Farmhouse cheddar is one of the easiest ways to preserve milk and the tradition of making it goes back centuries. These days, due to selective breeding, cows produce 14+ gallons of milk a day.
Even in the 18th century, a milk cow would still produce around 3 gallons of milk per day for a family’s use. Generally, cows were in milk from April to November, and cheesemaking is a great way to store surplus summer production for winter use.
My family has been making soft cheeses for the better part of a decade now, and they’re a normal part of our weekly routine. Even now as I write this, my husband is in the kitchen preparing a homemade mozzarella while our 3-year-old daughter eagerly waits for the first taste.
Hard cheeses are the obvious next step, but generally, they involve expensive equipment, namely a cheese press. Since cheesemaking is a niche hobby, there are only a few manufacturers, and prices are steep. There are a number of inexpensive cheese presses out there, ranging from as little as $40 to around $120 each.
Good options include:
- All Hardwood Cheese Press ~ This provides the basic framework for pressing cheese, but you’ll need a cheese mold for shaping the cheese and weights to place on top (milk jugs filled with water work for small amounts of weight).
- Simple Cheese Press with Cheese Mold ~ This one includes the cheese mold for about $40, and all you’ll need is something heavy to set on top to apply weight. I’ve personally used this one and it works just fine as a budget option.
- Stainless Steel Cheese Press ~ This one is designed to press anything, including cheese, fruit (for homemade wine), and herbal tinctures. For use with cheese, I’d suggest the largest model which holds 1.6 gallons of liquid (or the curds from several gallons of milk). It’s about $100, so a bit more than the other two, but more multi-purpose and you won’t need to find weights since it’s a screw-top model.
The simple inexpensive cheese press I’m using below is a screw-top model, but made from plastic. They don’t make it anymore, but a higher quality all stainless steel version costs about the same (around $100) and should last a lifetime. Professional cheese presses cost $300 to $500.
At roughly 1/3 the price of most of the others on the market, this one gets the job done nicely without breaking the bank. My 3-year-old cheese assistant was able to operate it just fine, which really says something about the ease of use.
Beginner Farmhouse Cheddar Recipe
Now that we have the press, the next step is finding a hard cheese to test it out.
I’ve seen a number of farmhouse cheddar recipes, and the recipes are often pretty exacting. Very specific temperatures, curd sizes, pressing weights, and aging methods. It can be a bit intimidating for a beginner.
Then I came across this video made by the Townsends, a supplier of 18th-century gear for reenactors. The woman heats the curds by the woodstove in a giant tub, measures the temperature with her finger, and spends plenty of time shooing away stray flies. The cheese is pressed without any mention of weights, on an old antique crank press.
Now that’s more my speed!
The trick now is to turn a video into a simple recipe for the home cheesemaker.
She starts with a rather large batch of 5 gallons of milk, which would make quite a bit of cheese. Most home cheese presses are only equipped to handle 1.5 to 2 pounds of curds for hard cheese. While you can make your own gigantic cheese press, I’m going to scale this down a bit for practicality.
Her directions are vague, add a small handful of salt, which she estimates is 2 to 3 tablespoons. This results in a relatively salty cheese with a dry texture, ideal for grating like parmesan. The extra salt means the cheese will keep better, even with less than perfect temperature control.
If you’re using pasteurized milk, instead of farm-fresh raw milk, it’s important to add about a bit of cultured buttermilk to put the good bacteria back into the milk. This recipe has no added cultures, and is simply relying on the natural bacteria in raw milk, thus “farmstead cheddar.”
If you are using raw milk, modern recommendations are that the cheese is allowed to age for at least 60 days so that the “good” bacteria can out-compete any nasty pathogens that might be present. It’s rare with propper dairy hygiene, but this recipe calls for a minimum of 2-3 months of aging anyway.
Here in Central Vermont, there’s no shortage of raw milk suppliers, and many farms will actually sell you bulk jugs (4 gallons) at half price. It saves them on jar washing and packaging, and cheesemakers being good loyal dairy customers, get a bit of a break on the price.
Farmhouse Cheddar Equipment & Ingredient List
If you’re new to cheesemaking, I’d suggest reading this beginner’s guide to cheesemaking at home before you begin. I walk you through the equipment and basic process in detail there, which will allow you to make this farmhouse cheddar as well as all manner of other homemade cheeses.
- Fine Cheesecloth (90 grade)
- Collander or Fine Mesh Strainer
- Slotted Spoon
- Cheese Press
- Rennet
- Cheese Salt or Canning Salt (Non-Iodized)
- Liquid Calcium Chloride (for pasteurized milk)
- Buttermilk or Buttermilk starter cultures (for pasteurized milk)
- 2 Gallons Fresh Milk (ideally, raw farm-fresh milk)
How to Make Farmstead Cheddar
Start by placing the milk on the stove and heating it up to “about blood warm.” You can test this with your finger, and ideally, the milk would be roughly as warm as your skin with clean hands. She mentions that you’re shooting for about 85 degrees F on a thermometer, which is slightly less than skin temperature.
In my house mid-winter, the best way to do this is to place the jars of raw milk right by the stove to come up to temperature. Placing them in a pot of water and surrounding it with scalding hot water in the sink is also a good option, or very gentle heating on the stove works too.
If you’re using pasteurized milk, add one quart of cultured buttermilk for every 5 gallons of pasteurized milk. Or, just under one cup of buttermilk for each gallon of milk. If you’re using raw farm-fresh milk, it’s a live food full of the right cultures for making this farmhouse cheddar naturally.
The rennet she’s using in this recipe is a commercial single-strength rennet, which is the concentration for most rennet on the market for the home cheesemaker. Occasionally there are bottles of double-strength rennet, so watch that depending on where you get it. For single strength rennet, the bottle will generally say use 1/2 teaspoon diluted 20:1 in water to set 2 gallons of milk.
You’ll notice that the rennet is the only thing that she does measure in this recipe, and the rennet concentration is quite important. Adding more will result in very stiff curds and not enough and the milk will not form curds.
You’re using pasteurized milk, it often has a bit of trouble forming curds, and liquid calcium chloride is added to help the curds form. For pasteurized milk, add 1/4 tsp of calcium chloride diluted in 1/4 cup of water to the milk along with the rennet.
Once the diluted rennet and optional calcium chloride are added, stir the milk using a figure 8 motion, making sure you’re moving from top to bottom for about 1 minute. Your goal is to distribute the rennet evenly, especially from the top to the bottom of the pot of milk.
After stirring, the cheese needs to stand for about 90 minutes in a warm place for the curds to set. At that point, it’s time to cut the curds into 1-inch curds with a large knife. Be sure to cut from top to bottom of the pot to get through all the curds. After cutting the curds, the cheese rests for another 60 to 90 minutes.
After the second rest, the cheese curds are placed back on a very low stove and slowly heated to 100 degrees. If it’s heated too quickly, the curds will become rubbery and won’t release whey properly.
This slow heating process should take about 30 to 60 minutes. During this heating process, the curds will continue to release whey and firm up further.
The book Home Cheesemaking has detailed instructions for farmhouse cheddar and says that the best way to do this is to place the whole cheese pot into a sink filled with hot water, and instructs you to increase”the temperature no more than two degrees every 5 minutes.” Once the curds and whey hit 100 degrees, keep them there for about 5 minutes.
The next step is to break up the curds and strain out the whey. Pour the cheese and whey into a colander lined with cheesecloth and allow the whey to drain. You can save the whey off to the side for making a whey cheese (recipes coming soon). Break up the cheese curds with your hands into small pieces and knead in a bit of cheese salt.
Line the cheese press with cheesecloth, place the salted curds into a cheese press and apply pressure. This cheese press is equipped with a spring, which means that turning is easy from start to finish.
Increase the pressure every 30 minutes to take up the slack as the whey drains. After about 2 hours of regular pressure increases, allow the cheese to sit under pressure overnight (about 12 hours).
Take the cheese out of the press, flip it over and allow it to press for another 12 hours. While the woman in the video had quite a bit of trouble slipping the cheese out of her wooden press, mine came out easy for flipping.
Once it’s been pressed on both sides for 12 hours, remove the cheese from the press. Remove the cheesecloth from the outside of the cheese.
Place the cheese on a salted shelf to age for a minimum of 60 days, flipping the cheese over every day. With more aging time the cheese will get sharper and dryer.
Cheesemaking Recipes
Looking for a few more cheesemaking recipes?
Farmhouse Cheddar ~ 18th Century Recipe
An old 18th century recipe for farmhouse cheddar.
Ingredients
- 2 gallons milk (preferably raw)
- 1/2 tsp liquid rennet (diluted)
- 1 tbsp cheese salt (or canning salt)
- 1/2 tsp calcium chloride (optional - if using pasteurized milk)
- 1 cup cultured buttermilk (optional - if using pasteurized milk)
Instructions
- Warm the milk to around 85 to 90 degrees.
- Dilute the rennet in 1/4 cup of water. Add the diluted rennet to the cheese and stir for about 1 minute using a figure 8 motion up and down in the pot.
- If using pasteurized milk, also add 1 cup cultured buttermilk and 1/2 tsp calcium chloride diluted in water at this time.
- Allow the cheese to sit in a warm place undisturbed for about 90 minutes until a stiff curd forms.
- Cut the curd into 1'' cubes with a large knife, ensuring you cut all the way through to the bottom of the pot.
- Allow the cut curd to rest for an additional 60 to 90 minutes.
- Slowly heat the curd and whey to 100 degrees, increasing the temperature by no more than 2 degrees every 5 minutes. Placing the pot in a sink full of hot water works well (though a wood stove is a more traditional 18th century method).
- Allow the cheese to stand at 100 degrees for 5 to 10 minutes before straining the curd through a colander lined with cheesecloth.
- Add salt and break the curd up into small pieces with your hands while distributing the salt.
- Line a cheese press with cheesecloth and place the curds into the press.
- Press the cheese, increasing pressure every 20 to 30 minutes for about 2 hours. Then allow the cheese to sit in the press under pressure for about 12 hours.
- Remove the cheese from the press and flip it over. Press on the other side for another 12 hours.
- Remove the cheese from the press and age the cheese on a salted shelf for a minimum of 60 days, flipping it over every day or two.
- The finished cheese will be dry and a hint salty, perfect for grating like parmesan.
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Historical Food Preservation
Cheesemaking is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to historical food preservation.
Carol Little R.H. @studiobotanica
I am so envious that you are making this wonderful cheese!
I will check out the cheese press. Sounds fabulous!!
Shawntai
I have been researching hard cheese making fo some time and actually watched the Townsend video a while ago wishing they had supplied a good recipe! Thanks to you, now I have one!!! Unfortunately, raw milk is harder to come by here in Georgia, but I’ve found a few suppliers that I can purchase from for “pet use” ;o) And thank you for the information about the economical cheese press! I’ve considered brow beating my husband into making me one lol!
G
This is great news for me – having the recipe and info on the press. And while I’m at it, thank YOU for your time and attention on many of your other posts!
Haley
Cheese is the best thing in the world.
Meg Staires
how do you protect the cheese from pests or dust while it ages?
Ashley Adamant
To be honest, we didn’t. I set it on a shelf in the basement. We don’t really have rodent problems in the house (cats) though we have them everywhere else (shed, coops, garage).
Charlene Lee
Salted shelf, where might that be? The fridge? What Temps can you age this cheese?
RL MAIDEN
About what temperature is the basement in which you aged this cheese? Also–while it is possible to get raw ‘pet milk’ around here, it has always gone through a seperator first, is this okay pr should I add cream for a higher milkfat content?
Ashley Adamant
Our basement is usually 50 to 60 degrees year-round. Without the cream, I’d say it’d come out pretty darn dry, so I’d suggest adding back in a bit of cream. Look for some that don’t have additives, as most cream brands have carrageenan and other things added these days. I’m not sure I’d honestly recommend using “pet milk” as I have no idea what the standards are for those dairies, ours out here keep a clean ship and test the milk regularly for bacteria. In theory this recipe, with the 60+ day aging, should be fine but honestly, I’d want to know the dairy farmer and be sure I trusted it if I were going to eat it.
Doe
Pet milk means the only way you are allowed to sell raw milk. Basically, not for human consumption. But
It is perfectly good milk. Just not pasteurized. It is regular raw milk.
Elizabeth
Yes, except (at least here in Indiana) pet milk has no cleanliness or inspection rules at all. The state government takes money for a license, but that’s the extent of their involvement. I wouldn’t drink it if I wasn’t confident in the farmer’s production methods.
Romy
I just made very similar cheese this morning using fresh goat milk. The recipe I used also had 1 pkg mesophilic culture added after the calcium chloride. pressing right now under 50 lbs weight, Thanks for other tips I learned here on aging the cheese !!
Ashley Adamant
Wonderful, hope it turns out well for you!
Honey
Thank you so so much for doing this! I love that YouTube
And have been looking everywhere for this recipe.
I have my own jersey . What lm confused about is does it matter what size cheese press you have ?
And how do you no how hard to press ?
New to cheese making 😬
Ashley Adamant
The size of the cheesepress will determine how much milk you can make into a wheel of cheese. The one I used can only hold about 1.5lbs of cheese. That matters for some cheeses, since the smaller the wheel, the more rind there is on the finished cheese (more surface to volume ratio).
For how hard to press part, the cheese press I used came with a conversion guide that had number of turns to a certain pounds pressure. Bring the crank to touch the cheese and then follow the guide for the number of turns for a given pressure. Some cheese presses actually work with weights, either placed on top or hung on a lever that presses, and those are much more visual when it comes to the weight applied.
Robynne
I seem to have a mould problem. All steps followed but blue mould has developed. What am I doing wrong?
Ashley Adamant
That’s not a problem I’ve had, but I did a bit of research for you. My first thoughts are that maybe it’s too moist where it’s kept, there’s not enough salt or there’s not enough air circulation.
There’s a good discussion on what to do with mold on cheese here, which offers some advice on how to remedy and potential causes: https://curd-nerd.com/cheese-mold/
Good luck, hopefully this is helpful!
Deb S.
You give me hope that I can achieve my goal of learning to make a few basic cheeses this year (2020)!!! How does this farmhouse cheddar compare to the “medium store bought”? Is it sharper or more bland? Does your shelf have slots on it like a metal rack or is it solid?
Thank you for this great recipe!
Ashley Adamant
I kept it on a plate that was sprinkled with salt (so no slots). Ours came out like a grating cheese. Think parmesan, but milder.
Sheri
I love this! I have a few goats and always have plenty of milk this time of year. Would there be any different directions you think for goat vs cow milk? Also, when you leave the cheese to age, is it not covered?
Excited to give it a try!
Thank you
Ashley Adamant
I honestly have never made cheese with goats milk, so I don’t know, but to the best of my knowledge it’d be the same. And yes, I left it completely uncovered on a shelf in my basement to age.
Danielle
I know your comment was forever ago, but I just made this cheese and put it on a shelf about 10 minutes ago. Curious to see if you tried with goat milk how it turned out. When I made mozzarella with goat milk I felt like I needed less rennet in my recipe so I did cut the rennet in this particular recipe. It pressed beautifully. Now I am aging. Any advice? Thinking of trying with full amount of rennet to test how each turns out.
Dale
Hi, I would really like to try making cheese but unpasteurized milk is not available in Canada. So what you suggest in making cheddar?
Ashley Adamant
You can make this recipe using cultured buttermilk as a starter, it should work out just fine. Good luck!
Doe
My Italian friend used to vacuum seal all of his cheese and put it on a shelf for years. Just salted after being pressed. How can this be?. It was darn good cheese!!. A bit of liquid with Some colour. Can’t remember which colours though. Lightish.
Jo
Do you have a problem with mice and or rats in your cheese that are aging? Any suggestions to keep my cheese safe from those Marauders?
Admin
Mice traps?
John
This sounds fabulous! I see another hobby coming up! Excited. Thanks for all the leads!
Vincent P Johnson
I bought the cheese press from Northern Brewer and it’s a great press that I learned how to use. I used a gallon of milk to make a farmhouse cheddar and found the amount of drained curds produced fully filled the cylinder so it was impossible to use the 50 pound spring until after several presses of increasing weight. Brewer hawks the press as being able to use a curd mass from 2 gallons of milk….not so. Anyway, the press functioned well. I checked out a variety of recipes for farmhouse and they are basically the same with the only differences being how to age to cheese whether with or without a lard/tallow impregnated cheese cloth, wax or nothing. I went with the cloth wrap and now it’s a matter of waiting a couple of months or longer.
Administrator
That sounds great Vincent. Thank you for sharing. There are so many possibilities.
Alitta
Great article . Can I put in fridge for drying time?
Administrator
I have found several articles that say that you can although it’s not ideal. The temperature is too cool and you won’t get great air circulation. If you decide to give it a try, you want to put it in the warmest part of the fridge and keep it in a container to keep it from drying out.
N
I’m not paranoid like most americans. My question is: If you have heavy cream that’s already gone to curd can you just add salt and press it and make hard cheese. I’ve worked with sourdough and many other things mushroom cultivation etc and I’m not “scared of” cheese making like most people are so I’m not worried about ooooo scary bacteria. I mean what did most people do back before all the factory methods anyways. Anyways, lemme know thanks
Ashley Adamant
Excellent question!
The answer is No with modern grocery store milk/cream, but potentially yes with fresh raw milk.
When grocery store milk/cream is pasteurized it kills all the good cheesemaking bacteria, as well as any potential pathogens. It doesn’t kill everything though, and it leave spoilage bacteria that work slowly in the fridge to make it spoil over the course of 2-3 weeks, eventually going nasty usually a few days after the expiration date. That is not cheese, as it’s been cultured by bacteria that thrive at low temperatures (spoilage bacteria) rather than good cheesemaking bacteria that thrive at warmer temps. Even if you put cultures in it right when you bought it, then stuffed it into the fridge for a few weeks, those cold tolerant spoilage bacteria would still win, resulting in spoiled, nasty cream/milk instead of curds.
If, however, you get farm-fresh milk that already has the natural cultures in it (raw milk) and leave it on the counter, it will turn into a type of cheese (clabber). In theory, you could also do this with really fresh pasteurized milk, but adding culture packets, and then leaving it on the counter to clabber. You’d have to be sure it wasn’t refrigerated for a week or more at the store though beforehand, as it’s already very slowly starting to spoil at that point.
Anyhow, that’s a long answer, but historically you could make cheese from curdled cream that was left out and curdled fresh within a few days of milking, but you cannot do it with spoiled modern milk or cream. Does that make sense?
N
Yes, thank you very much.
B.Vega
I’m at the stage where I’m heating the curds back to 100 and I went a little over 100 is that ok?
Administrator
How far over 100 would you say that it went?
B.Vega
Between 105 and 108 I would say. My thermometer broke so I used a candy thermometer and I didn’t catch it before it went over.
Administrator
Does the cheese seem to be doing what it’s supposed to do? Did the curds firm up and release the whey like they were supposed to? If so, then I think you are probably ok.
B.Vega
Yes but now I think it’s getting to dry its hard on the top. Is there a way I can send you a picture?
Administrator
I don’t have a way for you to send me pictures. Are you flipping it every day?
Mark
Hi, Which milk is best cow or goat to make a sharp Italian cheese ? Would it be better to use half cow and half goat milk ? I get natural goat milk and if possible would like to use it. Also, Ive read recipes that use different bacteria you can add to milk to make different types of cheese. Is this really necessary ? Also I read you can coat the outside of cheese while ageing with oil to keep from getting rock hard? Thank you !
Ashley Adamant
Hi Mark,
Goats milk should work wonderfully in this cheese. If you want to make sharp Italian cheese, most of that is made with skimmed milk and aged for quite a while. One of the keys to the sharpness is that it’s made with a different type of rennet, something more traditional that includes more of the enzymes in the cows stomach to really give it a kick. These days they add something called lipase powder to give that same type of flavor but without needing a special rennet. Anyhow, most of the answers to the rest of your questions can be found here: https://practicalselfreliance.com/beginner-cheesemaking/
If there’s something not answered there, let me know!
Patsy Carter
Do you have to let the raw milk age for 60 days, or can you just go ahead and use it freshly milked?
Administrator
You don’t need to let the milk age, you just need to allow the cheese to age once it has been made.
Emily
I have read that lemon juice or vinegar can be used as a rennet substitute, do you think that would work for this recipe? Trying to make cheese from strictly home made ingredients! Thank you!
Administrator
It’s possible that it could work. Typically this is done with softer cheeses. The lemon juice or vinegar will help the milk to coagulate but it could coagulate too quickly at too high of an acidity. It would be something that you would want to research a bit and experiment with if it’s something that’s super important to you. Otherwise you could just stick with the rennet.
Emily
Great, thank you so much!
Administrator
You’re very welcome.
Lauren
Vinegar and lemon juice can both be used. It’s a learning curve. This generally makes a “fresh” cheese. Look up queso blanco, or farmer’s cheese. I’ve never tried to make a pressed cheese with it. The important variables are the heat and the amount of acid. If the milk isn’t hot enough, the acid won’t make it coagulate into a curd. If it’s too hot, the curd will be tough and dry. If there’s not enough acid, no curd. Too much acid, it coagulates but leaves an acid taste behind. Experiment with it. I usually use this process to make cheese balls or cottage cheese rather than a pressed cheese. For cream cheese I use a different process.