Saturday, September 12, 2009

First Posting.

I have been inspired. For a long time I have been wanting to CREATE and lately that has taken form in some cooking adventures. I absolutely love cooking. And I'm a vegetarian. So, I wanted to create this blog in order to chronicle my adventures in cooking (and possibly other mediums of creativity).

My new job is mostly why I have reawakened the creative bug. For a long time I worked in the food service industry and then I moved to the corporate world. Restaurants and coffee shops were so stressful and a source of constant dissatisfaction for me. Then the corporate world...well, if you've ever worked in a high-rise in an office for a top executive, you know. It's great at first because everything's so professional and clean and perfect, but it gets old. Trust me.

Anyway, rambling about my past professions doesn't get to why I am creating this blog. I want to be creative! I want to teach myself and learn better cooking techniques and discover new foods. So, here I go.

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My first cooking adventure of the summer (back in July) was homemade mozzarella cheese. I have always wanted to try it, and when I stumbled upon an article on the internet about how easy it really is to make, I just had to try. It was mostly a success. I never did figure out how to get the salt to actually stay in the cheese because the whey just kept washing it away, and the cheese was very squeaky like curds you would buy in a dairy. But all-in-all it was a great success and a fun project.



I started out with the three things you need to make mozzarella: vegetable rennet (vegetarian enzyme that causes the milk to curdle), citric acid, and raw milk. I found the raw milk at Whole Foods and the only store that carried the rennet was out so I ended up ordering it from the New England Cheese Making Supply Company--it was inexpensive.


The first step was to slowly bring the milk to a temperature of 95 degrees. Warm, but not hot. Then I had to dissolve the rennet (only 1/4 of a tablet for a gallon of milk) and wait until the milk was perfectly still. Once it had sat for 3 or 4 minutes, I can't remember exactly how long, the next step was to cut the curds.



I just cut it into one-inch cubes so it would be easy to spoon out of the pot. It was not hot enough to burn my hands, but just hot enough to be really uncomfortable. Anyway, the next step was to separate the curds from the whey.

This involved simply kneading the curds like bread--or however I could knead them. Then draining the whey into the sink, nuking the curds in the microwave for 2 minutes, and continuing to knead and drain until it began to form into a ball of cheese. I burned my fingers a little bit but I survived. :) It was crazy because the cheese ball would look like it was all curds and then after 2 minutes of sitting there all of a sudden all this whey would appear all around it! It never stopped. Haha. I guess that's why when you buy fresh mozzarella in the grocery store it usually has extra liquid around it.

And here is the end result! My mozzarella ball was a little rough looking because it was my first time, but it tasted just fine! A little bland because of my salting problem, and a little squeaky on the teeth, but all in all a success.

I had so much fun trying something new and am thinking I'd like to try feta or goat cheese sometime.

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That was my first cooking adventure of the summer, and it won't be my last (though technically summer's almost over...it lasts until about October here in LA) :D

I will blog late about why I'm a vegetarian, so that all my readers (if I have any) can understand and better enjoy my vegetarian cooking posts. I am very excited because tonight is Provencal Stuffed Bell Peppers and Minestrone Soup with Pesto--straight out of my brand-new veg. cookbook. Stay tuned!

2 comments:

  1. Erin,
    I saw the link to your blog on Katie's wall. I blog too and am sort of obsessed with food and cooking too :) I have a lot to learn and have considered myself a fairly good cook. Anyway, I am hoping to make mozzarella cheese too, but will wait for the girls to bring me supplies at Christmas. I wanted to share a website that I found that sells kits for making cheese. Mozzarella, ricotta, feta and others. It may fit into your cooking "adventures." :) www.cheesemaking.com
    Also, www.thecheesemaker.com
    I am really interested in making cheese because I can't always get the cheese I would like to here in the PI.
    And I am trying new recipes from scratch. I tried beignets, which is basically french for donut holes :) They were yummy. Tomorrow I'm going to make apple fritters. This week, gnocchi is also on my list.
    Anyway, I'm going to record some of my "adventures" on my blog too.
    www.juliedehart.blogspot.com
    Some other food websites I like are:
    www.foodbuzz.com and
    www.bakespace.com
    You might like them too -- you maybe already know about them.
    I also got the book "Artisan Bread in 5 minutes a day" and the "Bread Baker's Apprentice" while I was stateside, and want to get into bread baking.
    Anyway, kudos to you & cooking -- it's really fun, isn't it?
    Actually, the girls and I talk about having a small restaurant together someday. :) We'd all have to live in the same spot though -- that would be the hard part. Maybe you could join us too :)
    I'll look forward to following your adventures. We can share them together.

    I just got a food processor today at S & R, so I'm super excited about that. I thought I would have to wait til the girls came at Christmas, but it's a Braun and was reasonably priced.
    I also got the book, "The Way to Cook" by Julia Child and "How to cook everything: by Mark Bittman. You can get them both at Amazon.
    Anyway, just some things I've found useful.

    Blessings Erin!
    Aunt Julie :)
    www.keep-your-home-cooking.com (my website)

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  2. Thanks, Aunt Julie! I will enjoy reading your blog as well. I have always loved cooking and thought to myself "why don't I just teach myself?" I really want to take a cooking class as well but those things are a lot more expensive than I thought--more than college sometimes! Haha. I can't wait to try new things and keep doing my projects.

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