The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Make great cheese, no cow needed

Wow your guests with simple paneer, vegan cheeses.

- By C. W. Cameron

There’s no question Atlanta loves cheese. More than 2,500 people attended The Cheese Fest at Old Fourth Ward Park in late September. They enjoyed an abundance of cheese with more than 75 vendors serving up everything from tiny cubes to big wedges of cheese from the folks at Murray’s. For us cheese connoisseu­rs, it was nirvana. Nibble, chat, move on to the next cheese maker. What a way to spend an evening.

As a person who is big into do-it-yourself (I took a class at Parish many years ago just so I could learn how to make my own Worcesters­hire sauce, and yes, I still make it by the half gallon), I’ve long been interested in making my own cheese. Not that I would ever be able to produce something to rival what they create at Blackberry Farm or Sweet Grass Dairy, but just so I could understand the process and maybe make something simple but delicious.

So in keeping with my do-ityourself bent, I took a cheesemaki­ng class with Mary Rigdon of Decimal Place Farm. Rigdon makes a wide range of goat cheeses served at every fine dining place in town and sold to us mortals at Freedom Farmers Market. In the class, we made feta. I followed up by going to Beer & Wine Craft in Sandy Springs and purchasing vegetable rennet and bacterial starter cultures, and I made a number of batches of feta at home. Rennet helps make a cheese firm, and the cultures are necessary when you want to make something like feta or chèvre or even just cream cheese.

I’ve also long been curious about vegan “cheese.” Atlanta is the home of Pure Abundance, a cultured and aged cashew cheese. Melanie Wade of Cultured South took over production of Pure Abundance in June 2017, and I talked with her about how that’s been going.

Wade began working in the world of fermented and cultured food when she created Golda Kombucha in 2013. When she opened her kombucha taproom and fermentati­on marketplac­e this year she was ready to take on cheese.

“It seems like a simple process,” she said, “but it’s not. Vegan cheese is based on nuts, and nuts can be different. Some can be drier, some can be richer. That’s fine if you’re just making cheese at home, but we need to make a product that consistent­ly meets our quality standards.”

Another piece of the puzzle was rejuvelac, the probiotic-rich

nonalcohol­ic fermented liquid that’s used to culture nuts and seeds to so they can give the cheese a tangy flavor. Wade and her cheese makers were having trouble with the rejuvelac formula they inherited.

She said, “It wasn’t buttery and creamy. It was making a sour cheese. It dawned on me, there we were in a kombucha factory.

We have hundreds of gallons of probiotic liquid all around us. We could use what we are excellent at making and incorporat­e it into the cheese. Now we use kombucha as the culturing agent. It produces a tanginess that’s really close to cheddar cheese.”

Now Wade and her cheese maker, Sarah Adams, make a double batch each week of the two varieties of Pure Abundance, Pan and Luna, and supply it to Whole Foods, Sevananda, Ancient Awakenings and their kombucha customers at local farmers markets.

If you really want to delve into the world of vegan cheese, you’ll want to get a copy of “Vegan Cheese” by Jules Aron ($24.95, Countryman Press). The author walks you through making spreadable cheeses like the Boursin-style cheese we share the recipe for, but also firm cheeses that require something such as agar, tapioca or carrageena­n to give them a firm consistenc­y. That may sound daunting, but these are all ingredient­s you can get at your local health food store or at a market like Whole Foods. There are recipes for cheeses made from cauliflowe­r, zucchini, sunflower seeds and Brazil nuts. It will open your eyes to a whole world of possibilit­ies.

And finally, I recommend my “old” standby, “But I Could Never Go Vegan! 125 Recipes That Prove You Can Live Without Cheese, It’s Not All Rabbit Food, and Your Friends Will Still Come Over for Dinner” by Kristy Turner ($24.95, The Experiment). It was the chapter titled “I Could Never Give Up Cheese” that sold me on the book. Its recipes for Tofu Chèvre (shared here), Pecan Parmesan and Sunflower Cheddar convinced me that yes, I could make “cheese” at home and yes, it would be delicious.

 ?? STYLING BY C.W. CAMERON. CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRIS HUNT ?? Simple recipes can help you make Paneer (from left), Tofu Chevre, and vegan Boursin-style herb and garlic cheese at home.
STYLING BY C.W. CAMERON. CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRIS HUNT Simple recipes can help you make Paneer (from left), Tofu Chevre, and vegan Boursin-style herb and garlic cheese at home.

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