The other think I'm looking for is plans/blueprints for the smallest possible legal milking parlor and cheese kitchen. I have a space for it, but would love to see some plans for designs that have worked for people. I know so many of these questions can only be answered with it depends...but I am looking for some experienced suggestions to help guide my dreaming. Thanks for any input you have!
The other think I'm looking for is plans/blueprints for the smallest possible legal milking parlor and cheese kitchen. I have a space for it, but would love to see some plans for designs that have worked for people. I know so many of these questions can only be answered with it depends...but I am looking for some experienced suggestions to help guide my dreaming. Thanks for any input you have!
You need to be a member of Nigerian Dwarf Dairy Goats to add comments!
Comments
There was a study done at least four or five years ago on the East Coast using Nigerians for year-round dairy production. I read the whole thing online -- it was done using a SARE grant -- but my memory is foggy, since it's been a few years. They had goats freshen in October and March for their year-round production and had lots of hard numbers on production, costs, and income.
I've looked into the dairy thing in Illinois, and after learning that it would cost about $100,000 to do everything necessary to become legal, we decided that it would be more cost effective to simply start making all of our own dairy products, which we now do, with the exception of butter, because I can't wait days for the goat milk to separate. We've been milking 10-14 NDs since spring, and that pretty much takes care of our needs. There are four of us home now, and in addition to using the milk fresh and making mozzarella, chevre, buttermilk, yogurt, cajeta, ice cream, puddings, cream soups, etc., we also make aged cheeses, including cheddar, colby, gouda, parmesan, etc. I got the idea to feed ourselves first -- like pay yourself first (save money) -- after watching friends work from sun-up to sundown growing a market garden and then having nothing homegrown to feed themselves after the first frost. It didn't make sense to me for us to use all of our milk to make chevre for sale and then go to the store to buy all of our other dairy products. Of course, your situation may be different, and Maine may not be as strict as Illinois with all of their requirements. I know there's a farmstead creamery business up there, but unfortunately the name is escaping me at the moment.
I found some good information on Pholia Farm website (www.pholiafarm.com), and the book "The Fabrication Of Farmstead Goat Cheese" by Jean-Claude Le Jaouen has some awesome information including a basic layout. I also took a cheese making class at the USU Western Dairy Center. The class was for cow milk, but the chemistry and biology of the process is the same.