April 26, 2026

Tons of Milk

"Tons," of course, is a hyperbole, i.e. a figure of speech using exaggeration for emphasis. I don't actually have tons of milk, but I'm getting more at this time of year than I usually get! Between River and Saluda, I'm getting close to a gallon per day. This may not seem like much to milk producers, but for our little homestead it's a lot! The fridge fills up fast so I'm having to do something with milk about every other day.

The reason it's more than usual is because I usually share the milk with the kids. But with River's being stillborn, I'm getting all of her milk. Between the two goats I have more than enough for my regular cheeses and have started making hard, aged cheeses again. 

Straining the morning's milk and my rigged cheese press in the background.

I haven't made hard cheeses in years. 

I pretty much gave up on aged cheeses because of my cheesemaking conditions. Curing cheese requires consistent temps of between 45 and 55. In our climate, my kitchen and pantry are usually too warm, and that doesn't make for good aged cheese. I've fed more cheeses to the chickens than I care to recall. Eventually, I settled on making fresh and Mediterranean cheeses, such as mozzarellafeta, halloumi, domati, farmerspaneer, and ricotta. These aren't aged, but are typically stored in brine, olive oil, or the fridge. Some of them, like the mozzarella and halloumi, can be frozen.

With so much milk, however, I started thinking how lovely it would be to have cheese for slicing all winter. I decided maybe it was time to invest in some proper equipment for this. 

freshly pressed cheese, ready for aging

I bought a new cheese press. 

my new cheese press

It's a Roots & Harvest Cheese Press that I purchased from Pleasant Hill Grain. I haven't tried it yet, but I'll let you know what I think after I give it a try. 

Besides cheese I continue to make kefir as a regular part of our diet. I'm also making cottage cheese, which is quite delicious.

Fresh homemade cottage cheese is hard to stop eating.

And with warm weather, ice cream!

vanilla goat milk ice cream and chocolate sourdough cookies

The cookie recipe is from Kate Downham's Sourdough Without Fail. She calls them "dark chocolate cookies," but Dan and I call them "brownie cookies," because they are like fudgey brownies. It's a perfect recipe for sourdough discard. It uses coconut sugar, but not too much, so they aren't too sweet. They're just the way we like them and perfect with vanilla ice cream. 

Between milk and planting, my days are busy. In the evenings, I'm working on getting a new warp on my big loom. That will be my summer weaving project. 

18 comments:

  1. You are reminding me of how much milk we got from our Jersey cow, many years ago!
    You are a busy lady. Just wondering how you are going to age your cheese in your climate now, if it didn't work before???

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    1. Rosalea, I'm buying a beverage cooler for a cheese cave! I've been researching them and finally found one on sale that will chill to the temps I need. :)

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  2. I like to make paneer now and then. My chives are budding up, so when they flower I'll make paneer and stud it with chive blossoms. It's beautiful and good food, too.
    That's a ton of milk! Can you freeze it?

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    1. Liz, chive flavored paneer sounds lovely!

      I have read that milk can be frozen, but I just don't have the room in my freezer. Cheese is the traditional way of preserving milk, so that's where I'm at. :)

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  3. I know nothing about cheese presses or pressing cheese but that press is the one I would likely gravitate to you. It visually looks built to last which is one of my number one considerations these days whenever I buy something.

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    1. Ed, it's definitely well built, which, like you say, has to be a primary consideration nowadays. Far too much is made poorly to be worth buying.

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  4. What a great way to make the best out of a sad situation. I like goat cheese, as I have given up on trying to properly digest cow’s milk cheeses. Enjoy your cheese making!

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    1. Thanks Daisy! There's always something to be thankful for.

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  5. Good luck with your hard cheeses, Leigh! I used to make soft/fresh cheeses back when I had dairy goats, and still miss that option. Dairy is certainly my biggest food expense, but adding dairy goats to my cashmere herd at this point - and breeding to keep a milk supply - would be quite an endeavor.

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    1. Quinn, thanks! Yes, getting milk requires more than just harvesting for fiber. I wish goats could have eternal lactations.

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  6. Loved this post. I miss having fresh goat's milk for sure. I loved making creamed cheese (a family favorite of all I made). Yum.

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    1. Kristina, creamed cheese is one I've never tried! My ricotta is wonderfully creamy, however. It works great as a cream cheese substitute.

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  7. Leigh, what are you thinking of to age your cheeses in? That has always been a sore spot for me and hard cheeses.

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    1. TB, I've discovered that my back porch solar powered chest fridge (https://www.5acresandadream.com/2020/03/chest-freezer-to-fridge-conversion.html) works. I have two baskets at the top which stay in the right temp range (the deeper parts of the fridge are lower). Except I'm running out of room. So I ordered a beverage cooler on sale, which should be delivered in the next few days. I'm thinking if it can save my hard cheeses, then it will be a good investment.

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    2. I had not thought about that as a possibility at all, Leigh! How fortunate.

      And yes, the hard cheeses (and what supports them) seems like a good investment to me as well, especially with the cost of dairy now.

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    3. TB, do you have a source for good cheese making quality milk? Milk is certainly more reasonable than cheese, plus there's the satisfaction of making it for yourself.

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  8. Well there sure are worse problems to have lol! I'm very sorry for the lost kid, but happy that at least you're reaping some sort of benefit. It's nice for you to have so much choice in what cheeses you make. I hope the hard cheese efforts work out well for you.

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    1. Nina, it is fun to have enough milk to experiment. I have a list of cheeses I prioritize, but hard cheeses have never been on that list. It's exciting to be able to make them!

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