Looking for a recipe on what to do with it I found you. I followed all your instructions to the t. The only difference is that I started with a lot less whey than you. I reheated it and when it was very hot to the touch (I do not own a thermometer) I added about 1/2 cup of white vinegar. I stirred it and turned the heat off, let it rest but nothing happened. Just very thin clumps of "curds" not even significant as to make a bit of ricotta.
    The whey was not yellow, it was whitish and I thought it had something left to make at least 1/2 cup of ricotta!
    Do you have any idea of what might have happened?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Місяць тому

      Yes, you used an acid whey because you acidified your cheese with vinegar. For making ricotta from whey, it needs to be a sweet whey, or whey from a cheese that's cultured with bacteria cultures (like clabber, freeze-dried cultures, buttermilk, etc).

    • @liviamon
      @liviamon Місяць тому +1

      @@jmilkslinger Thank you! Now I know, next time I have to buy something like you mentioned since I do not have any. Is rennet ok? I have heard that it is used for cheese makig.

  • @cassandrahuskey8866
    @cassandrahuskey8866 2 роки тому +1

    What was the cheese you made to get the whey? Can you do a video on the cheese you made?? What's it called ? Budapest?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +2

      In this video, the whey came from a Butterkäse (Butter cheese). I haven't done a video on that one yet, but you just may have inspired me!

    • @cassandrahuskey8866
      @cassandrahuskey8866 2 роки тому +1

      @@jmilkslinger oh please please please do this cheese! I've got so much milk and need to learn all it takes in making a cheese like this! I thought your video might be kind of flaky and thinking you may not know what your doing ( there's alot of people out there not experienced and just doing a video)
      Boy , I'm SO happy to be wrong and was so giddy about thiz..I have so much milk ! Yes please do this cheese, I'm on standby on the wait!
      God bless , looking forward to it

  • @chrys77cross
    @chrys77cross Місяць тому

    Can we use this method with Yogurt whey?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Місяць тому

      No, it's needs to be made with sweet whey from a cultured cheese.

  • @Farron1960
    @Farron1960 Рік тому +1

    I often make simple farmers cheese. And I've tried it using the way and making ricotta. It doesn't work with way from farmer's cheese. What am I doing wrong?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      What type of culture are you using? Sometimes, depending on a variety of things (pH, fat/protein content, etc), I don't get much (or any) ricotta from my whey, either. If I was more scientific about it, I'd have better results, but I'm usually just winging it.

    • @Farron1960
      @Farron1960 Рік тому +1

      I use raw milk and vinegar.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      @@Farron1960 If you're using vinegar, than you've already made ricotta, more or less, and the amount you would get from repeating the process would be pretty tiny, or not at all.

    • @Farron1960
      @Farron1960 Рік тому +1

      Ok, so I would need whey from other types of cheese making to get more cheese from left over whey.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      @@Farron1960 Yep!

  • @isabelquiroga1287
    @isabelquiroga1287 5 місяців тому

    Is that sweet or acidic whey though? And does it work with both?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  5 місяців тому

      Sweet. I've never tried making ricotta from acidic whey.

  • @weathormantom7206
    @weathormantom7206 8 місяців тому

    Jennifer i could use some guidance. Today I attempted to make whey ricotta for the third time. My first two attempts I bet I netted a whole tablespoon each of ricotta. Today was my best result (following your recipe) and I got a scant 3/4 cup of ricotta out of four gallons of whey and it's still draining. Does that sound right to you? Its not a tough recipe or procedure but my yield doesn't even compare to what I see you and others pulling out. Is it possible that there just isn't anything left in the whey after I make the cheese? --Tom (BTW I made your butterkase today. It's pressing now. I'll let you know how it tastes.)

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  8 місяців тому

      You know, sometimes I get very little ricotta --- practically nothing --- and other times I get a whole bunch. I'm not sure what causes the difference, but I've always thought it might have something to do with pH levels (but I've never tested them).
      My best advice is to use fresh whey leftover from making a cultured hard cheese (not a fresh, acid-coagulated cheese) and try it a bunch of times. Hopefully it will begin to work...
      P.S. I have a Butterkäse pressing right now, too!

  • @smalltownsessions2072
    @smalltownsessions2072 5 місяців тому

    Can you reuse the left over whey from this process ? Like a second time?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  5 місяців тому

      Not for cheesemaking, but you can use it in cooking in place of water, if you like.

  • @HalalCats7
    @HalalCats7 10 місяців тому +1

    i had a question does yogurt whey works for this ?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  10 місяців тому

      No, not that I'm aware of....

    • @HalalCats7
      @HalalCats7 10 місяців тому +1

      ok thank you@@jmilkslinger

  • @thomasgronek6469
    @thomasgronek6469 Рік тому

    Very Nice, thank you

  • @DeathByFashion1
    @DeathByFashion1 Місяць тому

    How long can I store this for?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Місяць тому +1

      Unsalted ricotta lasts 3-5 days in the fridge. Salted ricotta lasts 1-2 weeks. Frozen, it lasts months.

  • @thinkpositive2092
    @thinkpositive2092 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for sharing, but you never made a very basic video on "How To Make Ricotta From Milk". I know youtube already has a lot of videos on that.But please I wanted to see your video on this. THANKS

  • @22ERICSHELLY
    @22ERICSHELLY 2 роки тому +3

    Thanks for the great video! I am new to making homemade yogurt. This is the only way I like it. What else can you use the whey for?
    What do you do with the liquid after you make the ricotta cheese?
    May Jesus continue to bless you and your family

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +2

      Our whey goes to our pigs --- they love it!
      Other options: watering plants, using in place of water in some soups, using in bread baking...

    • @22ERICSHELLY
      @22ERICSHELLY 2 роки тому +3

      @@jmilkslinger so once you use the whey to make ricotta cheese; it is then like a water with some nutrients in it?
      I make homemade bread. I use it in place of the water?
      Thanks for your response.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +2

      @@22ERICSHELLY Yes, and there's acid in it, too, which is a good addition to bread. In other words, if your bread recipe calls for 2 cups of water, just replace it with whey.

    • @22ERICSHELLY
      @22ERICSHELLY 2 роки тому +3

      @@jmilkslinger thanks! A little lady in our church has been in the hospital. She wanted me to make her some beef and vegetable soup. I used whey in it. You need to do a video on all the ways you can use the whey and the leftover whey water. So glad I found your channel!

    • @ksschapp
      @ksschapp Рік тому +3

      I make my own yogurt. The whey is sour and doesn't work the same way that Jennifer showed. She used sweet whey (from cheese). I've used sour whey as a replacement for buttermilk. I've also made caramel from it. Its sweet and tangy and great on ice cream.

  • @yvonnehope7155
    @yvonnehope7155 Рік тому

    I made "farmer's cheese" with full cream fresh milk and vinegar... now to make ricotta do i add vinegar again????

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +1

      I'm actually not sure! I only make ricotta from the whey leftover from hard cheeses. My hunch is that you wouldn't get much cheese, if any, but you could certainly try!

  • @tessmichel7788
    @tessmichel7788 11 місяців тому

    Ok here’s a dumb question-can you continue to make more ricotta by adding more vinegar to the heated whey after this first batch of ricotta? Or is the whey useless after the ricotta is skimmed off the top?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  11 місяців тому +1

      Not a dumb question! I've tried doing it a second time and it didn't work for me --- never got enough to speak of. But you can certainly try and see what happens.

    • @tessmichel7788
      @tessmichel7788 11 місяців тому

      @@jmilkslinger thanks so much for the reply!! Made mozzarella yesterday and have the leftover whey, so I plan to try making ricotta today.

  • @louonUT
    @louonUT Місяць тому

    I need to get this straight --- so you are telling me that the Whey I have left over from making mozzarella , i can reheat , it will start to thicken , I had some vinegar and it will curd -- is that right ?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Місяць тому

      If it's SWEET whey. In other words, it needs to be mozzarella that's made the slow way, by culturing the milk, NOT the quick mozzarella that's acidified with vinegar or citric acid.

    • @louonUT
      @louonUT Місяць тому

      @@jmilkslinger oh. I didn’t know there is another way to make Mozzarella. I need to learn this way. I am new to all of this and soon I maybe be getting a batch of raw milk for the first time ever.

  • @safdartufail3074
    @safdartufail3074 Рік тому +1

    Great 👏👏👏😃

  • @jacquelinehatfield8298
    @jacquelinehatfield8298 11 місяців тому

    So cool. I have a small amount of whey from making yogurt. Is there and issues with freezing the whey until you have enough to make your cheese?😊

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  11 місяців тому

      For ricotta from whey, you're supposed to use whey that's only a couple hours old. I know you can freeze whey to use as a culture for future cheeses, but I'm doubtful it would work to freeze whey that you'll use for making ricotta. I could be wrong, though!

  • @Marketsolo
    @Marketsolo 3 місяці тому

    Can you use whey from making butter?

  • @Archzenom
    @Archzenom 7 місяців тому

    Can I still use the leftover whey in the pot? Like make protein powder out of it?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  7 місяців тому +1

      Sure! It'll be vinegary, though...

    • @Archzenom
      @Archzenom 7 місяців тому +1

      Ok. Thank you!

  • @jorob3764
    @jorob3764 Рік тому

    Can you still do this with just a small amount of whey say 1 litre?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      Sure! But you'll probably only get a smidge of ricotta...

  • @tillybinkieking7258
    @tillybinkieking7258 6 місяців тому

    what is Aboudacos/ Budacos>>>>???? Cheese?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  6 місяців тому

      Butterkäse. A German cheese, aka Butter Cheese

  • @alisonholmes2409
    @alisonholmes2409 Рік тому

    It didn’t work at all for me. I used the whey from making L. Reutiri yoghurt. Anyone know if this is why it was a failure?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      I haven't heard of that kind of yogurt, and I've never tried making ricotta from yogurt whey... I'm sorry I'm not more helpful!

  • @hardminder
    @hardminder Рік тому

    And then, what do you do with they whey that's left from this?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому

      Feed it to the pigs/chickens, or use it to water plants in the garden.

  • @randominternetprofile8270
    @randominternetprofile8270 3 місяці тому

    I used my leftover mozzarella whey and couldn't get it to curdle to make ricotta? Any thoughts. I heated it to where it was foamy like yours and added 1/4 cup vinegar but not curdling. The whey was leftover from a gallon of whole milk. Mozzarella turned out great, so i don't think the milk i used had anything to do with the whey not forming into ricotta

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  3 місяці тому +1

      If the milk was acidified with citric acid or vinegar, it won't work for ricotta. Ricotta needs to be made with sweet (slow-cultured) whey.

    • @randominternetprofile8270
      @randominternetprofile8270 3 місяці тому

      @@jmilkslinger traditional ricotta is made from leftover mozzarella whey so im confused now

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  3 місяці тому +1

      @@randominternetprofile8270 That works as long as the mozzarella is slow-cultured, so that makes sense. It's just the acid wheys that aren't suitable for whey ricotta. But I don't know everything about cheese, so I definitely could be wrong about this!

    • @randominternetprofile8270
      @randominternetprofile8270 3 місяці тому

      @@jmilkslinger thanks for the feedback. Appreciate the fast responses. I may need to add more milk to the whey. So many ricotta recipes out there with different methods.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  3 місяці тому

      @@randominternetprofile8270 Agreed! Lots of method. I, too, find it confusing!

  • @evatherapeutic
    @evatherapeutic 2 роки тому +2

    Could you freeze this?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  2 роки тому +1

      Yes! I freeze it all the time. In the freezer, the texture changes slightly, so I don't use the frozen ricotta for fresh eating --- it's still perfectly wonderful in baking, though, and in pasta dishes.

    • @evatherapeutic
      @evatherapeutic 2 роки тому

      @@jmilkslinger thank you for fast response. I loved this

  • @Mabbio01
    @Mabbio01 Рік тому

    what about hte left of ricotta water?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +1

      Use it to water plants, feed it to chickens/pigs, in bread in place of water, toss it....

  • @La_La_La3
    @La_La_La3 4 місяці тому

    Does it work for whey from yogurt?

  • @missmishpot
    @missmishpot Рік тому +1

    I have tried this twice - once just now from whey leftover from cheese I made this morning, and there are NO curds. None. Just liquid. What could I be missing?

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +4

      Ugh, this has happened to me and is soooo frustrating. What kind of cheese were you making? I've noticed that whey from certain types of cheeses have a higher yield of ricotta than others, and some have almost none. I imagine it's due to acidity levels, or maybe it has something to do with the starter cultures, or the type of milk. The saving grace is that when making ricotta from whey, the ricotta is kinda a side benefit --- it wasn't the primary goal --- and I can just toss it to the pigs. Still, the time and energy lost heating the whey only to get nothing is disappointing....

    • @missmishpot
      @missmishpot Рік тому +2

      @@jmilkslinger Thank you so much for your response! And yes, it is so frustrating - but also disappointing. The milk is from our cow, pasteurized, and more sour than one would like to drink. I made farmers cheese earlier, but did notice that the milk started curdling while heating to temp (early too - maybe around 120F) before I added any lemon juice. Maybe my farmer’s cheese is really more like ricotta? 😂 As you can tell, I’m super new to this cheese making. Just trying to figure out where I’ve gone wrong. Thanks again!

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  Рік тому +1

      @@missmishpot Why is your milk sour? Maybe try making the cheese with the fresh milk minus the pasteurization? I wonder if that might improve your results....

    • @missmishpot
      @missmishpot Рік тому +1

      @@jmilkslinger Ah, yes. It wasn’t spoiled. We get loads of milk from our Jersey, and it was a few days “old.” It smelled fine to me, but my husband is ridiculously sensitive to the smell once it’s a few days old and calls it sour. We drink the freshest and try to utilize that which is left over. We have so much butter now, so I’ve been trying my hand at cheese.

    • @missmishpot
      @missmishpot 10 місяців тому +1

      I thought I’d post an update for you. We have a new milk cow this year, and the hub’s sniffer determines her milk is “way better”. His words, not mine. He doesn’t enjoy milk from his mom’s milk cow because he thinks it’s “cowy”. The smell offputs him, but she doesn’t have mastitis because I’ve checked with CMT. (Do you have a solution for this? I’m tempted to sneak her vitamin E, but maybe there’s a better protocol)l That said…I snookered him to buying me a new milk cow, and her milk is divine! 😊 Apparently, just from my experience, some cows just make better cheese. For anyone whose failed with their cheese, it’s worth looking at the cow very closely!

  • @adamfreeman5609
    @adamfreeman5609 5 місяців тому

    I'm confused, I did this with left over whey and nothing happened. Does this sort of reaction depend on the type of cheese that was made from the initial milk.I'm confused, I did this with left over whey and nothing happened. Does this sort of reaction depend on the type of cheese that was made from the initial milk.

    • @jmilkslinger
      @jmilkslinger  5 місяців тому +1

      I use whey --- sweet whey --- left over from making wheels of cheese like Gouda, Asiago, Butterkäse, Manchego, etc. Don't use whey from making acid-coagulated cheese, like quick mozzarella or paneer.