Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Brunost (Scandinavian Brown Cheese)

So, I have alot of whey. I make queso blanco at least once a week, and am venturing into other cheesemaking adventures. I use it in bread, and to cook grains and beans, etc, and STILL have alot of whey. So I decided to try this unusual recipe for a scandinavian type of "brown cheese", made by essentially boiling your leftover whey (with a bit of milk and cream added, if you like) to make a thick, carmelized sort of whey-cheese. 

I used about a gallon of whey, and added 2 cups each whole milk and cream, as recommended by this recipe.

 
Here is the whey reduced to about half. It is starting to get darker.


Here it is reduced to about one fourth. Getting very dark,and thick, and starting to smell caramel-ey.


This is where I stopped it. It was quite thick and dark and I had to stir it constantly. Until this point, I mostly just let the mixture bubble away on medium heat on the stove, just stirring every now and again as I wandered through the kitchen. Not exactly a high-maintenance project.



I did notice at this point that the cheese was looking a little grainy. I poured it into a shallow pan and took it outside (it's very cold here right now, so I figured that would cool it off quickly) and set it on a cold glass table and stirred until it was cool. The grainyness does not detract from it's taste, but I'd much prefer a smooth cheese. I will have to work with this recipe to make sure I know how to get a smooth cheese.

After this was cool I packed it into a smaller, square container that I had buttered, and refrigerated it.  It is now slicable, while cold, and almost a spreadable texture. Similar to, dare I say it - Velveeta  - in density.

Now, the taste. It is REALLY interesting and super hard to describe. I like it VERY much. It's both salty and sweet, with caramel overtones. I think it would go well with both sweet and savory dishes. I am going to do alot of experimentation with this fun cheese to see how I like to serve and eat it. I am most intrigued by the idea of serving it on waffles, that sounds really good to me!

4 comments:

juliecache said...

i can't believe your glass pan didn't crack from thermal shock wotj the snow. i guess 86 isn't too high, though.

Vee said...

Did you re-experiment with this? I am making some right now. I messed up my regular cheese so I started with 3 quarts of goat milk, 2 tbs vinegar then when it didn't do right, I added a half gallon of whey left over from my last cheese-making sessions. Most of the liquid is almost out. Vee at http://veegettinghealthy.blogspot.com

Sharon said...

How much milk and cream did you add, and how much whey did you use? I'm looking for a recipe to make brunost, but I've been through the first page of links on google and yours is the only one so far with any kind of recipe. i'd love it if you could help. :)

chloe2757 said...

could you please provide the recipe?