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Making Cheese at Home: A Round-up of Cheese-Making Kits

2008_08_13-CheesemakingKits.jpgMaking cheese at home is something that we've been wanting to try for years. Now that we've gotten our feet wet with homemade paneer, we think we're finally ready to take the plunge. Who wants to join us?!

Click through for a round-up of the cheese-making kits we've been shopping...

 
 

We're thinking that mozzarella is the place to start. If all goes well, we can always work our way up to harder cheeses!

Ricki's Cheesemaking Kit: This kit is from the Cheese Queen Ricki Carroll in Ashfield, Massachusetts. Her workshops and small business have receive numerous recommendations from both bloggers and national magazines, and she was also featured in Barbara Kingsolver's book, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. The kit includes a thermometer, butter muslin, citric acid, vegetable rennet tables (enough for 30 recipes), flake salt, and a recipe booklet.

• Ricki's Cheesemaking Kit is $24.95 from the New England Cheesemaking Supply Company.

Mozzarella Cheese Kit from Leener's: We've blogged about Leener's before--it's one of our new favorite supply stores for lots of foodie DIY projects. Their kit includes thermometer, cheese cloth, vegetable rennet, mild lipase powder, citric acid, cheese salt, calcium chloride and instructions. The product blurb says that this one only makes about 7 batches of mozzarella for a total of 7 pounds.

• This mozzarella cheese kit is $24.95 from Leener's.

Mozzarella and Ricotta Cheese Kit from the Cheese Supply: This is one that kept coming up at the top of our internet searches. The kit includes a dairy thermometer, butter muslin, citric acid, vegetable rennet tablets, flake salt, and a 4-page Recipe Booklet.

• This mozzarella cheese kit is $37.45 from the Cheese Supply.

Honestly, all our searching led us to believe that most cheese making kits are pretty comparable, both in terms of kit contents and the price. Most kits included vegetable (rather than animal) rennet tablets; if this is something that is important to you, definitely double check the kind of rennet before buying.

We're off to order ours today! We'll see you in a few weeks to share our results.

Any advice on kits to buy or things to be prepared for?

Related: 360-Degrees of Cheese: Virtual Creamery Tour

(Image: Flickr member smcgee licensed under Creative Commons)

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Cheese, supplies, cheese making, mozzarella, homemade, kits

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Comments (6)

I made sheep's milk ricotta without the use of rennet. It's pretty simple.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/art_chel/sets/72157606337667093/

posted by art on 2008-08-13 14:13:37
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I'm excited to see your results. This would be a great birthday idea for my boyfriend.

posted by skreinking on 2008-08-13 14:29:45
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I have Ricki's cheese making kit, and it works pretty well - I've only tried the monzorella though, not the ricotta. The kit includes a recipe booklet that not only tells you how to make the cheese, but also gives some good recipes for using up the way (is that how it's spelled?), including bread and pizza dough.

posted by Rosie on 2008-08-13 14:51:01
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whey... I believe.

posted by burrda2000 on 2008-08-13 18:00:45
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I think Ricki's instructions are not thorough or clear. After doing it once, I get it, but it was really poorly written directions.

posted by Tazer on 2008-08-13 18:07:41
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I got Ricki's kit a few weeks ago and have to agree with Tazer. The mozzarella came out fine but there was a bit of trial-and-error. The instructions on her website (which include pictures) are a little easier to follow.

posted by Noodler on 2008-08-14 12:57:05
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