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Why is my mozzarella grainy?
If the acidity is too high, the curds will become grainy and fall apart when attempting to stretch them into mozzarella. If you do not have a pH meter, you can still make great soft or firm mozzarella if you follow the steps carefully. You will want to maintain this temperature until the curds are cut.
Why is my homemade mozzarella not stretching?
My mozzarella cheese won’t stretch! Jerri’s answer Acidity is the key for the stretch in mozzarella. Not enough or too much acid will result in hard curd floating or disintegrating in the water. The pH of your slab needs to be between 5.0 and 5.2 for it to stretch well when kneaded in hot water.
Why is my homemade mozzarella rubbery?
Mozzarella is Dry and Rubbery Simply let the cheese fall on its self a few times and put it in your container. It loses a lot of moisture during the stretching process. If it is still too dry, next time, add the rennet at a temperature 2-5 degrees lower and do less cutting and stirring before the stretching stage.
How do you spread fresh mozzarella?
Since fresh mozzarella retains at least 52 percent water, it will benefit from a bit of drying time. Instead of slicing the mozzarella and immediately adding the cheese, set the slices on a paper or tea towel to absorb excess moisture; let them rest for at least 15 minutes.
Can mozzarella be repeatedly made from a recipe?
Mozzarella cannot be repeatedly made from a recipe since milk differs in pH and protein content from cow to cow. I have been making mozzarella successfully for more than 10 years. I have run hundreds of experiments and can tell you that.
Why does mozzarella stretch when you knead it?
Getting your milk’s pH right at the curd stage will mean you will have a higher success rate making mozzarella when you’re get to the heat and knead stage. As the pH level reduces, the calcium phosphate in the casein micelles dissolve and is replaced by hydrogen. This increases the stretch.
Why is my mozzarella cheese not curdling?
Buy a pH meter, that will make your life less stressful and your mozzarella will be consistent. It’s not the pasturization that is the problem, it is the homogination which breaks up the casen molecules in the milk. These molecules are required for the curding proccess and when they are damaged, the milk will not curd.
What is the pH of mozzarella?
Low acidity, i.e. higher pH, will result in a cheese that stretches and melts well. Heating the milk and adding food grade citric acid to the milk help reduce the pH level to between 5.2 – 5.4, which is what you want when making mozzarella cheese.