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Mozzarella
0.0/5 rating (0 votes)

  • Difficulty: Easy
  • Total Time: 60
  • When to Prep: While You Work
  • Cook Time: 15
  • Yields: 3 balls
  • Storage: Refrigerate
Mozzarella

Highly touted recipe from an All recipes member. 

What you need

¾ cup cool water, divided
1/4 teaspoon liquid rennet
1 ½ teaspoons citric acid
1 gallon raw milk
1 teaspoon salt (Optional)

Instructions

  1. Combine 1/4 cup water and rennet in a small bowl; mix well.
  2. Combine remaining 1/2 cup water and citric acid in another small bowl; mix until dissolved.
  3. Pour milk into a large pot set over medium heat. Stir in citric acid mixture. Heat milk, stirring occasionally, until it registers 90 degrees F (32 degrees C) on an instant-read thermometer, about 5 minutes.
  4. Remove milk from heat and stir in rennet mixture in a figure-8 motion for 30 seconds. Stir counterclockwise for 30 seconds to still the milk. Let stand, covered, until milk sets into curd, 5 to 10 minutes. Press edge of curd gently with a palette knife or the back of a spoon to check for firmness.
  5. Slice vertically into the pot to cut curd into 3/4-inch cubes with a palette knife. Stir curds gently, but leave cubes mostly intact.
  6. Return pot to the heat; cook over medium heat, stirring curds gently, until temperature reaches 109 degrees F (43 degrees C), about 5 minutes. Remove from heat.
  7. Ladle curds into a colander set over a large bowl using a slotted spoon. Press curds gently to extract liquid whey. Pour drained whey back into the pot.
  8. Heat whey to 185 degrees F (85 degrees C), about 5 minutes. Wearing gloves, tear off a piece of curd and place on a slotted spoon. Dip curd into hot whey for 5 to 10 seconds. Stretch, fold, and knead curd. Repeat until mozzarella is smooth and elastic. Knead in salt and form curd into a ball. Repeat dipping and kneading process with remaining curd.
  9. Allow mozzarella to cool. Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and transfer to the refrigerator.

NOTES:

Do not use ultra-high temperature processed (UHT) milk. Regular pasteurized milk will work, but raw milk is best.

At the end of step 7, you may place your curds in a plastic bag and store both the curds and the whey in the refrigerator for 2 to 3 days before continuing the process. If you want a softer-textured, moist mozzarella, do not let the curd get as firm and work less when stretching and kneading. You can speed up the cooling process in step 9 by placing mozzarella balls in an ice-water bath.

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