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Homemade Cottage Cheese, 1839 Style

In 1839, making cottage cheese was just a matter of leaving raw milk sit out until it formed curds, then strain overnight.

First, let me say that this won’t work unless you have raw milk available to you. The reason is that raw milk never really goes “bad,” it just sours. You can use it months after it’s left the cow (properly handled, of course). Pasteurized milk, on the other hand, has had its molecular structure altered, and because of that it doesn’t ever sour, it putrefies. This means if it goes bad, it’s not edible. I know, I know, this happenstance eliminates the possibility for many to make cottage cheese using this method, but it’s still interesting to see how people made food 175 years ago.

But if you do have access to raw milk, this makes a wonderful creamy cottage cheese that I love. It’s creamier than store-bought cottage cheese, and the “lumps” are very small. The flavor is a combination of cottage cheese, sour cream, and cream cheese. It doesn’t taste like store-bought cottage cheese because the store-bought stuff is cultured, which gives it a specific flavor. You can make cultured cottage cheese at home, too, if you purchase the culture from an outside source, but this recipe allows you to make your own like folks made it at home long ago. And, it’s easy as pie!

INGREDIENTS & HOW-TO

  • 1/2 gallon raw milk
  • salt (optional)
  • butter (optional)

Raw milk forms curds on its own after it sits in a warm location for several hours.

Take your milk out of the refrigerator and set it in a warm corner (room temperature or higher) until curds form, which will take between 12 and 24 hours, depending upon the temperature of your room. You’ll see the curd development easily as the curds will separate naturally from the whey, as seen at right.

Once the curds form, strain them overnight, making sure not to press them. This can be done in different ways. I took a colander and placed it inside a larger bowl, and then poured my curds into a jelly bag. I left the jelly bag sit in the colander in the refrigerator overnight (you don’t need to refrigerate it). If you don’t have a jelly bag, you can just line your colander with a kitchen towel. Or if you don’t want to save your whey, you can secure a jelly bag or towel (tied at the ends) to the kitchen sink spigot and just let it drip into the sink.

The next day, turn your cottage cheese into a clean bowl. At this point you can choose to add more cream if you want it super creamy (I don’t find this necessary), butter for additional richness, or salt or spices to taste. I like it plain, myself. I just dump the cheese into a bowl and call it good.

I eat my cottage cheese with fruit and nuts, and I use it in recipes for things like homemade ranch dressing, dips, or anywhere I’d use cream cheese, sour cream, or sometimes plain yogurt. It has a wonderful flavor, and is so easy to make that I use cottage cheese in many ways. It is really only limited by your imagination!

Note: The references for this came from  the 1839 publication, “The Kentucky Housewife,” by Mrs. Lettice Bryan. The original text reads: “Take a large bowl of milk* that is just beginning to turn sour, cover it and set it in the corner where it will keep lukewarm till if forms a curd. Then place a linen cloth over a sieve; put in your curd, fold over the corners of the cloth to keep out the dust, and let it drain till next morning, without pressing it in the least. Then turn it in an earthen dish, add as much rich, sweet cream as will make it a little soft; add a large spoonful of butter to each pint of the curd, mixing it in a very little salt, and work it with a spoon till th whole is very smoothly mixed. Then put it in a china bowl, and set it in a cool place till the tea-table is ready.”

 

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Windsor Dairy, Colorado

A calf, and future produced of my raw milk.

I’m a huge believer in raw milk. But this spin isn’t on the benefits of raw milk or the recent demonization of raw milk by agribusiness, it’s about a dairy in northern Colorado that provides excellent raw milk, meat, and eggs to their shareholders. I am a herd owner in this dairy, and I’m pleased that the herd share I’ve purchased is in good hands.

Windsor Dairy is owned by two moo vets: board certified dairy veterinarians Dr. Meg Cattell and Dr. Arden Nelson. Their dairy is the only licensed, Grade A certified-organic dairy in the area, and their cattle are all grass-fed. Meg and Arden work to develop a herd of cattle that is adapted to the local environment near the Colorado Rockies. They’ve chosen cows that are adapted to conditions in the Alps (the Brown Swiss and Tarentaise), and graze them on over 1,000 acres of native grassland.

Potential herd shareowners are required to tour the dairy before buying into the herd; this is just one way Meg and Arden ensure a transparent interaction between owners and the animals. If I wanted, I could drive up to the dairy today and check things out, including watching cows being milked. It’s really a fascinating process to watch, and the attention to cleanliness can’t be beat.

Without a doubt, I trust the quality, safety, and taste of Windsor Dairy raw milk over any other milk, hands down. (And, no, they have no idea I’m writing this about them…no kick-backs here!). Every week they test their milk for pathogens — including Listeria, E coli 0157H7, Salmonella, and Campylobacter — at a USDA-certified food safety lab. Mass-produced milk is not held to this high a standard.

Windsor Dairy supplies more than just great-tasting raw milk that beats the pants off of mass-produced milk in taste, nutrition and safety. The dairy supplies eggs from free-range, certified-organic chicken flocks; a variety of delicious cheeses made on-site from their milk; beef; pastured pork; and grass-fed, pastured lamb. They are also working towards building their goat herd for goat milk shares in the future. I’ll look forward to that as another source of raw milk, which I’ll use for cooking, drinking, cheese-making, and soap-making.

If you have stories of a local raw-milk dairy in your area, please share them in the comments!

 
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Posted by on January 30, 2012 in Farm Profile

 

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