|
Pros
and Uses
|
Cons
and Problems
|
|
Raw
Cow
|
Preferred
for making butter, hard and Italian cheeses |
Regulated
in many States and not readily available |
|
Raw
Goat
|
Preferred
for feta, and goat's cheese. Works in most cheese recipes. |
Not
readily available. |
Whole
Processed
|
Available
everywhere. Works well in all cheese recipes. |
Homogenized
and may require adjustment with calcium chloride. |
|
Low
Fat Processed
|
Produces
high quality low fat cheese, especially when used in cream and soft cheese
recipes. |
Homogenized
and may require adjustment with calcium chloride. Will yield a drier more
crumbly curd of lessor weight. |
|
Skim
Milk
|
Produces
quality no fat cheese, especially when used in cream and soft cheese recipes.
Excellent when combined with heavy cream to recreate raw milk consistency. |
Homogenized
and may require adjustment with calcium chloride. Will yield a drier more
crumbly curd of lessor weight. |
|
Heavy
Cream
|
Used
to make butter and adjust the cream content of skim milk for producing
hard cheese from store bought milk. |
|
Light
Cream
|
Used
to make desert cheeses like Marscapone. |