Iceblink
Maa Maa Mama
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- Jan 25, 2009
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Pat - It's by Olivia Mills, published by Thorsons in 1982. So, yeah it's probably the one you mentioned.
I wasn't worried about the gunk for their sake, I just didn't want any of it getting in the milk, and I think I read that you are milking your Shetland ewe? Do you think it could get in the milk?
Free - Yeah, I guess MJT does mention pasteurizing frequently, I think when I was reading the book that just went in one ear and out the other. As far as I am concerned, cheesemaking is an inexact science. I love cheese in all forms, so if it turns out a little 'different' I'm still happy that I have cheese.
Speaking of inexact, I have "Garden Way Publishing's Making Cheese and Butter' by Phyllis Hobson, it has recipes for lots of old fashioned simple cheeses, but the directions are bare bones, more of guidelines than recipes. It's part of a boxed set that I found at a yard sale for a quarter. It's a very 'anything goes' book. It even talks about making cultures from yeast cakes.
I wasn't worried about the gunk for their sake, I just didn't want any of it getting in the milk, and I think I read that you are milking your Shetland ewe? Do you think it could get in the milk?
Free - Yeah, I guess MJT does mention pasteurizing frequently, I think when I was reading the book that just went in one ear and out the other. As far as I am concerned, cheesemaking is an inexact science. I love cheese in all forms, so if it turns out a little 'different' I'm still happy that I have cheese.
Speaking of inexact, I have "Garden Way Publishing's Making Cheese and Butter' by Phyllis Hobson, it has recipes for lots of old fashioned simple cheeses, but the directions are bare bones, more of guidelines than recipes. It's part of a boxed set that I found at a yard sale for a quarter. It's a very 'anything goes' book. It even talks about making cultures from yeast cakes.