Freezing milk

Does anyone freeze milk to use for cheese making in the winter?  Right now, it seems like we don't have time to make cheese and I wondered if I pasturize and then freeze it, if it would work.

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  • thanks!! I have frozen some chevre hoping it will be ok when I want to eat it.

    Just made a cheesecake with goat cheese and I beat it too vigorously I am afraid. It got little cheese balls on the top - as if I were making butter. :(  I am going for broke though - at this point it is nice and golden and in the fridge.

    The cheese was very creamy to begin with, so I think I just over beat it.

  • Chevre itself freezes very well, so you might consider making batches of cheese with your milk now and freezing it for the winter instead of freezing the milk to make cheese later (which I understand does not make very good cheese). Also takes up a lot less space!

  • I intend to try cheddar from goats milk. My Nigerian (only 1 in milk) is only giving me qt. a day - so I will have to save up and use cows milk to make up for the 2 gallons of milk for cheddar. I just put together a cheese press from 2 boards, 2 carriage bolts and a couple of nuts. Now, all I need are the weights. ^^ I am really envious you have already made cheddar. How are you aging it?

    Melissa Johnson said:

    No goat taste with the Nigerian milk - to me it compares to half and half.



    Misfits Farm said:

    I made some farm cheddar using fresh milk and I think it worked pretty good.  I had to use our weight set to press it.  I need to get a cheese press or make one.  Mozzarella is next but I need to order more supplies.    I noticed no goaty taste with the NDs.  My alpines seem to be more sensitive to what they eat and I get more of a goat taste.  I won't try freezing then and I will just make it when I get the time.  The milk seems to hold up pretty good in the fridge.  I have tried making everything from cottage cheese to ice cream and it has so far turned out pretty good using goat's milk.

  • from my experience - your only option is to "work" it off. lol - cause we know the goats aren't going anywhere. lol

    you have company - since August I have eaten all the chev I have made - then I developed a liking to ice cream. lol - I just got my cheese mold today, made a cheese press - next endeavor is to try cheddar. ^^ And, you can make ricotta from the whey that is left after making chevre - just found out about that.

    Margaret Langley said:

    Oh wow! I am impressed. I had no idea I could do that! I know nothing about making cheese, and we love mozzarella. You know something I never see anyone mention, that I love and want to make with different seasonings and herbs etc. (play with recipes) is butter. Please don't tell me no one mentions it because you can't do it with goat milk. I will be heart broken. I am so looking forward to learning to do ice cream and buttery spreads. Do they work out good from goat milk? I feel myself gaining weight real bad! LOL! That worries me because I did not use to gain any weight, and now I can't seem to stop. This venture is not going to help at all. UNLESS, maybe I will WORK it OFF.

  • I will have to try both of the recipes.

  • No goat taste with the Nigerian milk - to me it compares to half and half.



    Misfits Farm said:

    I made some farm cheddar using fresh milk and I think it worked pretty good.  I had to use our weight set to press it.  I need to get a cheese press or make one.  Mozzarella is next but I need to order more supplies.    I noticed no goaty taste with the NDs.  My alpines seem to be more sensitive to what they eat and I get more of a goat taste.  I won't try freezing then and I will just make it when I get the time.  The milk seems to hold up pretty good in the fridge.  I have tried making everything from cottage cheese to ice cream and it has so far turned out pretty good using goat's milk.

  • As I grab the extra on my waist line - I have a wonderful chocolate ice cream recipe! It is in the Cuisinair recipe book. Doesnt make much mine is only 1.5 qt. freezer. 3/4 c. Hersheys cocoa, 1/2 c. sugar, 1/3 c. brown sugar, 1/2 tablespoon vanilla and 3 cups of milk - I use all goats milk, but for my daughter use heavy whipping cream - (she doesnt do goat milk - even though I tell her I bet my milk is alot cleaner than what she insist on from the store) - anyway, too bad for all the sugar - but it is wonderful. The only cheese I have made is soft chevre, which I love! But I want to try cheddar - I just wonder if I can freeze the milk until I have enough. Everything I see says you need 2 gallons of milk.



    Glenna Rose said:

    Tonight I made the custard for my first 100 percent Capri ice cream.  Though I had made it before, it was only half Capri's milk and the other half purchased goat milk.  This I made chocolate and am still trying to find the perfect chocolate recipe.  Though I've had a good one, it doesn't quite match up to the recipe that came with our ice cream freezer in the late 1960s.  The custard takes really good but won't know until it is actually ice cream.  As I was cooking the custard, I realized the original recipe used chocolate squares rather than cocoa; the floating flecks of chocolate while it was cooking took me back to when my boys were little.  In February, at our chocolate/wine festival, I bought some incredible chocolate sauce (with wine base) that will be perfect on this.

    Back to the chocolate ice cream - as a kid, that is what we had to make chocolate milk with - cocoa. We would mix the sugar with cocoa, then a little hot water to mix - then the milk. I was skeptical of mixing cold milk with the dry ingredients - but surprisingly, it did mix fine. No little chocolate balls.

  • I was so bad - I finished the custard as pudding so it never got to ice cream; good thing it was only a quart - over three days, that wasn't so bad.  I have a half-gallon of purchased goat milk so I will make it again in a day or two so at least part of that will make it to ice cream.  It was absolutely delicious; by doubling the chocolate, it would be sinful. <g>

    The sauce I bought is "Quady Winery Elysium Chocolate Sauce."  Ingredients appear to be sugar, corn syrup, Quady Winery Elysium, Dutch chocolate (cocoa liquor, sugar, ???, soy lecithin as an emulsifier, & vanilla), and Cream(?).  It's tiny script print and *very* difficult to read.  Good thing I didn't read the ingredients and bought it by taste sample.<g>  It appears to be from California, says made exclusively for Quady Winery, P.O. Box 728, Madera, CA  98639. (559)673-8068 http://quadywinery.com  It is really, really good!

  • That does sound good.  I'm going to have to try that.  I've never heard of a chocolate sauce with a wine base.  I'll have to check out the local wineries for that.

  • That sounds delicious! What time did you want me there?

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