That's why we're sharing some tips and suggestions, including information on pasteurized milk, raw milk, how milk is processed, checklists to help you along the whey and much more.
Finding For Cheese Making Good Milk

That's why we're sharing some tips and suggestions, including information on pasteurized milk, raw milk, how milk is processed, checklists to help you along the whey and much more.
Why and when did people start drinking milk?
Can milk quality affect cheese making?
Is all milk the same, no matter what?
- Location | The same type and breed of animal in different locations will produce slightly different milk
- Seasons | Changes in the season will produce differences in milk solids
- Diet | Pastures and feed will affect milk
- Exercise | The amount of exercise an animal gets will change the milk
- Handling | Free range pasture vs large scale commercial farming affects the quality of milk
- Time | How long the animals are milked before being dried off and freshened affects the quality of milk
- Milk Treatment | Pasteurized vs raw milk affects the quality of milk
- Animal Care | Even disposition and care of the animals such as well cared for happy cows vs large high production herds affects the quality of milk
Handling affects the quality of milk
- How Animals Are Milked | Use of automated milking equipment or milked by hand
- Properly Chilling Milk | Milk needs to be chilled properly and quickly
- Transportation | Milk can be trucked long distances to the processing plant or picked up Fresh from the farm
- Storing Milk | Sometimes milk is held for long periods in storage tanks
- Processed or Not | Milk can be raw or pasteurized
- Type of Processing | Different amounts of heat and time can be used during the Pasteurization process
- Long Term Storage | Sometimes milk sits on the store shelf for long periods of time
Good quality, pasteurized milk is the best choice for beginner cheese makers
Why does milk get pasteurized?
How does milk get pasteurized?
Why does milk get homogenized?
Cold stored milk can loose calcium which may affect cheese making
What are the differences between milk quality and milk economics?
- Smaller farms and herds
- Quality of milk over quantity
- Pasture raised
- Low pasteurization temperature
- Local
- Fresh
- Large scale production
- High density enclosures
- Diets for yield over quality
- Competing for a lower priced product
- High yield animals, sub-standard quality milk
- High heat pasteurization
- Long distance distribution
- Shelf stable for extended period of time
How to find the right milk for cheese making
- Good Flavor | Source a milk that has the best flavor to start with
- Right Cost | Milk that you can comfortably afford for your cheese making
- Avoid | Ultra-pasteurized and high temp pasteurization milk, anything above 168F
- Processing | 162F held for 16-20 seconds or lower temp is a good choice for cheese making
- Expiration Date | Avoid milk that is close to the best before date
- Keep it Simple | Try making a simple cheese from several milks before making cheese that needs longer aging, this will help you find a good quality milk more quickly
- Good Milk List | Visit our Good Milk List for a collection of good milks for cheese making. This is a resource built by happy cheese makers, filled with milk they have worked with successfully over the years
Why is raw milk sold differently than pasteurized milk?
- First it goes directly from the udder into automated milking equipment and pipelines
- It gets chilled along the way
- Once chilled it’s added to previously chilled milk
- A big truck comes and trucks it to the bottling location
- It’s usually stored for a few days
- Next it gets processed into retail packaging
- And it goes back into another truck
- Then it travels to a store where it sits for a period of time.
- Finally the milk is purchased
- First it goes directly from the udder into automated milking equipment and pipelines
- It gets chilled along the way
- Then it goes directly from the farm to the consumer
Is raw milk safe for cheese making?
- Raw milk tastes better
- It provides better curd formation
- Your Raw milk is intact with everything from the pasture that nature provided
- It contains natural bios, in many cases a healthy dairy blend that has sorted itself out over generations
- Raw milk contains beneficial dairy bacteria and enzymes to make cheese easier to digest
- Omega3 is higher in raw milk providing many health benefits, especially in pasture raised animals
- It doesn’t travel or store well
- Raw milk has the potential to introduce milk borne disease and health risks
- It has the potential to cause problems for those charged with a nations health
- The potential for contamination begins with the udder, skin, feces, milking equipment, handling and storage, so proper sanitation and milk handling is imperative
Things to keep in mind when purchasing raw milk
- If you have local farmers markets where cheese is being sold, talk with the vendors about where to find raw milk.
- Use our Good Milk List to find high quality milk sources near you.
- Ask friends if they know of anyone who is milking their own animals and selling raw milk.
- Visit the farm to see the animals, how the milking goes and talk to the owners. Sanitation and care of the animals is very important.
- Form your own opinion of the operation and milk and be sure you feel comfortable with the milk source.
- Once you have found raw milk start with small trials, if you have never consumed raw milk you may digest it differently.
- If you have an uncomfortable reaction that persists stop using raw milk and consult your doctor
- Avoid any milk that is more than three days old and any milk that does not taste or smell good.