Saturday, December 27, 2008

Making Brother Laurent



We are sold out of Brother Laurent for 2008. This week we made the first batch which will be for sale in 2009. This is a supple washed-rind cheese based on French Meunster that takes at least 90 days to develop its characteristic orange aromatic rind. It's a lot of work, and if I didn't enjoy eating it so much, I wouldn't be making it.



The first thing to do was to put the tall blue cheese forms aside (we made these ourselves from food-grade PVC) and break out the fancy, expensive Kadova cheese molds. These are in 4 pieces (meaning 4 times the clean-up, as my husband Dan says).



Molds are filled and stacked one over the other. Not a lot of action photos because I was up to my elbows in curds and clean-up. These have to be 'baby-sat' the first hour to prevent them tipping over and falling off the table while the curds are compacted.



The next morning, these slightly-pressed cheeses are ready for un-molding.



This is a one-kilo (2.2 lb.) fresh cheese. There are 110 of them (though I really didn't count, it's my recollection that I have 110 moulds, but I could be wrong).



We salt them by hand and stack in a cold, humid aging room, turning every day.



(Cheese-making secret) Cheeses are periodically bathed in brine and b-linens (a bacteria) to form the sticky rind.



When they are finished curing, we wrap them in copper-colored foil and send them downstairs to cold storage. They will stay that way for several months, making them a good keeper, which is essential for a small cheesemaking operation such as ours - we aren't under any pressure to get them out the door by a certain date, and can have them available during the entire six months we do farmer's market.