fresh mozzarella

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My first attempt at making mozzarella was a miserable failure. I was overly optimistic. I started with 5 gallons of milk and ended up with 5 pounds of ricotta. It was fine ricotta, but it wasn't the pasta filata that I had hoped for. My family ate lots of lasagna that week. 

My second attempt produced the same results. Ditto for the third. And the fourth.

I was obviously missing a piece of the puzzle. The recipe that I used was from a reliable source, complete with detailed, step-by-step instructions, but I could not make it past the second step where rennet was added to the inoculated milk. At this point, it was supposed to coagulate into a solid mass and separate from the whey, instead it formed small curds that would not "spin" or melt together. I tried different types of inoculants from citric acid to buttermilk to yogurt. I tried varying the amount of rennet. I tried different brands of milk–all to no avail. I'm not easily discouraged, but even I know when to let sleeping dogs lie.

I decided that it was time to revisit the mozz when a unique application recently caught my interest. More on that later. After further research, I found the missing piece: raw milk. While I found many accounts of mozzarella being successfully made from homogenized and pasteurized milk, I went directly to the source: real milk, straight from the cow, unhomogenized and unpasteurized. 

The real advantage of making fresh mozzarella from raw milk is that I can produce a product that is superior to anything that I can buy in terms of flavor, texture, and nutritional content. On a socioeconomic  level, it allows me to lighten my carbon footprint while supporting local farms. An added perk of raw milk is that in the summer, when cows graze on fresh grass and clover, the milk is rich, buttery, and yellow…pure sunshine.
Fresh mozzarella
yields about one pound
1 gallon raw milk
3 Tblsps plain yogurt
3 Tblsps buttermilk
1/2 tablet rennet

Step 1: Inoculation
Pour the milk into a large stainless steel pan. Set over medium heat and bring to 32C (89F). While milk is warming, stir together the yogurt and buttermilk. Add about 1/4 cup of milk from pan and blend well. Cover the pan and maintain the temperature at 32C for 10 minutes to allow the live cultures and bacteria to activate.
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Step 2: Coagulation
While the milk is activating, dissolve the rennet in 1/4 cup of tepid water. Stir the dissolved rennet into the milk gently, but quickly. Cover the pan and set aside, undisturbed, for 2-3 hours in a warm, protected place until it coagulates into a solid mass that will pull away from the side of the pan. 
Note: I place the pan in a large bowl of warm water and monitor the temperature of the water, maintaining it at 32C. It is important to not disturb the curd while it is coagulating.
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Step 3: Cutting the curd
After 2 hours, check the curd for a clean break by poking a finger into the coagulated curd and lifting. If the curd does not break cleanly, allow it to sit, undisturbed until it does. Be patient.
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When a clean break is achieved, cut the curd with a long, thin knife into 1/2" cubes. Stir the cut curds gently, breaking up any large curds.
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Set the pan over medium heat and bring the temperature up to 36C (97F) with constant, gentle stirring. The curds will continue to break up.
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Step 4: Acidification.
In order for the curd to spin, or melt together and stretch, it must be acidified to a PH of about 5.3. To achieve this, cover the pan tightly and set aside in a warm place for 8-10 hours. After 8 hours, check to see if it will spin by removing a walnut-sized piece of curd and dropping it into a bowl of water at 71C (160F). When it is lifted out and pulled, it should stretch without breaking. If it breaks, allow the curds to acidify further.
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Step 5: Melting
Once the curds spin, heat a half gallon of water to 71C (160F). Drain the acidified curds in a colander (reserve a quart of the whey to make a brine if you will not be consuming the mozzarella immediately). Break up the mass of curds and place into a large bowl. Pour the hot water over the curds.
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Allow them to soften for a few minutes, stirring gently, until they begin to melt.
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Step 6: Molding
When the curds melt and fuse together, pull off a lemon-sized piece and with two hands, pull and stretch like taffy. Fold it onto itself and continue the stretching and folding until it is smooth, glossy, and elastic. If it begins to stiffen while working, let it soften in the hot water before molding.
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Roll the sheet of stretched curd upon itself, working it into a smooth ball.
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If you do not intend to consume the mozzarella immediately (I recommend that you do), the balls can be stored for up to two days in brine. 
To make a brine: dissolve 1/4 cup of salt in 1 cup of hot water. Mix in the reserved quart of whey. Cool.

13 thoughts on “fresh mozzarella

  1. Wow! This is indeed very very foodie! Making your own mozzarella! Unhomogenized and unpasteurized? You are the new Brave! Congratulations and thank you for the write-up! I may gather some guts to make myself some mozzarella too…

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  2. OMGWOW. That is awesome. I’ve watched someone make raw milk mozz before…and then I got to eat it. It really is wonderful. I’d like to try this someday, when I’m back in my home kitchen.

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  3. this is great! I’ll love to try my hands on this one, especially after you mentioned “a product that is superior to anything that I can buy in terms of flavor, texture, and nutritional content”. now i have to crack my brains on where to get raw milk from the part of the world i live!

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  4. You are my hero. First of all, kudos to you for finding raw milk. Secondly, wow! I am so impressed by your ambition! One day, I might just try this. That’s when I find a good farm!

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  5. thank you!
    we have a raw milk share and get from 2 to 6 gallons per week- way more than 5 people can consume! we’ve tried making mozz about 3 times this summer, all 3 times with barely-edible results. (but the ricotta turned out great!) i’m going to try your recipe, here’s hoping for some better cheese!!

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  6. What an stunningly beautiful blog you have. I’m impressed with the raw milk mozz. The Extension agents in our county would be running around hysterically waving their arms if they knew people were making raw milk Mozz. Our state permits the sale of raw milk aged cheeses- but mozz is a no no.
    Best wishes.

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  7. The secret to using homo / Pasturized milk is adding a few drops of Calcium Chloride to it. It helps the curde develop a lot better.

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  8. Helena, may I ask why you think this is so brave? This is the way of life. Well, that is, before chemicals were brought to the mix so they could make more money. You have to remember, real milk (fresh milk, otherwise known as RAW milk which isn’t really raw, since milk wasn’t meant to be cooked unless you didn’t want any real or natural nutrients) actually lasts longer (doesn’t spoil as fast) when it sits out for a few days unlike milk purchased from a store that has been homogenized or pasturized or ultra pasturized. Real milk has all the nutrients in it that one needs. If you want vitamin D, get your tush outside for 15 minutes(whatever intervals you would like). In addition to all the health benefits, you get to save yourself some hard earned $$! And talk about flavor! OMG! No additives, preservatives etc! ALL NATURAL wholesome goodness AND flavor! 🙂 Just make sure your farmer has good hygiene for his dairy farm. Thats it…

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  9. actually adding calcium adds no benefit to fresh mozzarella. the milk sheds calcium as you heat it for stretch, the less calcium with mozzarella, the better. as far as raw milk goes you should still do a low temp pasteurization at 145 for 30 minutes. kills the bad bugs.

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