LUCY BURDETTE: I
attended a seminar on making mozzarella at the Restaurant Store in Key
West this fall. (And by the way, if you visit Key West and are a foodie and/or cook, you will be thrilled to find this store!) Mozzarella Mark is a cheese specialist and we all enjoyed
watching the cheese emerge from the brine, and then sampling the fresh
cheese and the various ways he put it together.
(I wanted to let you guys know that I don't really expect you to make this mozzarella. You could but I don't expect it.)
One of the problems with my translation is that I was chatting with a friend during the class and didn't pay close, close attention. (Oh my gosh, this sounds so much like my college career.) And then the more I studied Mark's recipe, and the more I thought about the
quantities of ingredients he pulls together, the more I thought you
should buy your fresh mozzarella, LOL, and then use it to make delicious
dishes. But I'll show you how he did it, and then you can decide.
Ingredients:
Boiling water
5 pounds curd Salted water Break the five pounds of curd up into little pieces:
Gradually add boiling water, but not too much or you'll kill the curd:
Gather the cheese into a mass, stretching edges, lifting and pulling: Cut portions into balls and soak them in brine for 12 to 17 minutes: Wouldn't he make the best character ever?? He looks so suspicious... You can tell from the recipes I've presented over the years that I use mozzarella unlocked. To read my recipe for pesto, tomato, and fresh cheese pizza click here. Or the easiest fresh pasta sauce in the world click here. But the bottom line is try with all your might to avoid the rubbery supermarket mozzarella. Fresh out of the pan the way Mark makes is best, but in the fresh cheese section of your food market, you can find BelGioioso brand, which I like quite well.
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Our town-owned organic farm offered a cheesemaking course a few years ago, and I went and had a great time (I actually purchased rennet and whatever the other thing I need is--both of which are still waiting patiently in my fridge). We ended up with cheese, which was easy to make and delicious. Everyone should try it!
ReplyDeleteFresh mozzarella is amazing! It's so yummy and buttery tasting.
ReplyDeleteLike fresh ricotta. You hardly recognize that it's the same thing as that blah regular stuff.
Just watch out for fresh mozzarella on pizza-it can be rather wet and make the pie soggy.
Oh, yes, I play with 5 pounds of curds every day. Uh huh! Actually, it would be great to be able to make the fresh stuff at home. But I guess I probably won't be doing that anytime soon. It does sound very yummy!
ReplyDeleteThere are few things more creamy and buttery than fresh mozzarella, but we have to agree that it's far easier to buy it, especially when there's an Italian butcher shop and a pork store mere blocks away, and both make execellent cheese. Now that I've seen your salad, Lucy, I might just go for a walk.
ReplyDelete~ Cleo
Yum, yum! Say cheese! My kind of girl.
ReplyDeleteDaryl/ Avery
Fresh Mozzarella is the bomb.
ReplyDeleteSounds yummy! Thank you!
ReplyDelete