Home-Made Cheese: Artisan Cheesemaking Made Simple | A Review & Recipe

Home-Made Cheese: Artisan Cheesemaking Made Simple makes a bold promise, offering to teach cheesemaking that is simple enough to try at home. The author, Paul Thomas, is a cheesemaker, cheese inspector and even a cheese judge so he certainly knows his stuff, but can he bring it to a level that’s manageable for the aspiring home cheesemaker without resulting in a disappointing end product?

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We’ve tried a high street cheese making kit before and it was a spectacular failure, which perhaps explains my natural cynicism when it comes to a book claiming to make it “simple”. However, even the most casual glance through the book suggests this is a far more detailed effort and gives me hope that the author has resisted the temptation to oversimplify the recipes just to appeal to the home cook.

The first quarter of the book gives an extensive overview of the whole cheesemaking process, with chapters on the equipment any home dairy may need, the ingredients that go into cheese and the basic techniques you’ll need to be familiar with.  This section is fantastically detailed – you can certainly see that Paul is a scientist by training – but it can be a little overwhelming for the home cheesemaker. The line between “things you ought to know” and “things you have to know” isn’t always obvious, so I’m left (for example) unsure whether it’s impossible to make cheese without a pH meter to hand, or if it’s just that having access to one will give me more understanding about exactly what’s going on.

The first block of actual recipes are “easy dairy recipes” to get you started – things like butter, yogurt and cottage cheese. This is a great way to ease you gently into things, and gives you the confidence to approach the ‘proper’ cheeses to follow.

This approach continues as the following sections take you through fresh & brined cheeses like Ricotta and Halloumi (which are made quickly and ready to be eaten immediately), hard cheeses such as Cheddar and Gouda (which are more time consuming and require ageing, but are still relatively simple processes) right the way through to  surface-ripened and blue cheese such as Brie and Stilton. This last group are more complicated to make and age properly, so are quite rightly left to the end of the book.

Each recipe is beautifully presented, with large photographs of the cheese you’re trying to make and plenty of step-by-step images to show you exactly how to proceed. The ingredient list includes a full list of all the equipment you could possibly need (although to be honest, you can often make do with less!) and an accurate estimate of the time required.

homemade cheese book kavey eats collage
Images from the book, used with permission, assembled into a collage by Kavey Eats

The steps are numbered and are generally clear and understandable. That said, there are almost as many step-by-step images as there are steps, but they don’t always line up. Indeed, although the images are all labelled alphabetically (from a to z), these images are never referred to in the written instructions so it isn’t always obvious which picture refers to which step (and which steps don’t have an accompanying picture).

This is a very in-depth book that feels like it’s aimed at the passionate home cheesemaker – perhaps someone who aspires to become professional – rather than a complete novice. The level of detail sometimes feels a little intimidating, and if I hadn’t had the benefit of recently attending an excellent cheese making course then all the talk of exact pH measurements and scientific precision might have put me off trying the recipes in my own kitchen – not to mention the bewildering array of cultures and yeasts that some of the later recipes call for.

homemade halloumi collage
Pete’s homemade halloumi cheese

With that confidence in hand, I’ve used the book to make the best halloumi I’ve ever tasted and as soon as I’ve tracked down some suitable cultures I plan to work through the book cover to cover. While I’m not sure that it really manages to make cheesemaking simple, it does at least make it something that any confident cook should be able to approach.

Talking of cultures brings me to the other issue I have, which I can’t fairly blame on the book itself. Home cheesemaking currently seems to be at the stage that home beer making was about 30 years ago; although there are a handful of small suppliers of cheesemaking cultures (which are listed in the back of the book), it’s very hard to track down all the different cultures listed – especially in ‘domestic’ quantities. It may be more practical to talk to your friendly local cheesemaker to get your hands on these, (although I can understand why the author might not have wanted to suggest this!)

The yeasts listed in the final section of the book – for the surface-ripened and blue cheeses – are especially tricky to find, not least because the few suppliers that stock them don’t actually call them yeasts! Reading all the culture descriptions carefully – and peering closely at the pictures to try and identify the code numbers mentioned in the book – seems to be the only way to track them down.

Overall, I’m a fan of the book. It’s detailed enough for the most dedicated cheesemaker, the recipes I’ve worked through so far have been clear and easy to follow, and highly successful. In many ways, I’m grateful that the author hasn’t dumbed down the recipes for home use but with that comes a considerable amount of frustration at sourcing the more “industrial” ingredients.

Recipe for Halloumi

We have permission to share Paul Thomas’ halloumi-style cheese recipe here on Kavey Eats.

If you decide to buy this book after reading our content, please consider clicking through our affiliate link, located within the post and in the footnote at the end.

Kavey Eats received a review copy of Home-Made Cheese: Artisan Cheesemaking Made Simple by Paul Thomas (RRP £14.99) from publisher Lorenz Books.

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22 Comments to "Home-Made Cheese: Artisan Cheesemaking Made Simple | A Review & Recipe"

  1. kaveyeats

    We had a kit but the instruction book with it was woeful. This one is way better!

    Reply
  2. kaveyeats

    The only thing holding us back is difficulty getting cultures in small amounts.

    Reply
  3. Paul Thomas

    Thanks for your review which I enjoyed reading. If the reader has any issues obtaining the exact cultures recommended, the various suppliers listed are usually quite helpful and should be able to provide a good alternative from another manufacturer. Good luck with your cheesemaking. The Halloumi style cheese that you made looks great.

    Reply
    kaveyeats

    Thank you so much for reading our review, and for your suggestions! Much appreciated! We’ve already been told a few friends have bought the book so shall be getting their cheesemaking on too!

    Reply
  4. Annie @ Annie's Noms

    I’ve always been intrigued by cheese making, so I think I need to get this book. I’m definitely interested in making my own halloumi; it’s one of my favourite cheeses!

    Reply
  5. Beth

    What a fun cookbook! I’ve never even considered making my own cheese but with the step by step instructions, it doesn’t seem such a hard task!

    Reply
  6. Angela

    This looks like a really informative book. I’ve started making my own yoghurt, looks like cheese is next.

    Reply
  7. Laura

    Being a cheese fiend, I have had had a few attempts at making a few cheese in the past, with mixed success. Not got round to making Halloumi yet, so definitely on my list to try.

    This looks like a book that I will break my promise to husband not to get any more food books for… I’ll stick it on my Christmas list.

    Reply
  8. Cath

    I have this book and agree completely. It isn’t for the novice, but if you have done a one day ( or more comprehensive) course this is a brilliant book. Have had the same problems as you, in finding the starters in the recipes.

    Reply

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