Hey everyone, hope you’re having an incredible day today. Today, I will show you a way to prepare a distinctive dish, vegetarian venezuelan cuajada cheese. It is one of my favorites food recipes. This time, I’m gonna make it a bit tasty. This is gonna smell and look delicious.
Vegetarian Venezuelan Cuajada Cheese is one of the most well liked of recent trending meals in the world. It is easy, it’s quick, it tastes delicious. It’s enjoyed by millions daily. Vegetarian Venezuelan Cuajada Cheese is something that I have loved my entire life. They’re nice and they look fantastic.
Great recipe for Vegetarian Venezuelan Cuajada Cheese. Delicious to eat with fried plaintains, arepas, cachapas, tequeños, empanadas, etc. or cut it into slices and grill them. Note about milk: use pausterized milk; if you use ultra-pausterized or homogenized milk it won't.
To get started with this recipe, we must prepare a few ingredients. You can cook vegetarian venezuelan cuajada cheese using 5 ingredients and 16 steps. Here is how you can achieve that.
The ingredients needed to make Vegetarian Venezuelan Cuajada Cheese:
- Get 1 Gallon Pausterized Milk
- Take 1/4 teaspoon calcium chloride
- Get 1 packet Mesophilic Starter Culture
- Make ready 1/8 teaspoon vegetable rennet
- Take 8 grams salt
All Kirkland Signature (Costco) cheeses EXCEPT PARMIGIANO-REGGIANO AND MANCHEGO are made with microbial rennet and are suitable for vegetarians. Heat non-stick skillet or cast iron pan over medium-high heat. This soft, moist flatbread is perfect for on-the-go street food. The Venezuelan version often is stuffed with ingredients like cheese, avocado or cuajada, a type of milk curd.
Instructions to make Vegetarian Venezuelan Cuajada Cheese:
- Heat the milk until it reaches 36° C or 97° F
- Mix the calcium chloride with a bit of water (1/4 or 1/8 cup of water) and add to the milk
- Add the starter culture to the milk
- Stir for 2 minutes
- Let it sit for 45 minutes (keep the temperature with slow heat for ~2 minutes every ~15 minutes)
- Mix the rennet with a bit of water (1/4 or 1/8 cup of water) and add to the milk
- Stir for 2 minutes
- Let it sit for 45 minutes (keep the temperature with slow heat for ~2 minutes every ~15 minutes)
- Use a knife to cut the curd into squares of 1/2 inches
- Slowly stir for 15 minutes. The curds will clump together. Cut them back into squares of 1/2 inches while stirring. Keep the temperature of the whey at 36° C or 97° F the whole time.
- Remove the pot from the stove and use a slotted spoon to transfer the curd to a colander lined with a cheesecloth (the thinner the better)
- Let the curd drain the excess of whey for 30m
- Transfer the curd to a bowl and knead together with the salt
- Now transfer the curd back to a cheescloth and into a mold / press
- Press with 4-8 pounds of weight for 1 hour
- Extract the cheese from the mold and refrigerate
The Columbian version, featured here, is often served plain. "This is a quick and easy recipe to make delicious Colombian arepas. The word 'Cuajada' means 'curdled' in Spanish. Famous in the north-eastern regions of Spain, earlier it was made from ewe's milk, but it is industrially made from cow's milk at present. During preparation, raw warmed milk is blended with rennet or plant extract and left to curdle. Traditionally it was made in a wooden recipient known a 'kaiku' plus heated with a red-hot.
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