Cheshire Cheese Recipe (2024)

Cheshire Cheese Recipe (1)

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Cheshire is one of Britain's oldest and finest cheeses and was almost lost in history. This is still considered to be one of the finest cheeses ever made in England but is only made by a select number of small scale traditional farms. Cheshire is know for its deep yellow to orange hue. Often times, the only way taste this wonderful cheese is to make it in your own kitchen.

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (2)

    Yield

    4 Pounds

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (3)

    Aging Time

    ~2 Months

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (4)

    Skill Level

    Advanced

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (5)

    Author

    Jim Wallace

Ingredients

Ingredients

  • 4 Gallons of Milk (Not UltraPasteurized)
  • 1 Packet C101 Mesophilic Culture or 3/8 tsp MA11 Culture
  • 1 tsp Single Strength Liquid Rennet
  • 1-2 tsp Annatto Cheese Coloring
  • 1-2 oz Cheese Salt
Equipment

  • Good Thermometer
  • Knife to Cut Curds
  • Spoon or ladle to Stir Curds
  • E28 Stainless Steel Cheese Mold
  • Cheese Press
  • Butter Muslin
  • Cheese Wax (optional)

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Instructions

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (8)

    Acidify & Heat Milk

    Begin by heating the 4 gallons of milk to 86-88°F (30-31°C). Higher temp for higher fat milk.

    You can do this best by placing the pot of milk in a larger pot or sink of very warm water. If you do this in a pot on the stove, make sure you heat the milk slowly and stir it well as it heats.

    Once the milk is at proper temperature the culture can be added.

    1 pack of C101 Mesophilic Culture or 3/8 tsp MA11 (same as Cheddar) for fresh farm milk but increase this to 1/2 tsp if using pasteurized milk from the store.

    Ripen 40-60 minutes. This is ripened less than Cheddar.

    To prevent the powder from caking and sinking in clumps, sprinkle the powder over the surface of the milk and then allow about 2 minutes for the powder to re-hydrate before stirring it in.

    Once the culture has been mixed in well, the color can be added. This is an extract from the Annatto tree. For a full color Cheshire, about 8-12 ml of the color should be added to the milk. It is best to mix this in a small volume of milk and then add that to the full batch.

    This will not appear to be very dark, but since the color is held in the curd, the color will darken through the process as whey is released and the color concentrates. This initial milk/curd will be a nice golden color. (I will be posting a more detailed page on coloring cheese in the near future).

    Make sure the color is stirred in for 10-15 min before adding rennet.

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (9)

    Coagulate with Rennet

    Then add about 5 ml (1 tsp) of single strength liquid rennet diluted in 1/4 cup water.

    The milk now needs to sit quiet for 60 minutes while the culture works and the rennet coagulates the curd . The thermal mass of this milk should keep it warm during this period. It is OK if the temp drops a few degrees during this time.

    At 20 minutes you should note a thickening of the milk, but wait a full hour before cutting.

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (10)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (11)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (12)

    Cut & Cook Curds

    The curd can now be cut to 1/2-3/4 inch pieces and stirred briefly before allowing it to settle for 5 minutes.

    Over the next 60 minutes stir intermittently while heating slowly over 60 minutes to 88-90°F.

    Over the next 30 minutes, the curd is allowed to settle to the bottom of the vat (pitch) limiting the moisture loss while a slow acidification of the lactose takes place.

    This last 90 minutes was a slow stir and settle to keep moisture loss to a minimum and thus keeping a moister curd than with the Cheddar process but it does allow the bacteria acid production to continue in the best environment.

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (13)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (14)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (15)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (16)

    Remove the Whey

    Now a colander or perforated pan is lined with a draining cloth and the curds are transferred to this for the whey separation. The curd mass is wrapped in the draining cloth and weighted with 8-12 lbs to help consolidate the curds for 10-15 minutes.

    Following this, it is broken into large cubes of 3-4"and turned every 10 min (5-6 times). It is kept warm while it continues to drain.

    Continue with this for 2-3 hours while the acid continues to develop and the whey drains freely from the broken blocks of curd. Open the cloth and turn the curds several times to increase the whey drainage.

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (17)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (18)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (19)

    Salt & Form Curds

    The curd can now be broken into 1/2-3/4 inch pieces and salted. My final curd weight was 4.25 lbs and I used about 1.75 oz of salt to slow the bacteria and flush the final whey.

    Notice in the photos above how much darker the curd has become.

    Once the salt is absorbed the cheese is transferred to a cloth lined mold (I am using the 6 inch stainless mold for this cheese here) BUT NO WEIGHT is added now.

    This also is a major departure from the Cheddar process. The forms should be turned occasionally as they drain and are kept overnight in a warm place at a temperature between 75-80°F.

    I achieve the warm phase by placing the form filled with curds back into the pot and water bath and keeping the temperature of the outer pot around 80°F.

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (20)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (21)

    Pressing

    The next morning the cheese is removed from the forms, re-wrapped in cloth, and placed in a press.

    It will be pressed slowly for about 2 days and turned daily while in the press. The weight begins light at about 12-20 lbs and is increased gradually until finally it reaches about 150 pounds in a 6 inch diameter form. With each change in press weight, unwrap the cheese, turn and re-wrap.

  • Cheshire Cheese Recipe (22)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (23)

    Cheshire Cheese Recipe (24)

    Finishing & Aging

    The cheese is removed from the press, dried and wrapped with a bandage or waxed. It is cured on shelves in a curing room at temperature of 55-60°F. Notice in the photo here how dark the color has become compared to the earlier stages of the process.

    This early-ripening cheese may be cured for as short a time as 3 weeks (I find 5-6 weeks better). The medium-ripening type is cured for about 2 months, and the late ripening type is cured for at least 10 weeks and often for 8 to 10 months. The longer curing period improves the cheese.

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Cheshire Cheese Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is special about Cheshire cheese? ›

Product details. Appleby's Cheshire cheese is a unique, complex Cheshire, with a crumbly texture and a zesty, full-bodied and tangy flavour. Cheshire is in fact Britain's oldest cheese, having been made since before Roman times. It was recorded in the Doomsday Book of 1086.

What are the ingredients in Cheshire cheese? ›

Pasteurised Cows Milk, Salt, Vegetarian Rennet, Penicillium Roqueforti, Dairy Cultures.

What does Cheshire cheese go with? ›

11 Cheshire Cheese Recipes I Can't Resist
  • Meat. • 1 Cheshire cheese & ham on toast. ...
  • Seafood. • 1 Cheshire cheese and smoked salmon quiche.
  • Produce. • 1 Buttermilk scones with cheshire cheese and chives. ...
  • Condiments. • 1 Cheshire cheese melt with apple and red onion relish, Organic.
  • Bread & Baked Goods. ...
  • Dairy. ...
  • Desserts.

What is the difference between Cheddar and Cheshire cheese? ›

The primary difference in these 3 is the milk quality (time of year), the final moisture in the cheese determining aging potential. Cheshire is a cheese characterized by its moist, crumbly texture and mild, salty taste. While some consider it a form of Cheddar, it is quite different both in texture and taste.

Why is Cheshire cheese hard to find? ›

Cheshire Cheese experienced competition with other farmhouse cheeses. Popularity decreased during the last century and demands to change the texture of the cheese during wartime further reduced the number of producers. It can be difficult to find the different cheese varieties.

Can you still get Cheshire cheese? ›

Appleby's is one of the only raw milk, clothbound, farmhouse Cheshire still in production, despite this once being the most famous of all British cheeses.

Does Cheshire cheese melt well? ›

A good place to start, Lightbody suggests, are “those slightly forgotten territorial or place-name cheeses from around the UK”, such as cheshire. Designed to be eaten relatively young, they have higher acidity and moisture, which as we now know result in a nice melt.

What does Cheshire cheese taste like? ›

Cheshire cheese has a slightly salty flavor, owing to the characteristics of the area's soil, which has a high concentration of underlying bedrock salt. The salt and minerals make their way into the cheese via the grass eaten by the cherished cows which graze the region.

What is traditional Cheshire cheese? ›

Cheshire cheese is usually white or red in colour but there is also a blue Cheshire. The distinctive flavour of Cheshire cheese is due to salt springs which run under much of the pasture land. These give the milk, hence the cheese, a slightly salty tang, which is still a characteristic of Cheshire cheese today.

Why can't i buy Cheshire cheese? ›

Demand for the Cheshire Cheese Company's products soared in 2021, with managing director Simon Spurrell claiming the country went 'cheese mad' after lockdown. But he warns that soaring costs are contributing towards a major cheese shortage for the country.

How long does Cheshire cheese last in the fridge? ›

Most of our cheese will last up to 3 months if kept in the fridge. We have to include compulsory BBE dates, but this is not a true indication of the lifetime and quality of the cheese.

Is Cheshire cheese similar to feta? ›

Swap Greek Feta for Crumbly Cheshire.

The lightness and tanginess of Feta is actually very similar to Cheshire Cheese. Crumbly Cheshire cheese is a mild, young cheese with a lot less salt than feta.

Is Cheshire cheese hard or soft? ›

Cheshire cheese is dense and semi-hard, and is defined by its moist, crumbly texture and mild, salty taste. Industrial versions tend to be drier and less crumbly, more like a mild Cheddar cheese, as this makes them easier to process than cheese with the traditional texture.

Is Cheshire cheese strong? ›

Cheshire is a semi-hard, crumbly cheese. The cheese I tried had a full taste, but was not overpowering.

Is Cheshire cheese hard? ›

Cheshire is a hard cheese with a light, flaky texture and salty-sweet flavour said to be due to salt under the soil (which can be detected in the Cheshire area by the suffix 'wich' to the names of towns, e.g. Nantwich, where the famous Midlands cheese-show is held).

What type of cheese is Cheshire? ›

It is a dry cheese with an pale orange color since it is organically dyed with annatto. The texture of Cheshire is a bit drier than Cheddar, but it is crumbly like Cheddar.

What is the most loved cheese in the world? ›

You might even think it's Ricotta. But you'd be wrong. Today, the most popular cheese in the world is… Mozzarella.

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