Making Provolone... Ending Up With Feta?
For my first attempt at "real" cheesemaking I tried the provolone recipe out of Ricki Carroll's Home Cheese Making. She is to home cheesemaking what Charlie Papazian is to homebrewing. I say that not only as a great compliment but also to suggest that both write books more for the casual reader than someone interested in perfecting the craft. Home Cheese Making makes cheese making sound very easy and fun, much like The Complete Joy of Homebrewing does for brewing, but it also tends to be less detailed/technical/precise.
The recipe was relatively simple, acidify the milk with a bacterial culture, add lipase enzyme for a sharper flavor, curdle with rennet (an enzyme derived for a young cow's stomach), slice the curd, cook the curd, separate the curd from the whey, stretch the curd, form the cheese, brine the cheese, age the cheese. Sadly, my results weren't up to snuff, so no point in going into too much detail on the fine details of each step.
While making the two page recipe I counted at least four errors/omissions. First it calls to dilute 1/4 tsp of rennet in 1/4 tsp of water (while every other recipe in the book calls for diluting the rennet in 1/4 cup of water). Second, in the 7th step it says "you are ready to slice your curd into _ inch slices". Third, step 9 ends with putting the cheese into ice water, while step 10 starts with removing it from a brine (how long the cheese should be in the brine isn't mentioned). There are also just places where the math doesn't make sense, for example they suggest going from 97 to 144 in 45 minutes, at about 2-3 degrees every 5 minutes... not much chance of getting a 47 degree increase in 45 minutes when increasing the temp by less than 1 degree per minute.
In the end my provolone came out more like feta (crumbly and rather salty). I'm not sure if the issue was not diluting the rennet enough (the curd never got as firm as I have seen it in videos), or some other process mistake I made along the way, but the cheese never stretched like it was supposed to. The flavor is fine, but nowhere near what I was aiming for. I understand brewing well enough that I can use a good book with poor editing (like Radical Brewing) and still make great beer because I know the basic process pretty well. I just barely grasp the basics of cheesemaking so I am following the recipe exactly as it is written, any editing mistakes included.
I have the ingredients and tools to make a batch of Camembert, so I'll give the book a second chance just in case this recipe (or something I did) was an aberration.