Guest guest Posted August 10, 2001 Report Share Posted August 10, 2001 Conventional wisdom is that ingredients are listed in order of quantity from largest amount (top of list) to least (bottom of list). Milk, of course, is first as that is the largest amount of ingredients in cheese. Then, of the two examples you gave, more salt is used than microbial enzymes in one but more cheese culture than salt is used in the other. I prefer Landmark or Rumiano brands that do not add extra salt and that use raw, unpasteurized milk. Accordingly, they are blander than salted cheeses. I have seen both Landmark and Rumiano in local stores in the Los Angeles area (mostly coops and health-food stores). Rumiano is available by mail order in small quantities and at very reasonable prices too (www.rumianocheese.com). Both make salted cheeses as well so be sure to specifically ask for the type you want. Regards, -=mark=- At 03:11 PM 8/10/01 -0400, you wrote: Hi, When buying cheese, does the way the ingredients are listed matter? Is " cultured milk, salt, microbial enzymes " the same as " milk, cheese cultures, salt microbial enzymes " ? Is there a particular brand that is better than the others? Any advice on what to look for is appreciated. Thanks, Ann in Memphis Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 11, 2001 Report Share Posted August 11, 2001 Well, raw cheese from grassfed cows is best, but you're not going to find that in a grocery store. I order mine from http://www.meadowcreekdairy.com/ . Aubin __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2001 Report Share Posted August 13, 2001 * Aubin Parrish (aubinparrish@...) [010810 20:53]: * Subject: Re: Cheese: > Well, raw cheese from grassfed cows is best, but > you're not going to find that in a grocery store. I > order mine from http://www.meadowcreekdairy.com/ . I'd agree that cheese made from raw milk from cows fed grass is a really good start, but I'd argue that it's easy to make the mistake of assuming all grass is the same. In fact, it is quite the opposite. The grass must be grown on highly fertile soil for the milk, and ultimately, the cheese to be high in nutrients. Sadly, milk starting from good, fertile soil appears to be very rare. :-( [Worse, *anything* coming from good, fertile soil is rare.] We really need badly to develop a way to test the quality of the food we eat. It's pretty easy to measure the Brix of plant juices and milk which seems to be a pretty good indication of quality, but then foods like cheese or grains are somewhat more difficult to test. With reasonable, objective measures of quality combined with a sizeable number of *smart* comsumers, we ought to be able to convince markets and ultimately farmers to produce food with reasonable (or dare I even wish -- high) nutrients levels. --alan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 15, 2001 Report Share Posted August 15, 2001 That would make a good tag line. " All grass is not the same. " Best Regards, Ratliff icq 1495914, msn ROBERT RATLIFF ,aim mtncurr22, http://www.copernic.com search engine http://www.ghisler.com> windows commander http://www.paltalk.com> voice/text chat (I'm TennRascal) <*> I am not a criminal, I am not a moron, but there is always; Hope <*> -----Original Message----- From: Alan Lundin [mailto:aflundi@...] Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 10:25 AM Subject: Re: Cheese * Aubin Parrish (aubinparrish@...) [010810 20:53]: * Subject: Re: Cheese: > Well, raw cheese from grassfed cows is best, but > you're not going to find that in a grocery store. I > order mine from http://www.meadowcreekdairy.com/ . I'd agree that cheese made from raw milk from cows fed grass is a really good start, but I'd argue that it's easy to make the mistake of assuming all grass is the same. In fact, it is quite the opposite. The grass must be grown on highly fertile soil for the milk, and ultimately, the cheese to be high in nutrients. Sadly, milk starting from good, fertile soil appears to be very rare. :-( [Worse, *anything* coming from good, fertile soil is rare.] We really need badly to develop a way to test the quality of the food we eat. It's pretty easy to measure the Brix of plant juices and milk which seems to be a pretty good indication of quality, but then foods like cheese or grains are somewhat more difficult to test. With reasonable, objective measures of quality combined with a sizeable number of *smart* comsumers, we ought to be able to convince markets and ultimately farmers to produce food with reasonable (or dare I even wish -- high) nutrients levels. --alan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 15, 2001 Report Share Posted August 15, 2001 --- Alan Lundin <aflundi@...> wrote: > We really need badly to develop a way to test the > quality of the food we eat. It's pretty easy > to measure the Brix of plant juices and milk > which seems to be a pretty good indication of > quality, but then foods like cheese or grains > are somewhat more difficult to test. I totally agree with what you've said about the quality of the soil = quality of the final product (whether milk, butter, cheese, meat or vegetable matter) = health of the animals and people. I also wish there was a way to easily test the things that don't lend themselves to refractometer testing. The cheese I mentioned I feel is quite good mainly because it has a rich, natural color, like spring butter, whereas grocery store cheese that has no coloring added is usually very white. Aubin __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 15, 2001 Report Share Posted August 15, 2001 * Aubin Parrish (aubinparrish@...) [010814 20:18]: * Subject: Re: Cheese: > --- Alan Lundin <aflundi@...> wrote: > > > We really need badly to develop a way to test the > > quality of the food we eat. It's pretty easy > > to measure the Brix of plant juices and milk > > which seems to be a pretty good indication of > > quality, but then foods like cheese or grains > > are somewhat more difficult to test. > > I totally agree with what you've said about the > quality of the soil = quality of the final product > (whether milk, butter, cheese, meat or vegetable > matter) = health of the animals and people. I also > wish there was a way to easily test the things that > don't lend themselves to refractometer testing. The > cheese I mentioned I feel is quite good mainly because > it has a rich, natural color, like spring butter, > whereas grocery store cheese that has no coloring > added is usually very white. There is a way around the problem with milk products. Simply get the cheese, butter, yogurt, kefir, etc. manufacturer to reveal the Brix of the milk used to make it. Of course we'd have to trust the manufacturer to tell the truth, but not really. If they hired an independent lab to do the testing, the manufacturer could simply put the testing lab name and address on the produce label for the consumer to contact. That could be fraudulent too, but it's a reasonable start. The bad news is that it is *very* unlikely, as near as I can tell, that anything like good quality milk is available to anyone anywhere. In my testing and queries, it is *very* rare to find milk that Brixes above 11 -- the highest being 15, and I'm told that milk really should be up in the 21 to 25 range. Sadly, the inevitable conclusion one must draw is that all milk and milk products available are likely devoid of important nutrients that they should include. After I discovered this for myself, I've given up milk and milk products. When I can find a source of higher Brixing milk, I'll reconsider (depending on how high it Brixes). As an aside, this may be the link explaining the vastly different sides people take on milk. The anti-milk crowd is totally convinced that milk is poison, while the pro-milk crowd considers it to be the perfect food. I wouldn't be surprised that both camps are right. If you're talking about highly nutrient-dense milk from cows in isolated Swiss mountains or perhaps from cows of the Maasai eating native plants adapted to the harse terrain of Africa, maybe it really is a highly healthy food. But maybe, just maybe, the low quality milk we get in places like the USA leads to nutritional deficiencies. I have reason to postulate that the low Brixing milk may be calcium deficient -- possibly explaining the osteoperosis link to milk, but I won't bore you with that line of thought here. Anyway, it's something to think about. --alan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 6, 2001 Report Share Posted September 6, 2001 - I have tried Landmark and Rumiano. They also make cheese without added salt if one prefers. Landmark seems to be a local favorite with several folks. Rumiano will mail small quantities and bill afterward for those who can't find the unsalted cheeses locally. Check the web for details. -=mark=- At 03:27 AM 9/6/01 -0400, you wrote: >The below raw milk cheeses are available locally at a reasonable price. Of >the below brands, does anyone know which one would be best? > >Organic Valley >Landmark >Rogue Gold >Rumiano > >Thanks - > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 28, 2004 Report Share Posted May 28, 2004 I recently received my rist order of Kefir starter and am looking forward to making my first batch using RAW goat milk. In the instructions, they also give a receipe for making a soft cheese from Kefir and suggested using herbs for a different taste sensation. However, they did not make any suggestions about which herbs to use. I would appreciate some ideas from anyone making cheese from kefir. Anne VA USA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2004 Report Share Posted May 30, 2004 Hi Anne, I don't make kefir cheese and don't really know how adding in herbs would affect the outcome of your cheese. But I could suggest some herbs to try. Lemon Balm, Rosemary, Basil, Oregano, Marjoram, Thyme, Sage, Lemon Grass, any of the mints. I am sure that others will pipe in here and offer some suggestions as well. You might even try powdered up lemon rind, orange rind or lime rind. Peace, love and light, Don Quai " Spirit sleeps in the mineral, breathes in the vegetable, dreams in the animal and wakes in man. " Anne Bird wrote: > I recently received my rist order of Kefir starter and am looking > forward to making my first batch using RAW goat milk. > In the instructions, they also give a receipe for making a soft cheese > from Kefir and suggested using herbs for a different taste sensation. > However, they did not make any suggestions about which herbs to use. > I would appreciate some ideas from anyone making cheese from kefir. > Anne > VA USA > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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