How to Make Real Greek Feta

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 12 вер 2024
  • I was lucky enough to get my hands on some Ewes milk to make this feta using a traditional Greek recipe. Thanks go out to Graham Strong for sending me some Ewes milk to experiment with!
    Please help contribute to translations and subtitles for this video: www.youtube.com...
    Ingredients
    3.5 litres (3.5 qt) Ewes' Milk
    1 litre (1 qt) Goat's Milk
    1/8th teaspoon mesophilic culture
    1/4th (1.25ml) tspn Liquid Rennet in 1/4 cup non -chlorinated water
    1/4th (1.25ml) tspn Calcium Chloride in 1/4 cup non-chlorinated water
    Brine solution 10%
    Starter culture used Mad Millie Mesophilic Single use sachet; www.littlegree...
    Rennet Chymax Plus IMCU 200; www.littlegree...
    I recommend our Feta Cheese kit for this cheese; www.littlegree...
    Check out my other cheese tutorials; • All Cheese Making Tuto...
    Help fund the next cheese making video by pledging your support at Patreon; / greeningofgavin
    Curd Nerd Newsletter; www.littlegree...
    My First cheese-making eBook, "Keep Calm and Make Cheese" courses.little...
    My Second cheese-making book, "Keep Calm and Make More Cheese" courses.little...
    recipes
    and for the Little Green Cheese Podcast, visit www.littlegree...
    Follow on Facebook;
    / thecheesemantv or
    / littlegreenworkshops

КОМЕНТАРІ • 382

  • @GavinWebber
    @GavinWebber  6 років тому +38

    What's your favourite type of Feta? Greek, Bulgarian, Danish, or Persian?

    • @smitty7692
      @smitty7692 6 років тому +15

      I'm more of a Greek man myself. Never really had Bulgarian, Danish, or Persian style cheeses.

    • @carolavant3778
      @carolavant3778 6 років тому +14

      Definitely Greek. My paternal grandfather was from Lefcas, Greece, and I was raised on Greek feta!

    • @Dimo4ka.
      @Dimo4ka. 6 років тому +3

      Bryndza. Its ukrainian version of Feta.

    • @apollochild111
      @apollochild111 6 років тому +2

      Greek, or Persian.

    • @apollochild111
      @apollochild111 6 років тому +3

      Okay to be honest I don't know if it was Persian, I had it when I was in Iraq, and it was different than any I've had before.

  • @jamesart9
    @jamesart9 2 роки тому +4

    PERFECT volume for your background music.
    It enhances the video, but you actually have to pay attention to really notice it.
    Most folks get it SO wrong.

  • @haider9874
    @haider9874 4 роки тому +11

    0:00
    As a kurd, i appreciate you noticing us

  • @valverdefankhauser
    @valverdefankhauser 5 років тому +6

    Love your videos. I live on a ranch in Texas and have milk goats. My ranch manager and I are now making cheese. Thank you so much, Our two sheep are now bred (someone gave us a Dahl male) so in 7 months we will be able to milk sheep. All has been successful so far. And YUMMY!

  • @nektariossigalas
    @nektariossigalas 4 роки тому +4

    Hello from Greece i made your recipe from sheeps milk and the taste is amazing. Thank you for your videos, i wish you the best

  • @tofty21
    @tofty21 4 роки тому +6

    I never liked feta until I had it in Greece. It was wonderful, so full of flavour unlike the shop bought ones we get in the uk.

    • @LA-qt3tr
      @LA-qt3tr 2 роки тому

      They use fresh raw sheep milk, which not very available anywhere.

  • @fatimajunejo6201
    @fatimajunejo6201 6 років тому +7

    I love when you cut the curd.

  • @mackenziewhethers1257
    @mackenziewhethers1257 6 років тому +5

    Nothing is bettah
    Than a nice piece of feta
    Put it in brine
    Give it a squeeze
    Make salads Devine
    With this lovely cheese!
    Give me not Swiss
    Give me not cheddah
    For there's only part
    Of room left in my heart
    For wonderful feta.

  • @Melkizidor
    @Melkizidor 6 років тому +2

    I don't know if I'll ever make my own cheese.
    I do, however, enjoy learning about the cheeses and listening to you.

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  6 років тому +1

      Thanks, Justin!

    • @zerohedge9642
      @zerohedge9642 6 років тому

      Justin Time : I am the same way. I am a fairly adventurous eater and a decent home cook. I would have to do some searching for the various milks in my area. They don't sell them at the regular grocery store, for the most part.

  • @dimitriskarathanasis4230
    @dimitriskarathanasis4230 3 місяці тому +2

    The flora makes the difference for Greek Feta cheese
    The flora of Greece consists of approximately 5,752 species (6,600 classes), 22% of which are endemic (1,278 species)

  • @sarahdixon6011
    @sarahdixon6011 5 років тому +3

    Your channel is so well done, even down to appropriate music.
    Thanks You have lit a cheesy fire in me 🤣

  • @user-ue6yc9kr8i
    @user-ue6yc9kr8i 4 роки тому +6

    Good one! All you need now are some tomatoes olive oil cucumbers onion and some kapari herb if you like it. Sprinkle a little salt and some oregano and add the feta. Most important have a lot of OUZO and good friends and good music and everything is full filled! Enjoy!😀

    • @josieross8802
      @josieross8802 3 роки тому

      I truly loved Greece when I lived there! I miss REAL Greek Salad’s and psyeti (spelling?!) and being able to go down to the market and get a huge block of Feta anytime! Yamas!

    • @FrankieG-M
      @FrankieG-M 2 роки тому

      Γειά μας!

  • @samdean71
    @samdean71 6 років тому +10

    I actually love your videos, a mouse killed my entire family so I am constructing a trap for him, I intend to use your cheese recipe as my main bait. thank you my friend. - number 1 curd nerd xxxx

  • @crustybuns9344
    @crustybuns9344 6 років тому +1

    Thank you so much for this video! Feta is one of my all time favorites and I'm so excited to make this cheese! Again, thank you. I like to fry eggplant in olive oil, add feta then basil and you have a delicious snack.

  • @itsmeaylin8893
    @itsmeaylin8893 3 роки тому +1

    Sonunda türkçe altyazılı bir video buldum çok sevindim altyazı koyduğun için çok teşekkür ederim keşke bütün videolar altyazılı olsa 🙏🙏🙏

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  3 роки тому

      they are now automated by UA-cam.

  • @WetBaconFishing
    @WetBaconFishing 5 років тому +3

    Your voice is so peaceful.

  • @TheFragmentor
    @TheFragmentor 5 років тому +5

    Hi Gavin. Can I just say that I watched this video completely by accident, 3 months later I'm a dedicated curd nerd and am almost constantly making cheese of one kind or another. I love it! So far every cheese has been a success. Can I ask one question? When you use your cheese press, how do you know what pressure it is exerting? I can't see any gauge, is it just experience? Keep the videos up, I follow them to the letter when making my cheeses.

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 5 років тому +2

      He puts a spring between the press and the cheese.
      You can buy calibrated springs that fully compress at a certain pressure/weight. Or you can just grab a couple of weights and try a few springs until you get one that just barely compresses all the way.

    • @TheFragmentor
      @TheFragmentor 5 років тому +1

      I knew he used a spring, I just couldn't figure out how he applies the correct pressure. Cheers,
      @@lordgarion514

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 5 років тому +2

      @@TheFragmentor
      Oh gotcha. I thought you had missed him using it. I was on my third video before I realized it(I'm always multitasking it seems).
      You'd be much better off just using weights to check different springs. Calibrated springs are quite a bit more expensive.

  • @stevesimon460
    @stevesimon460 6 років тому +2

    Never thought I would be interested into making cheese but after watching a couple of your videos I am now

    • @musa2775
      @musa2775 6 років тому

      steve simon This looks like a good starter recipe, too. I started with Gavin's traditional cheddar and...oh my word...it was amazing. At 4 months it was the sharpest, best tasting cheddar I've ever eaten. And I'd never done anything like cheesemaking before! My family and friends all keep asking when the next batch will be ready! Soon as I start making it, I suppose. 😂 Good luck with your cheesemaking endeavours! Consider buying a small wine fridge for temperature-and-microbe-controlled aging. Cheers!

  • @jim34morrison
    @jim34morrison 4 місяці тому

    Gavin, hope you and your family are doing well! Thank you for these videos. They help keep my kitchen interesting!

  • @So_Harufied
    @So_Harufied 6 років тому +1

    Great job, Gav. Feta is one of my favorites! 💖💖💖

  • @lacyblackburn
    @lacyblackburn 6 років тому +2

    God Bless you my Aussie friend!!!

  • @mediterranean.australian932
    @mediterranean.australian932 4 роки тому +2

    Oh wow! Would love to give this a go. Thanks for sharing!!

  • @theherbalizer5145
    @theherbalizer5145 2 роки тому

    Another 'accidental' watcher. Just brilliant - this is what YT is all about for me. Am definitely going to give this feta a go and, who knows, may yet become a dedicated curd nerd. Thanks mate!

  • @zerohedge9642
    @zerohedge9642 6 років тому

    7:21 amazing how the curds break down! Nothing like seeing the process!

  • @danielpatrickswain4338
    @danielpatrickswain4338 6 років тому +2

    curd nerds probably my favourite phrase of the year,

  • @illybrown1208
    @illybrown1208 Рік тому

    Can’t wait to try this!!!
    Thanks so much for sharing! 🙏

  • @acmulhern
    @acmulhern 5 років тому

    This was a really great video, easy to follow and understand. I'll be making this!

  • @ArielLarue
    @ArielLarue 2 роки тому +4

    Curd nerds 😹😹I like that

  • @thewillowfairy1434
    @thewillowfairy1434 2 роки тому +1

    Hey Gavin. Great work you’re doing here 👏🏻. Although I would like to know which mesophilic starter culture you used there pls.

  • @sazji
    @sazji 5 років тому +1

    In many areas, after the curd is removed, they hear the whey and add fresh milk to it and strain it out several times until the milk stops setting, this becomes mizithra.

  • @ilovesesshomarusama716
    @ilovesesshomarusama716 4 роки тому +1

    I love feta especially with a strong flavor. I put it in almost everything I eat lol

  • @vasilismf
    @vasilismf 5 років тому +3

    Gavin, you dont stir the feta, you cut it in big pieces and then you put it in the mould and you let it drain slowly

  • @NaturopathsGarden
    @NaturopathsGarden 2 роки тому

    Thank you Gavin, great instructions really appreciate

  • @elvihoelsida
    @elvihoelsida 4 роки тому +2

    Yum, yum, yummy!!!

  • @pogogogo9002
    @pogogogo9002 6 років тому +1

    Have you made a persian feta? I love the Persian feta that is packaged in olive oil but it is so expensive. Love your channel!

  • @PauletteReid
    @PauletteReid 6 років тому +2

    All very well if you can get your hands on sheep milk, almost impossible in SEQld. Would love to get my hands on a supplier. Guess will have to stick to expensive goat or run of the mill cows milk

  • @lindahoneywell1615
    @lindahoneywell1615 6 років тому +1

    When I store feta for a long time, I store in glass. I find that plastic imparts a taste after a while. I have stored my homemade feta up to a year and it was still very good.

    • @zerohedge9642
      @zerohedge9642 6 років тому

      Linda Honeywell : I always prefer glass to plastic for storage.

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  6 років тому

      Good tip.

  • @JohnSmith-il4wi
    @JohnSmith-il4wi 3 роки тому

    I love your channel, great video. One question I have is, why don't you just brine your whey and soak the cheese in it? That way you already know that the pH matches the cheese, no worries about chlorine, and no waste.

  • @Bluebirdiran
    @Bluebirdiran 4 роки тому +3

    I have noticed that some of the links to your written recipes are dead. It says the page does not exist. So maybe you would look into that and resolve the issue. Cheers

  • @vernfl291
    @vernfl291 6 років тому +1

    I kept expecting Anthony Quinn dressed as Zorba the Greek to dance across the screen 😁

  • @jumakumajuma
    @jumakumajuma 6 років тому +1

    8:23 the curds have shrunken all the way ,,!!!! good one

  • @miamorgenlarm1302
    @miamorgenlarm1302 4 роки тому +4

    Hello Gavin, please can you explain to me, why it is important to cut the curd in samesized cubes? Is there some impact on the texture ?

    • @Domowyser
      @Domowyser 4 роки тому

      It helps to release whey evenly.
      larger pieces retain more whey while smaller ones have dried up.

  • @iPhoneSamMan
    @iPhoneSamMan 6 років тому +1

    Nice job on the feta gav

  • @nenadlazarevic3494
    @nenadlazarevic3494 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you for the recipe and the instructions. My two bricks of this cheese are in the brine as I write this. Thanks!

  • @emtpwanabe
    @emtpwanabe 4 роки тому +2

    Curd nerd??? Slapped that sub button so hard I thought I’d broken my screen!!!

  • @traviousandrews1015
    @traviousandrews1015 3 роки тому +2

    You just pour it out? What a wheyste! Hahahahahahaha lmao

  • @jorgemach___2162
    @jorgemach___2162 5 років тому +2

    feta and mozzarella on my pizza every time. it is the best

  • @kaisenji
    @kaisenji 6 років тому

    Ugh, if I can get my hands on a in milk goat while mine are growing, I'm totally on this one. Love Feta!

  • @Nosfistis512
    @Nosfistis512 6 років тому +3

    as a greek i aprove

  • @jhayneartoflife6830
    @jhayneartoflife6830 4 роки тому

    Delicious! My favorite

  • @kenwhibley9827
    @kenwhibley9827 6 років тому +2

    Hi Gavin from the UK. What was the % fat content of the milk mix you used. Will the recipe work OK with standard whole milk & 3.7/9%. I would also presume to + Lipase but in what quantity

  • @johanessuryanata1544
    @johanessuryanata1544 2 роки тому

    Hi Gavin, nice clear & concise video. Thanks, i appreciate it. I just have 1 question. Do you maintain the heat at 30°C until you are ready to drain the curd into the cheese cloth? If not, at what point you switch off the heat? Again, appreciate your video.

  • @SewAndTellwithDori
    @SewAndTellwithDori 4 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing your tutorial! It was wonderful to see how fairly easy feta cheese is to make at home. Would you make a tutorial showing how to make Mediterranean herb feta cheese, please? Here in the USA, there are a few popular flavors of feta sold, and most people seem to prefer the herb variety.

  • @Darkblade0926
    @Darkblade0926 4 роки тому +6

    How tf did people make this by accident, It's pretty complicated to do by accident

    • @XarryKlynn
      @XarryKlynn 4 роки тому +7

      Answer in ancient Greece shepherds used to store the milk in lamp belly bags the enzymes combined with milk can produce a cheese or yogurt. Imaging traveling long distances and after a couple of days you discover that there is no mik inside but a white substance. Its all chemistry...

  • @MrRenegreg
    @MrRenegreg 6 років тому

    I can't wait to try my own feta with watermelon in the summer.

  • @Silentgrace11
    @Silentgrace11 6 років тому

    My cheese fix is quickly being satisfied. Thank you

  • @cornycobble3042
    @cornycobble3042 6 років тому

    Looks yummy!

  • @CanOner22
    @CanOner22 4 роки тому +1

    Çeviri için Uğur Resul Can a teşekkür ederim and i thank you its veri nice video clasic turkish white cheesse we dont use the mesapholic culture only rennet is enough

    • @user-rw8vz7qe9c
      @user-rw8vz7qe9c 4 роки тому +2

      Eh you know this is a Greek cheese, right?

    • @CanOner22
      @CanOner22 4 роки тому

      @@user-rw8vz7qe9c we use the cheese like greek feta in börek if we don't have ekshimik

    • @CanOner22
      @CanOner22 4 роки тому

      @@user-rw8vz7qe9c i live in Adrianoupoli we have here many dairy (γαλακτοκομείο) and we can trink a coffe

    • @user-rw8vz7qe9c
      @user-rw8vz7qe9c 4 роки тому

      @@CanOner22 Well obviously someone can make white cheese and use it by himself,no problem with that, but the original feta is a Greek invension.

    • @user-rw8vz7qe9c
      @user-rw8vz7qe9c 4 роки тому

      @Dua Lipa 👍👍👍

  • @DianeH2038
    @DianeH2038 Рік тому +1

    sheep's milk feta is the BEST!

  • @whizkybent
    @whizkybent 2 роки тому

    This video was amazing I'll let you know how it turns out

  • @onemelissa2003
    @onemelissa2003 4 роки тому

    Thank you. I love Feta!

  • @debracarriere9051
    @debracarriere9051 2 роки тому

    Concise; thank you.

  • @iysaw
    @iysaw 6 років тому +1

    You should make Chechil or Konya Obruk cheese!

  • @cannedstarfish6194
    @cannedstarfish6194 5 років тому +2

    I'm trying to make this at home, but I live in east asia, where sheep milk is technically avaliable but seriously overpriced, to the point that it's actually way cheaper to ship the cheese all the way from Greece. If I decide to use goat milk or cow milk, how much does it matter?

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  5 років тому +3

      Use cows milk with lipase added.

  • @lisalisa6613
    @lisalisa6613 3 роки тому

    I miss my mother for making cheese with combination of good quality white soft moist bread.

  • @ahmedelmoghazy5184
    @ahmedelmoghazy5184 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much Gavin, I did one and have a question, brine after 1 day became not clear is that normal?

  • @greeklovin83
    @greeklovin83 6 років тому

    Love all the videos Sir! Ever had Kasseri cheese? Would love a video on this!

  • @pokerbosscycler
    @pokerbosscycler 3 роки тому

    like apple pie, they must have feta cheese competitions . so many many styles.

  • @freeurmind2871
    @freeurmind2871 Рік тому +1

    I made this following your exact recipe but I didn’t get that clean break, all I got was curdled up pieces & continued the rest of the steps anyways but ended up with a weird tasting, salty block of nothingness. Tasted nothing like feta cheese at all. What did I do wrong??

  • @zacvillano946
    @zacvillano946 2 роки тому

    Ive been watching your videos for a while and looking to start making cheese on my own/with my dad. Growing up he would bring home Kalamata Olives and a hunk of Manouri cheese. Ive been searching for days, looking to find a video or recipe. Would you happen to have a recipe you would be willing to share? Would you ever consider doing a video?

  • @wolftronic1327
    @wolftronic1327 6 років тому +1

    Hi Gavin love your vids I just started getting into cheese making I was just wondering if you could tell me which one of these you would prefer liquid rennet or tablet rennet 👍

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  6 років тому +2

      I actually prefer liquid rennet. The reason is that because most home cheese makers tend to make smaller batches, liquid rennet can be scaled down a lot easier than can breaking up a rennet tablet.

    • @wolftronic1327
      @wolftronic1327 6 років тому +1

      Gavin Webber thanks

  • @SF-dd3tb
    @SF-dd3tb 2 роки тому

    I love it!

  • @61cheezil
    @61cheezil 2 роки тому

    Thanks for the comprehensive instructional vid, doesn't look easy to me tho!
    I've never been a cheese maker & just getting curious as always loved bought feta but never realised, checked or heard of the ingredients used (other than milk).
    So what are those other chemically sounding ingredients? (misophilic culture, calcium chloride, rennet etc)?

  • @thomasgronek6469
    @thomasgronek6469 Рік тому +1

    Great video, thank you. Calcium chloride for the brine. Pellets, or 30% solution ?

  • @meas7489
    @meas7489 5 років тому +2

    why my cheese turned to milk after 5 days all melted ,i fallowed your recipe step by step
    what could be wrong ? thanks

  • @faint7007
    @faint7007 6 років тому +4

    i watched this eating a block of greek feta

  • @bheppes
    @bheppes 6 років тому

    Had a lovely Goat’s Milk Cheddar today, you should try making some! 😊

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  6 років тому

      I just think I might Brett. Thanks for the suggestion!

  • @tbirdlouise
    @tbirdlouise 2 роки тому +1

    Do you keep the heat on with the whole process?

  • @josephlebleu7828
    @josephlebleu7828 3 роки тому

    Hey man, have followed you off and on for awhile now.
    I love Feta and was wandering if it could be stored at
    room temp safely, I feel doing so could give said cheese
    a true flavour profile and mouth feel.

  • @zeenasworld
    @zeenasworld 3 роки тому

    You did feta for me. Thanks. I am crazy for feta Bulgarian is my favorite. I go into a cheese coma when I eat it.

  • @mounadm25
    @mounadm25 3 роки тому +3

    hello from Morocco please how much does the 2 blocks of Feta weigh

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  3 роки тому +2

      About 1 kg

    • @mounadm25
      @mounadm25 3 роки тому

      @@GavinWebber thank you sir i will make it and i will s'endort you picture for a cheese i make

  • @j.m.992
    @j.m.992 6 років тому +3

    You're the Bob Ross of cheese

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  6 років тому

      Thanks, I've been told that a few times now.

  • @drew6195
    @drew6195 6 років тому

    have you ever considered using a sous vide machine to regulate your temperatures? I have been using a large canning pot to put my cheese pot inside of and using my sous vide machine to regulate my temperatures and achieving excellent results! I am currently aging a cheddar from your recipe.

  • @dannysquires5955
    @dannysquires5955 4 роки тому

    That style harp would work really good in stainless square vats

  • @PetraKann
    @PetraKann 3 роки тому +1

    Can you please explain what you mean by a 10% brine solution?
    250g of non iodised salt in 2L of water gives you a Brine concentration of almost 10%?????
    Are you assuming a high moisture content in the salt?
    If the moisture content of the salt is zero, the brine concentration is almost 12.5% even if you include the tablespoon of vinegar and teaspoon of CaCl2.

  • @yohananlau1620
    @yohananlau1620 4 роки тому +1

    Searching the recipe of cheese for hot weather like 27 to 28 Celsius.

  • @BarcelonaAustinA35
    @BarcelonaAustinA35 6 років тому

    Enjoyable! Will do it myself! No lipase?

  • @DasAlbatross
    @DasAlbatross 6 років тому +4

    You're gonna make me start making cheese and my wife and I are going to be so fat!

  • @ARSUMAN79
    @ARSUMAN79 4 роки тому

    Very good!

  • @stevene6181
    @stevene6181 6 років тому +4

    there arre 70million sheep in austrailia, how hard can it be?

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  6 років тому +2

      I know, right? Most are bred for wool, not milking

    • @graemeozzie2251
      @graemeozzie2251 5 років тому +1

      Sheep dairy in Australia had a brief flash in the pan from early 80's to around 1993. There were around 30 dairy's including some 1000 head rotaries, in the Riverina and at Cowra. It's now restricted to a hatfull of small boutique operations.

    • @graemeozzie2251
      @graemeozzie2251 5 років тому +1

      @@GavinWebber Gavin, I'll give u a call at some point to catch up. I'm on this feta video because I made some last night from about 14 litres of ewes milk. Wanted to have a squiz at how you did it. Still mucking around with sheep dairy.

    • @Mcfirefly2
      @Mcfirefly2 5 років тому

      I know...one of my family's favorite movies was "The Sundowners". I keep seeing the sheep jumping over each other, and the kangaroos jumping over the sheep, and the sheep station...

  • @machineheada
    @machineheada 5 років тому

    Dear Gavin, first of all thank you very much for your videos, time and support.
    About this feta cheese if i am going to use %70 of cows milk + %30 of ewe or goats milk. Do i still need to add lipase ? İf yes is it okay to add 1/8 tea spoon of lipase for 3 litre cow + 1 litre of goat or ewe milk.

  • @user-hj9fq9mc4v
    @user-hj9fq9mc4v Рік тому

    Please do not skimp. I have followed you from a period of time, I liked your good style and your beautiful, I wish God to be close to you to learn those cheeses.

  • @04paok
    @04paok 3 роки тому +2

    When you get the milk to 30 degrees, do you turn off the heat?

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  3 роки тому +2

      Yes

    • @04paok
      @04paok 3 роки тому +1

      Then from then on, you don’t put the fire back on? Great vid by the way... if you’ve had Greek feta in the past, which does yours come close too? Thanks mate

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  3 роки тому +2

      @@04paok apply heat when it drops by a few degrees to bring it back to target temperature

  • @eliopearlman1309
    @eliopearlman1309 2 роки тому +1

    Do you turn off the stove after the milk is pasteurized before adding the starter culture?

  • @jumakumajuma
    @jumakumajuma 6 років тому

    HI GAVIN , love your videos. Do you have a shop in Sydney

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  6 років тому

      No I don’t, and I live about 800km from Sydney 😉

  • @iCircleKi
    @iCircleKi 6 років тому +1

    I've been recommended to add lipase to this recipe. When might I add that to this recipe?

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  6 років тому

      I wouldn't. Goats milk is naturally high in lipase so if you added more it would be quite overpowering.

  • @brendamarshall-lewis5093
    @brendamarshall-lewis5093 2 роки тому

    Sorry happy safe and happy Christmas season

  • @ginadraper4093
    @ginadraper4093 2 роки тому

    Hi Gavin, can the curds be salted before you mould them, instead of brining?

  • @HEKuiper
    @HEKuiper 6 років тому +1

    If using raw milk, I can leave out the calcium chloride?

    • @GavinWebber
      @GavinWebber  6 років тому +1

      Yes you can

    • @piscesgirl730
      @piscesgirl730 6 років тому

      I use raw milk gavin and have made Feta maybe 6 times in the last 18mths, since I did a two day cheesemaking workshop in Nth qld Australia . I have found the only way it stores without marinating in oil is in a whey brine. I was using 120gms salt in 1 lt water with 5ml vinegar.didnt always work, some dissolved

  • @ArrogantBaSStard
    @ArrogantBaSStard 4 роки тому

    Hello, my mesophilic culture pouch says it can be used for “up to” two gallons of milk. Can I use the whole pouch, or do I need to still measure out the 1/8 tsp from the pouch? Thank you!