Create Your Own Chèvre Using Natural Ingredients

Making cheese at home may seem like a time and labor-intensive process — but what if you could have a delicious, high-quality cheese that practically made itself? With chèvre, you can.
The following recipe for all-natural chèvre will change the way you look at homemade cheese!
The following is an excerpt from The Art of Natural Cheesemaking by David Asher. It has been adapted for the web
The cultural circumstances within which chèvre evolved make the production of this cheese ideally suited to our modern times.
With the many distractions and diversions in our lives, it is often difficult to find dedicated time for cheesemaking; chèvre’s simplicity helps it find a place in our daily rhythms.
Using Cows’ Milk for Chèvre
Cows’ milk can be used in this recipe in place of goats’ milk: the soft and creamy curd that results is firmer than yogurt cheese and is sometimes called cream cheese, fromage frais, or Neufchâtel, though that final name is an American bastardization of a very different bloomy-rinded French cheese.
The long fermentation of the cows’ milk allows its cream to rise, creating a beautiful layer of creamy curd atop the whiter curd below.
Using Chèvre As A Canvas
Chèvre is excellent on its own but also serves as a delicious canvas for adding many other herbs, spices, and flavors.
Roasted or raw garlic, cracked pepper, preserved lemons, even fruit preserves all pair well with chèvre. But be sure to add them at the end of the cheesemaking process, when the cheese is salted and drained; if the flavorings are added too soon, their flavor will flow away with the whey.
RECIPE: Natural Chèvre
Chèvre is generally eaten fresh in North America, so it is a little-known fact that it can also be aged! Chèvre is the foundation of an entire class of aged cheeses that start as this fresh cheese.
Time Frame
30 minutes to make; 2 days total
Yield
Makes about 1 1/2 pounds (700 g) chèvre
Equipment
- 1-gallon (4-L) capacity heavy-bottomed pot
- Wooden spoon
- Ladle
- Du-rag or other good cheesecloth
- Steel colander
- Large bowl
Ingredients
- 1 gallon (4 L) good goats’ milk
- 1/4 cup (60 mL) kefir or active whey
- 1/4 dose rennet (I use less than 1/16 tablet WalcoRen calf’s rennet for 1 gallon milk)
- 1 tablespoon (15 mL) good salt
Procedure
- Warm the goats’ milk to around 90°F (32°C) on a low heat, stirring occasionally to keep it from scorching.
- Stir in a cheesemaking starter culture: Pour in the kefir or whey and mix it in thoroughly.
- Stir in a small amount of rennet: Dissolve the quarter dose of rennet in 1⁄4 cup (60 mL) cold water. Mix it into the warm milk gently but thoroughly.
- Leave at room temperature, covered, for 24 hours. After the long fermentation period, the curd will shrink and sink to the bottom of the pot.
- Ladle the curds into a cheesecloth-lined colander perched over a bowl to catch the whey. Tie the cheesecloth into a bag, and simply leave it in the colander to drain.
- Drain for at least 6 hours, at room temperature. Cover with a clean towel if need be to keep flies from landing on it. Be sure that the curds are well suspended above the level of the whey.
- Salt the curds: Open up the cheesecloth bag and sprinkle 1 tablespoon (15 mL) salt over the surface of the cheese. With a wooden spoon, mix the salt into the cheese thoroughly.
- Tie up the cheesecloth bag, and let the salted curds drain for another hour or two. Once the cheese feels quite dry, it’s ready to eat, or have herbs or spices added to it.
- Keep chèvre in the refrigerator if you don’t eat it right away. It will keep for at least 2 weeks.
To make chèvre, ferment goats’ milk with rennet until it yields a soft curd; hang the curd to drain its whey; and salt the cheese to preserve it.
Recommended Reads
Recent Articles
Move aside, maple! We have two new syrups to add to the table. Read on for insights on tapping, selling, and eating syrup from walnut & birch trees.
Read MoreDoes the cold weather have you dreaming about fresh greens and colorful salad? Grow and harvest sprouts indoors to make those dreams a reality! Follow this quick start guide to year-round greens for fresh salad greens in just a couple of weeks! The following is an excerpt from Year-Round Indoor Salad Gardening by Peter Burke. It…
Read MoreCraving something sweet? These delicious maple roasted nuts are the perfect treat to help you push through those end-of-winter blues. The following is an excerpt from Full Moon Feast by Jessica Prentice. It has been adapted for the web. The Magic of Maple: A Rich History Following the Hunger Moon, just before the first thaw…
Read MoreSprouts are easy to cultivate, mature quickly and pack a nutritional punch! You can make nutrient-rich sprouts from all kinds of edible seeds in your kitchen.
Read MoreWhy is modern wheat making us sick? That’s the question posed by author Eli Rogosa in Restoring Heritage Grains. Wheat is the most widely grown crop on our planet, yet industrial breeders have transformed this ancient staff of life into a commodity of yield and profit—witness the increase in gluten intolerance and ‘wheat belly’. Modern…
Read More