Friday, March 2, 2007

Home made Cottage Cheese - Paneer

You can make good cottage cheese at home. Lot of Indian dishes use this, so I am giving the recipe here, and some photographs I took as I made it. I hope it helps my students to make it - so they can try dishes like Palak Paneer, Kadai Paneer, Paneer Tikka... List is endless !

You will need, beside the ingredients, Two utensils, a colander, a chopping board, and a thin linen cloth - any cotton cloth, which is thin - and does not have the loops of thread on the surface, so the regular hand napkins we use are not suitable. I bought mine in Ikea. Any clean, thin, cotton cloth will do.

Preperation time : cooking time : 15 minutes Waiting time : 1 hour
Yields about 150 grams of cottage cheese .


Ingredients :

Fresh Milk - 1 carton
One Tablespoon White vinegar.

I used this carton of milk, but Bright brand Fresh milk is good as well. I found that these two brands make good cottage cheese. With one carton of milk, you will get a block of cottage cheese, about 150 to 200 gms - If you want more, use more milk. The whey has lot of nutrients - so I don't throw it away - I use it to knead my roti dough - gives soft, tasty and nutritious rotis !
Generally lime juice is used in India to split the milk , but here in Shanghai, I found that lime juice does not always work, so I have started using the white vinegar.
Method : Pour the milk into a container and place it on the stove.Bring it to boil.
While you are waiting for the milk to boil, place a colander on a utensil, which can hold about 600 ml or more of liquid, since this is
going to hold the whey which seperates once the milk is split. If you use a smaller one, it will overflow with the hot whey. Also take care that the utensil is such that does not mind hot boiling liquids - do not use light weight plastic ones. Make the napkin a little damp, just wet it and wring it out - this facilitates easy draining of the whey - and drape it on the colander.



When the milk comes to boil, it will start rising up. At this point, add the vinegar to it, and mix well, turn the heat to low.

After one minute or so, it will split.
Turn off the heat, when you can see greenish whey seperate, like in this picture.

Now strain the split milk through the napkin draped on the colander, and you will have the cheese remaining on the napkin.
If you are uncomfortable about pouring the hot mixture out, you can wait a few minutes and do this step after the mixture cools - it will not effect the quality of the cheese.

Lift the four corners of the napkin, twist the napkin above the cheese contained in it. take one corner of the napkin and wind it around the place where you twisted it. You can also tie it with a piece of string, if you wish. You can tie it up and let the liquid drain out, if you can , and it will take a longer time to drain this way, I just place a chopping board on it, and put a weight on it. You can do it either way, if you are hanging it up for drain, be sure you make arrangements for the whey draining out - either hang it up above the sink or place a container beneath to catch the drips.

So if you wish to use the weight, then :
Place the bundle on an upturned dish or, if you have a strong colander, on the colander, and put the chopping board on the bundle. Place a weight - even a one kilo bag of grocery will do - on the board, leave for one hour. After one hour, remove the weight, the board and you will have your cottage cheese ready.





Now you can cut it into pieces, if you are using it in a dish like palak paneer, or grate it and use it as you like.

This is what I made that day - Palak Paneer - or Spinach cooked with cottage cheese - Yum!!






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