cheese

Food, Nutrition and Agriculture
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diamond lil
Posts: 9960
Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:42 pm
Location: Scotland.

cheese

Post by diamond lil »

Does anybody freeze it? Has anybody kept it way past the use- by date?
Ogre

Re: cheese

Post by Ogre »

Think we have. I'll check with Mrs O. I know we've frozed butter and used it about 4 years after use by date.
maryb

Re: cheese

Post by maryb »

It freezes fine but gets crumbly so best to grate it first. And I use cheese for as long as it's not mouldy. After all it was originally a form of preservation
Ferricks
Posts: 427
Joined: Sun Feb 26, 2012 12:16 am
Location: Near Glasgow

Re: cheese

Post by Ferricks »

maryb wrote:It freezes fine but gets crumbly so best to grate it first. And I use cheese for as long as it's not mouldy. After all it was originally a form of preservation
I'm with mary - it keeps a peach! Waxed is good for LT in fridge and freezes wonderfully.
preppingsu

Re: cheese

Post by preppingsu »

Yes I freeze. But as Mary said it does get crumbly.
User avatar
diamond lil
Posts: 9960
Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:42 pm
Location: Scotland.

Re: cheese

Post by diamond lil »

Ok will grate it first. I am sure I did once freeze it and something happened but I forget what :mrgreen: I do freeze milk and butter all the time. TY!
chris8472
Posts: 91
Joined: Tue Feb 14, 2012 9:36 pm

Re: cheese

Post by chris8472 »

maryb wrote:It freezes fine but gets crumbly so best to grate it first. And I use cheese for as long as it's not mouldy. After all it was originally a form of preservation
mouldy cheese is fine thats how cheese ages so scrape or slice the mold off
wolfpup

Re: cheese

Post by wolfpup »

Another alternative to freezing cheese is to wax it yourself. I buy cheese wax off eBay (around £7 but does LOADS) and when any hard cheese that I like is on offer I buy a few kilos, cut it down to about 1 pound weights and some 1/2 pound weight and wax them. Then they are stored in my office cupboards (for office read back bedroom). I suspend them from the rail or just stack them - turning once a month to stop the cheese 'settling' and cracking the wax. This saves fridge/freezer space - and does not damage the cheese - in fact it continues to mature.
preppingsu

Re: cheese

Post by preppingsu »

wolfpup wrote:Another alternative to freezing cheese is to wax it yourself. I buy cheese wax off eBay (around £7 but does LOADS) and when any hard cheese that I like is on offer I buy a few kilos, cut it down to about 1 pound weights and some 1/2 pound weight and wax them. Then they are stored in my office cupboards (for office read back bedroom). I suspend them from the rail or just stack them - turning once a month to stop the cheese 'settling' and cracking the wax. This saves fridge/freezer space - and does not damage the cheese - in fact it continues to mature.
Wolf pup, that sounds very interesting. Would you be prepared to do a photo tutorial for us please?
wolfpup

Re: cheese

Post by wolfpup »

preppingsu wrote:
wolfpup wrote:Another alternative to freezing cheese is to wax it yourself. I buy cheese wax off eBay (around £7 but does LOADS) and when any hard cheese that I like is on offer I buy a few kilos, cut it down to about 1 pound weights and some 1/2 pound weight and wax them. Then they are stored in my office cupboards (for office read back bedroom). I suspend them from the rail or just stack them - turning once a month to stop the cheese 'settling' and cracking the wax. This saves fridge/freezer space - and does not damage the cheese - in fact it continues to mature.
Wolf pup, that sounds very interesting. Would you be prepared to do a photo tutorial for us please?

No problem - next time I do a load will take piccies - although to be honest I learned the way to do it off the internet. SO, any suggestions on doing it better will be very gratefully received