New Cheese: I had a wonderful piece of Appleby's Farmhouse Cheshire, which made me want
to try some other English farmhouse cheese-styles.  While you could make something "like" Cheshire, you can never make a true Cheshire cheese unless you're getting your milk from Cheshire.  The cows feed on grasses from salt bogs, which gives the milk (and thus the cheese) a wild, grassy, salty flavor.  It's a true terroir-cheese, intimately linked to the land where the milk is sourced.  So I made a similar style of cheese, a Red Leicester.  Red Leicester is a quick-ripening cheese, so it doesn't take as much aging as cheddar.  It's also not as sharp or firm.Aged Cheeses: My raw milk Leyden tastes
spot-on!  It was the perfect amount of cumin, with a smooth gouda texture.   My first-attempt pasteurized cheddar was ok, but needed more salt.  The cheddar's texture was also not quite right.  I think I'm over heating the curds, which is also why the cheese did not knit together properly in the press.Homebrew: Last fall (2008) I made a great Maple Brown Ale with a quart of maple syrup. This fall I started another batch, but this time with a gallon of maple syrup. I used a Belgian high-gravity yeast that could digest that much sugar (and still survive the resulting alcohol levels), but it's still fermenting after a solid month. I think it's going to be a great beer in the end...it's just taking a looong time to eat through that much maple syrup.

I've also got another lambic going. This one is 3 lbs of liquid malt extract that I soured in two gallons of water, then added three gallons of apple cider into the fermenter. My boss is from Northern England and he told me that 50/50 beer and cider is popular in the fall, so I'm seeing how the malt will blend with the cider when fermented together with a blend of Belgian lambic yeast.
Oink!: In an act that could be
described as nother less than a true labor of love, Carla got me a cooler full of pig parts!  I've got three tails, four ears, a head, a heart, a liver, four feet,  two strips of back fat, and a tub of caul fat!  Up first I'm cooking the tails.  The game plan is to braise them in stock, then allow them to cool until I can bread them in mustard and bread crumbs and fry till crispy.  Details to follow!
2 comments :
Nice!
Are you sure all those parts are from a pig?
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