Farm News, Herd Share Pickups, Farmers Market Info: 2-25-2021

Hello beautiful peeps,

rosie and calfLook at what we found this afternoon. As many of you know, Rosie is very young and we were quite worried about her having a calf. She came through with flying colors. This little gem, a girl, weighs about 40 lbs. She is a tiny thing — and so CUTE!!

Ok, on to other news. We are selling again at the Independence Farmer’s Market. Online only at the moment, but everyone is hopeful that the 2nd Friday of May the market will be in full swing again.

Market Updates
As I said, Independence Online Farmer’s Market. You can sign up by clicking HERE. This market opens on Friday evening and closes on Wednesday evening for pickup two days later on Friday afternoon.

This Saturday 2/27/2021 is the last market for February at the Wytheville Farmer’s Market. The hours are 10:00 am to 12:00 noon.

For your convenience, you can set up your Wytheville online market account HERE. This market opens on Sunday at 7:00 pm and closes on Thursday at 7:00 pm. Place your order with whatever vendors you choose during that time window and pick everything up at the Wytheville Farmer’s Market between 9:00 am and noon. Anything ordered from the online market is not picked up at our booth. Your purchases are picked up on the covered side of the building. Feel free to come on in an chat with me even if you placed your order on line and picked it up outside. 

These items are available at either market. We will have our lovely quail eggs for $3 a dozen. I have a couple of pickled quail egg recipes that are working well for me. I’ll have jars of pickled quail eggs as examples of how they look. Three different varieties to give you an idea what can be done. Again, I’ll have pickled peppers (not very hot) for $5 a jar, pepper jam (HOT, Medium and mild) for $5 a jar and apple pie jam, $8 a jar. We have the usual grass-fed meats available – ground beef $7 per package (approx 1 lb), ground goat $12 per package (approx 1 lb) and ground lamb $10 per package (approx 1 lb). Quail meat packages are available 1 lb – $18.00, and pickled peppers $5.00. 

If you are a Herd Share member, this week you can pickup at the Wytheville Market between 10:00 am and 12:00 noon. Email me to let me know want anything extra this time. To get to the product section, you can jump down the page here

Quail

The quail almost got axed. I was looking at our finances and realized that these guys cost a lot compared to raising chickens. As they say, there is a reason everybody isn’t doing it. Anyway, I’m going to give them another year to pay for themselves before making any other decisions. You all know I would have a very hard time giving them up. They are so much FUN!! Friday, March 5th is when I start collecting eggs to start the next incubation cycle. Three weeks later we will have lots of cute baby quail.

Cows 

As you saw, Rosie surprised us by having her beautiful calf even earlier than we thought. She is very young to have a calf. Usually a heifer will be two years old before giving birth to her first calf. Rosie is barely 18 months old. Scott had a hunch about her and once again his instincts were correct. Isn’t that calf beautiful?

Cloud is the next in line for having a calf. That date is a month away. Claire will be right after her within a few days. These births remind up that spring is right around the corner. As usual this time of year, I’m so ready for spring!!

Creamery

I hope you have been following the progress of the creamery on our Facebook page. Scott has finished the outside of the creamery. There are lots of little pieces here and there to be completed. One of them was creating a way to get the milk from the milk room where the fresh milk is stored to the cheese make room where it can be poured into the vat. There is an ingenious little cat door on one end of a PVC Pipe that runs through the wall between the two rooms. The end of the pipe in the milk room has a PVC cap on it. Take the cap off, run the hose through the pipe, pushing open the cat door, and the milk can be dumped directly into the vat. It’s ingenious and approved by the state inspectors as a safe way to transport that milk from the storage tank to the cheese vat. Yay, glad that’s done.

Scott had lots of other tasks on his list of stuff to do but it got sidelined as he was preparing for milking Rosie — this before she even had her calf. We could tell she was getting close and it was past time to get the milking machines tested, cleaned and prepped for the season. Still not ready, so hand milking in the morning. But soon all will be in place.

That’s it for farm news. Now on to the farmer’s market update. 

Farmer’s Market

I will be at the Wytheville Farmer’s Market on Saturday 10 am to 12 noon. 

Our items for sale include apple pie jam and hot, medium, or mild pepper jam. 

We have all of our meats back in stock for you.  

We have ground lamb as well as rib chops and loin chops.

We have ground beef and ground goat.

I’ll have lots of quail eggs!!. 

Herd Shares

Herd Share Peeps, I’ll see you in my usual location. Add on as you desire and all cheeses and butter are at your service. Looking forward to seeing you on Saturday and/or Tuesday. 

I still have new raw milk cheese herd shares available. Contact me via email (melanie@peacefulheartfarm.com) or phone (276-694-4369).

Please go HERE to learn all about Herd Shares and get on our waiting list. 


 News This Week 


Products Available to Herd Share Owners

Choose 1 per week 1/2 Share Whole Share
Butter 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Ararat Legend 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Peaceful Heart Gold 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Pinnacle 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Clau d’ville Cheddar 1/4 pound 1/2 pound

Products Available to the General Public

Quail Price / Pound
Quail Eggs (1 dozen) $3.00
Quail meat (approx 1 lb) $18.00
Beef Price / Pound
Ground (approx 1 lb) $7.00
Lamb Price / Pound
Lamb Loin Chops $18
Lamb Rib Chops $18
Lamb Kabobs SOLD OUT
Ground Lamb (approx 1 lb) $10
Chev (Goat) Price / Pound
Ground Chev (approx 1 lb) $12
Jams and Jellies Price / 8 oz Jar
Apple Pie Jam $8
HOT, Medium, or Mild Pepper Jam $5

Let’s Get Together

As always, we love meeting you in person.  You can find us at the Wytheville Farmers Market on Saturday from 10:00 am to Noon. Special procedures are in place for your health and safety. Masks are still recommended but not required as far as I know. 

As always, you may visit us at our dairy farm in Claudville, Virginia Tuesdays from 10 am to 12 noon and Saturday afternoons from 3 pm to 5 pm. Find out how we raise our animals and why you will love the taste of tradition that is inherent in all of our products. Herd share holders will be able to see up close how their cows are cared for and the cheese operation and where it is stored. 


Peaceful Heart FarmCast

In this week’s podcast, “Flavored Cheese” is a fun topic. If you are making your own cheese, this is a short introduction to some ideas about how you might take your cheesemaking to the next level. Or if you just love cheese, it will give you some ideas about what to look for as you are shopping your local markets.


Free Downloads

I want to follow up on my previous FarmCast, The Taste of Cheese where I talked about developing your expertise with using descriptive words. The FREE downloads of Classifying Cheese by Type and Category and Expand Your Cheese Vocabulary are still available at our website. Please stop by and get your FREE resources. 

You can LISTEN TO THE PODCAST HEREOr, if you have an Alexa device, just say:Alexa, play podcast Peaceful Heart FarmCast.

And don’t miss an episode! Subscribe to the Peaceful Heart Farm podcast on Apple PodcastsAndroidTuneIn, Stitcher or Spotify


Flavored Cheese

Have you considered flavored cheese in your home cheesemaking operation? Likely most of you are not making your own cheese. You’ll want to seek out some flavored cheeses from your local markets for a real treat. There are so many possibilities here that I couldn’t possibly cover them all in this short podcast. Today, I’ll give you just a brief overview of what you might consider in tasting and in creating with your cheeses.

Welcome new listeners and welcome back to the veteran homestead-loving regulars who stop by the FarmCast for every episode. I appreciate you all so much. I’m going to start off with what’s going on at the homestead and then I’ll get right into talking about some tasty flavored cheese.  

Our Virginia Homestead Life Updates

I want to start off with talking about our herd share program. We are opening up our raw milk cheese herd shares to more people. One full share will provide you and your family with about two pounds of our hand-made, aged, raw milk cheese per month. A half share will provide about one pound of cheese per month. We have four varieties from which to choose.

Our Peaceful Heart Gold is a danish Havarti-style cheese. It is a washed curd cheese that is soft, buttery and the sweetest cheese we make. Moving from the mildest to the sharpest, the next in line is our Ararat Legend. This is also a washed rind cheese made in the Dutch gouda tradition. It is a firmer cheese than the Gold with nearly as much butter flavor. This cheese ages well and the flavor deepens with each passing month. The next two kind of tie for sharpest, depending on how long they have aged. We have a wonderful aged cheddar and an alpine-style cheese we call Pinnacle. The flavor complexities of these two cheeses are amazing as neither is even ready to taste until 9 months or more of aging. Well, we do offer the milder cheddar at three and six months, but you will definitely want to wait for the good stuff.

Details and costs can be found on our website at Peaceful Heart Farm dot com. Product pickup is available at the Wytheville Farmer’s market, the Independence Farmer’s market and from our homestead. Support us or some other local farm. Keep good food alive. Give us a call and we can get you set up.

Cows

We are on calf watch with Rosie. This event is happening far ahead of our expectations. Her udder is developing and filling with milk. It may be only a matter of days. You never really know, any more than you know for humans, when the exact date will be for the event. She is looking good and Scott and I are feeling pretty good about Rosie and her calf. We are still cautious and watching her very closely, but again, she looks really good right now. Buttercup is doing a good job of keeping Rosie company. She is our only cow that is not going to have a calf this year.

After Rosie, next up for giving birth is Cloud followed closely by Claire. Butter and Violet are much further down the line, due in May and June respectively. And as I said, Buttercup is not having a calf this year. If all goes well, we will end up with five calves this year. Praying for some heifers.

Goats and Sheep

The sheep are doing well. Their expected delivery date is the 27th of March, so about a month more for them. We are likely to have six to eight lambs this year.

The goats have been reduced to five. Yes, finally I got moving on reducing our goat population. We are moving more rapidly toward changing over to meat goats. If you are new, we currently have cashmere goats. I had this grandiose idea that I was going to have time to gather their cashmere, have it made into yarn, and knit up some wonderful cashmere items. It took a few years for me to realize that I was not going to have time to include yet another enterprise into our business model. By that time, we had well over twenty goats.

Now these wonderful animals are great at keeping the pastures cleared of brush, briars and small pine trees. So, we definitely want to keep a few of them around. However, it makes much more sense for our homestead to have meat goats. That way they can keep the pastures pristine and also provide more nourishment for our family. Later this fall we will process the final five goats. At that point we will be in the market for a small herd of meat goats. Right now, I am focused on Kiko goats but would probably consider Spanish goats.

Quail

A few days ago, Scott and I went over the costs of raising these great birds. It’s pretty expensive according to my year-end profit and loss statement. My first, knee-jerk reaction was to just stop raising quail. However, after waiting a couple of days, I decided to break down the actual cost and how much we are benefiting from the eggs and meat.

Back in 2006, Scott raised just short of 150 chickens in the Joel Salatin-type chicken tractors. He calculated that it cost a little over $1 per pound to raise those chickens. Our cost to raise quail is somewhere between $5.50 and $6.50 per pound of bird. However, there are also the eggs to consider. Scott and I sat down and tried to come up with a better comparison. If we had to buy eggs, what would be our cost? Subtract that from the total costs, based on four quail eggs per one chicken egg, and the rest of the cost divided by the approximate weight of the birds raised for meat. The bottom line is that we decided to give the quail one more season to prove their worth. I also decided to feed them a little bit less. They did seem to be putting on quite a bit of unnecessary fat so this seemed the first place to cut a little cost. We shall see what happens this year. I’m going to keep better records.

I’m still anticipating when we will be able to build our chicken facilities. It won’t be this year. The quail get a well-deserved reprieve.  

Garden

I just received a couple of rolls of woven fabric ground cloth. Yes, we are about to get started on the garden. The biggest change this year will be the strawberry bed. I’ve order 500 bare-root strawberry plants. Yes, you heard that right. I ordered 500 plants. We are pretty much starting from scratch with our strawberries. I’m excited about this new opportunity.

I’m also going to start some plants for sale at the farmer’s market. If you are in my neighborhood, I should have some herbs, tomatoes and perhaps some green pepper starts ready for your garden. I’m not going to grow very many tomatoes or peppers this year but I really love growing plants. Growing for you guys seemed to be the best way to fulfil that desire to grow stuff. And I chose to grow some culinary herbs, because they are sometimes harder to find. I’ll keep you posted on which herbs I was successful in sprouting.

Flavored Cheese

Today want to talk a little bit about flavored cheese. If you’re making your own cheese at home, this could be a great adventure for you. On the other hand, if you’re just a real cheese head and love to try new cheeses, you might take a look at some of the cheeses available that have had either spices and seeds added or maybe they have herbs added, and some have been created using ale wine and/or spirits. You may even be able to find a cheese wrapped in leaves. These are just a few of the methods used to add various flavors to cheese. In this short podcast, I’ll be briefly touching on those flavorings that I just mentioned. There are others, but I’ll stick with these for today.

Seeds and Spices

The first flavoring I want to mention is seeds and spices. Your first thought when considering what seeds and spices to add should be the quality. You don’t want to use three-year-old dried herbs from your cabinet. Next, think of what you like. Now temper that with the thought that sometimes there’s a good reason that you haven’t seen that kind of cheese made. However, don’t let that thought stop you from experimenting. Sometimes it could be as simple as it not being economical to produce such a cheese on a commercial basis. If you’re making it in your own kitchen, the costs are much less of a factor. If you’re concerned at all, simply start with a combination that you’ve seen or tasted.

There are two things that you want to consider when preparing your experiment. Getting the right distribution and the size of the seed. I’ve seen lots of cheeses use whole peppercorns. Those are pretty big seeds so you would use less. On the other hand, if you have a small seed such as Caraway, you don’t want to put so many in there that you ruin the texture of the cheese. For a cheese maybe 2 gallons of milk, you are likely going to choose one to 3 teaspoons of your chosen seed or spice.

When you’re preparing your seeds and spices for addition to the cheese curd, you might consider boiling them for 5 to 10 minutes. There are couple reasons you might want to try that. If you suspect any kind of contamination or you want to soften a seed so that the flavors are more readily incorporated into the cheese.

Adding your seeds or spices can happen in a couple of different ways. Almost universally, the whey needs to have been drained. You don’t want to lose your spice with the whey. One of the easiest methods is to simply stir your seeds and/or spices into the drained cards. Another fun way would be to layer it in the mold. Put little curd in, add your spices, put more curd, add spices again and so on. You want to be careful with that method. There is always a chance that you will bunch your spices up too closely together and over spice one area while another would be under served. You may even have trouble getting the cheese to get together properly. The trade-off is the visual effect of layers.

Here are some of the most popular seeds and spices used in this method flavoring your cheese. I’ve already mentioned caraway seed and peppercorns. Other seeds might be mustard, fennel, fenugreek, or cumin. Some useful spices include cloves and red pepper flakes. Generally, you want to stay away from using herbs for aged varieties of flavored cheese. They will be prone to breakdown and change the color of your cheese. That’s not a good look. Herbs are most often used either mixed into a soft cheese or spread.  Or lots of times you’ll see them used as a coating on the outside of a fresh, soft cheese.

Ale, Wine, and Spirits

This is a great way to create a flavored cheese. And ale or beer can be incorporated directly into the cheese curd in the same way that the seeds and spices were added. Wine and spirits on the other hand, work better on the outside. This is most commonly done in washed rind cheeses. I briefly mentioned wrapping a cheese in leaves. Using alcohol to macerate the leaves, that is to soak them for a period of time, prior to wrapping the cheese is a favored practice.

Adding beer or ale, similar to adding seeds, happens after the whey has been drained. When making cheddar, it can be added after the cheddaring process has been completed and the curds have been milled. Otherwise, simply stir into the curds after they have been drained. You don’t need much. I also think it would be hard to use too much. Whether you pour the whole bottle into the curds made from your 2 gallons of milk, or you use only a half cup for your cheese and save the rest for yourself, that’s up to you. I’ll use a whole bottle for 15 or 20 gallons of milk. But again, I don’t think you can use too much.

There are several things to consider when deciding to use wine or spirits on your washed rind cheese. Because you’re adding wetness to the outside of your cheese, you can be prepared for softening. Sometimes, for a softer cheese, you might let your cheese dry for 2 to 3 days. Then begin the wash. Or, for a harder, drier cheese such as an alpine style, you can begin the wash right away. Something else to consider would be experimenting with the frequency of washing and the humidity in your aging room. The hardness of the rind and the texture of the cheese will also influence what your final results are going to be with the washing. Obviously, the softer rind is going to absorb more of the flavors.

Wrapping Your Cheese with Leaves

Many flavored cheeses utilize some type of leaf wrapping. Sometimes the leaves are dry, but more often they have been macerated in a strong alcohol, such as brandy or bourbon. This is a wide-open field. Choose your favorite spirit, and parent with your favorite leaf. Some leaves to consider are chestnut, maple, or grape.

Not all leaf-wrapped cheeses use spirits. Nettle, sycamore, or walnut are good choices here. Like with the herbs, you don’t want them to break down and become mush.

I hope you enjoy your experiments whether in making the cheese or trying out a new cheese from your local market.

Final Thoughts

I hope you’ll give some thought to becoming part of our herd share program. We’d love to be of service to you. Come on out to the homestead and see where it all happens. Say hello to Claire and the rest of the girls. Pet the donkeys. Be sure to wear rugged shoes and/or boots. Animals are messy creatures and if it has rained, omg, the mud.

I hope I’ve titillated your senses a little and you’re on your way to trying some new flavored cheese. Whether you’re making it from scratch or buying from your local market, your enjoyment is sure to be mooua, superb.  

If you enjoyed this podcast, please hop over to Apple Podcasts or whatever podcasting service you use, SUBSCRIBE and give me a 5-star rating and review. If you like this content and want to help out the show, the absolute best way you can do that is to share it with any friends or family who might be interested in this type of content. Let them know about the Peaceful Heart Farmcast.

Thank you so much for stopping by the homestead and until next time, may God fill your life with grace and peace.

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Farm News, Herd Share Pickups, Farmer’s Market info: 2/11/2021

Hello beautiful peeps,

First off I want to welcome all of my new subscribers. Thanks for tuning in. I’ll give you a brief rundown on how this newsletter is structured. That way you can skip around to where your interests lie.

I usually start with any market updates. Next I’ll give some homestead updates to keep you in the loop with how our animals and projects are progressing. Then a section on market availability and herd share pickups. Following that, there will be a section on what products are available to herd share owners and then what the general public can purchase. I end each newsletter with an invitation to meet me in person either at the market or the farm and a brief write-up on my latest podcast complete with a link to the podcast page on our website. And if you haven’t gotten your free downloads, there is a link to make that happen as well.

Market Updates
This Saturday 2/13/2021 is the 1st market for February. The hours at the Farmer’s Market this time are 10:00 am to 12:00 noon.

For your convenience and safety, we just started an online market. Let me fill everybody in on how the online market works. To set up your account CLICK HEREIt opens on Sunday at 7:00 pm and closes on Thursday at 7:00 pm. Place your order with whatever vendors you choose during that time window and pick everything up at the Wytheville Farmer’s Market between 9:00 am and noon. Anything ordered from the online market is not picked up at our booth. Your purchases are picked up on the covered side of the building. Feel free to come on in an chat with me even if you placed your order on line and picked it up outside. 

We will have our lovely quail eggs for $3 a dozen. I have a couple of pickled quail egg recipes that are working well for me. I’ll have jars of pickled quail eggs as examples of how they look. Three different varieties to give you an idea what can be done. Again, I’ll have pickled peppers (not very hot) for $5 a jar, pepper jam (HOT, Medium and mild) for $5 a jar and apple pie jam, $8 a jar. We have the usual grass-fed meats available – ground beef $7 per package (approx 1 lb), ground goat $12 per package (approx 1 lb) and ground lamb $10 per package (approx 1 lb). Quail meat packages are available 1 lb – $20.00, and pickled peppers $5.00. 

If you are a Herd Share member, this week you can pickup between 10:00 am and 12:00 noon. Email me to let me know want anything extra this time. To get to the product section, you can jump down the page here

Quail

The quail are still laying lots of eggs. The cold weather does not seem to affect them at all. Again, check out my pickled quail eggs at the market. They are easy to make and oh so tasty. Once I start incubating eggs again, the egg availability will drop off so get your eggs now.

Cows 

We are getting closer and closer to the time when we will have new calves. Claire, the matriarch, will be 11 years old shortly after delivering her calf this year. She is starting to show her age a bit more. As her pregnancy advances, she has more and more difficulty getting up after a nice time laying down and chewing her cud. I’ll be giving the vet a call soon just to make sure this is not going to be a problem. She did this last year, but it seems to have started earlier this year. I dread seeing how hard it will be for in a month from now. We shall see. 

Rosie is starting to develop an udder. That means she is getting ready to have her first calf. It will likely still be six weeks or more but we are watching her closely. We bought her even though it was likely that she was already bred and at a very young age. Again, asking the vet lots of questions about how to determine if she is having any difficulty. So far so good.

Creamery

Scott has nearly finished the entire outside of the creamery. If you have been following his pics on Facebook, you’ve seen the beautiful job he is doing on this project. He is waiting on some soffit material to ship so that he can finish up on the outside (except for paint).

We had a good discussion on whether I would be able to make cheese in the cheese make room this milking season. The jury is still out on that but if it does come to pass, it will be right before we stop milking in the fall. I try not to be too pushy but I’m so ready to be able to have an easier time with all of it. In due time I’ll have my dream cheese make room complete. 

That’s it for farm news. Now on to the farmer’s market update. 

Farmer’s Market

I will be at the Wytheville Farmer’s Market on Saturday 10 am to 12 noon. 

Our items for sale include apple pie jam and hot, medium, or mild pepper jam. 

We have all of our meats back in stock for you.  

We have ground lamb as well as rib chops and loin chops.

We have ground beef and ground goat.

I’ll have lots of quail eggs!!. 

Herd Shares

Herd Share Peeps, I’ll see you in my usual location. Add on as you desire and all cheeses and butter are at your service. Looking forward to seeing you on Saturday and/or Tuesday. 

I still have new raw milk cheese herd shares available. Contact me via email (melanie@peacefulheartfarm.com) or phone (276-694-4369).

Please go HERE to learn all about Herd Shares and get on our waiting list. 


 News This Week 


Products Available to Herd Share Owners

Choose 1 per week 1/2 Share Whole Share
Butter 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Ararat Legend 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Peaceful Heart Gold 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Pinnacle 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Clau d’ville Cheddar 1/4 pound 1/2 pound

Products Available to the General Public

Quail Price / Pound
Quail Eggs (1 dozen) $3.00
Quail meat (approx 1 lb) $20.00
Beef Price / Pound
Ground (approx 1 lb) $7.00
Lamb Price / Pound
Lamb Loin Chops $18
Lamb Rib Chops $18
Lamb Kabobs SOLD OUT
Ground Lamb (approx 1 lb) $10
Chev (Goat) Price / Pound
Ground Chev (approx 1 lb) $12
Jams and Jellies Price / 8 oz Jar
Apple Pie Jam $8
HOT, Medium, or Mild Pepper Jam $5

Let’s Get Together

As always, we love meeting you in person.  You can find us at the Wytheville Farmers Market on Saturday from 10:00 am to Noon. Special procedures are in place for your health and safety. Masks are still recommended but not required as far as I know. 

As always, you may visit us at our dairy farm in Claudville, Virginia Tuesdays from 10 am to 12 noon and Saturday afternoons from 3 pm to 5 pm. Find out how we raise our animals and why you will love the taste of tradition that is inherent in all of our products. Herd share holders will be able to see up close how their cows are cared for and the cheese operation and where it is stored. 


Peaceful Heart FarmCast

In this week’s podcast, “What is Flocculation in Cheesemaking?,” I’m going over the basics of making cheese again. This time I’m going to pause at the step where coagulation of the curd occurs and give a quick and easy method for taking this to the next level. Of course, I’ll be giving more updates on the homestead and ideas we are considering for this year’s garden.


Free Downloads

I want to follow up on my previous FarmCast, The Taste of Cheese where I talked about developing your expertise with using descriptive words. The FREE downloads of Classifying Cheese by Type and Category and Expand Your Cheese Vocabulary are still available at our website. Please stop by and get your FREE resources. 

You can LISTEN TO THE PODCAST HEREOr, if you have an Alexa device, just say:Alexa, play podcast Peaceful Heart FarmCast.

And don’t miss an episode! Subscribe to the Peaceful Heart Farm podcast on Apple PodcastsAndroidTuneIn, Stitcher or Spotify


What is Flocculation in Cheesemaking?

What is flocculation when making cheese? And how does it affect my cheese? Today I’m going to revisit home cheesemaking and talk a little bit about each of the steps to creating any cheese. I’ll pause in the middle and talk in more detail about flocculation. It can take your home cheesemaking to the next level.

I want to take a minute and say welcome to all the new listeners and welcome back to the veteran homestead-loving regulars who stop by the FarmCast for every episode. I appreciate you all so much.

Our Virginia Homestead Life Updates

I’m starting off, as I always do, with our homestead life updates. I’ll try to put a time stamp in the notes for those of you that want to skip the homestead updates and get straight to the unique topic of the podcast. I’m not sure I know enough to make that happen, but I’m making the effort. We’ll see how it goes.  

Cows

A couple of the cow matrons are showing their pregnancies. Claire will be 11 years old shortly after having her calf this year. That’s getting up there in cow years. They can live 15 or 20 years, but she is definitely old enough to start showing her age. I was out there checking on everyone a few days ago and caught Claire in the act of trying to get up from her afternoon laydown and chewing of cud. In order to make this happen, she rocked and rocked and rocked for nearly a minute before giving herself a big push, getting her up on her rear legs and then finally getting her front legs under her. She looked a little stiff but after moving around a bit she seemed pretty normal. Last year she did the same thing, but this year it seems like it’s taking her a bit longer than usual to get up. I’m going to put in a call to the vet to get some guidance just to be safe.

Same for Rosie. I need to ask the vet more details about what to look for as she nears her delivery date. Rosie is about 6 to 8 weeks away from giving birth to her first calf. We are watching her closely. Her udder is starting to form. Again, if you are just tuning in, we purchased Rosie in the fall even though we suspected she was bred and was quite young to be having a calf. Sure enough, when we got the cows preg checked, she was pregnant and due to deliver in mid-March – or so we estimated. Her age of conception would be similar to a 9 year old girl who just had her first period. Sure she was old enough to conceive, but not fully grown to an age where pregnancy is considered safe. We’ll keep you updated on that progress.

Donkeys, Goats and Sheep

The donkeys are still coming up every day for a treat and a pet.

The sheep are doing well, both flocks. There is a breeding flock out in the front pasture. Those girls, four of them, are due to start having lambs at the end of March. So they are starting to show their pregnancies also. Lambert is taking good care of his ewes. There are twelve in the back. Nine are last year’s lambs and three are ewes that we did not want to breed.

We had to make a quick change with the goats. Goats and sheep are prone to what is called hoof scald that can lead to hoof rot. We’ve never had a problem with our sheep but the goats are a never-ending disaster with these problems. This year we moved them to their own pasture away from the other animals. What happens is that as the animals stand around the hay bale and eat, they inevitably do their business. When it rains all of that becomes a thick muddy mess. This is a problem for our goats. After a good bit of rain or snow combined with cold temperatures, we will often see the goats begin to limp. We got them out of there and gave them their own space so they are not standing in that wet, poopy, muddy mess. Their hooves just don’t do well in that environment. Cold, wet, and the proper bacteria will take them down. Of course, after we moved them to their own pasture, they decided they wanted to be in another pasture. That one was also vacant so we let it pass. Everyone looks to be doing well at this point.

Quail

The quail are still being amazing and acting like winter is no big deal. Most days they are all laying eggs. If it gets too cold, they will not lay eggs. So the fact that the eggs keep coming tells me they are doing just fine in the cold.

Garden

This time of year gets me starting to twitch and itch to start growing some plants. I had not planned to grow any tomatoes this year. I’m planning on focusing on beans and peas. But just today I started thinking about, “what if I grow some tomato plant starts for folks at the farmer’s market?” I mean just because I’m not going to grow them for us doesn’t mean that other people won’t want them. And so many of you do not have the space and equipment to grow them from seed. It’s quite the operation. What do you think? Tomatoes, maybe some peppers. And what about herbs? You all likely want some basil, parsley, cilantro and so on. The jury is still out on that one. But I will say I’m leaning heavily toward growing some stuff and those sound like really good plants to make it happen.

Creamery

We have opened up new Raw Milk Cheese herd shares if you are interested in regularly obtaining some fabulous raw milk cheese. A half share will provide about 1 pound of cheese per month and a full share will provide about 2 pounds of raw milk cheese per month.

The outside of the creamery is nearly complete. Walls, roof, soffit, knee walls, dormer walls and whatever else Scott did to make it work. It’s so exciting. I’m waiting for that scaffolding to come down. The scaffolding makes it look like a building under construction – and it is – but I look forward to the day when I can look at the building without it. This is the most beautiful building. Follow us on Facebook at Peaceful Heart Farm to see Scott’s updates and the pictures of the progress of the creamery.

As we talked over how the interior building was going to progress, I tried to work out if I was going to be able to make cheese in the cheese make room this year. Looks like no. At least not at the beginning. There is a small possibility that I would be able to get in there about the time we stop milking. Maybe just one cheese before the end? It will be whatever it is and I will love it no matter what. Speaking of making cheese.

What is Flocculation When Making Cheese?

I want to walk through the basic steps of cheesemaking once again. It is not as hard as you might think. If you get these steps down in your head, when you finally get the courage to give it a try, you will have the basics already in mind. Often the instructions look intimidating. But when you break it down into steps that you are trying to accomplish, it makes it much easier. If you are already making your own cheese, I hope the additional information about what is flocculation will make your cheesemaking even better. And if you don’t make cheese at all, but love eating it, these are the steps that make it happen for you.

These steps are going to be very rudimentary. And if you are at the stage of just wondering what you need to get started, I have a two-part podcast on You Can Make Your Own Cheese. These two podcasts go over the basics of space, equipment, and supplies to get you started.

Steps in Cheesemaking

Step 1 – sanitize everything.

No explanation needed here. Cheese is the result of bacteria, molds, and yeasts interacting with milk. You want to make sure you have all the right ones and none of the wrong ones. You control this by sterilizing everything and then adding in what you desire.

Step 2 – heat the milk to the proper temperature for ripening.

That means you are going to raise the temperature of the milk to a temperature where the cultures you have chosen to use in your cheese will flourish. Too cold and not enough happens. Too hot and they die.  

Step 3 – add the cultures and let the cheese ripen.

Ripening happens for a specific amount of time noted in the recipe. This can be as short as five minutes or so up to an hour or even more, depending on the cheese. The cultures and ripening time are central to creating the type of cheese you desire.

Step 4 – add rennet or other acid to set the curd

This is where I’m going to elaborate a little bit. And I will be focusing on using rennet to set the curd. Rennet originally was produced solely from the stomach lining of a calf. Today, there are many kinds of rennet. In all cases, what happens is the rennet forms a chemical bond with the milk and causes it to coagulate into one giant curd. Or one giant blob of solidified milk.

The length of time it takes to get to the point where the curd is completely formed and ready to cut into cubes varies according to the cheese you are making. Once that time is reached the curd is ready to be cut. More on that in the next step.

Flocculation refers to the time when the casein matrix has begun to form, the curd has just begun to set. That flocculation time is then multiplied it by a factor. The factor is different depending on the type of cheese. Examples are to multiply by a factor of 2 – 2.5 for hard cheese like parmesan all the way up to multiplying by 4, 5 or 6 for moister cheeses like gouda, camembert, or stilton.

The curd at the time of cutting will have a different strength. The longer is sets up, the stronger the curd. A young curd, let’s say only 30 minutes of time has passed, will release more whey. Lower multipliers are used for harder, dryer cheeses. A soft brie or camembert will have a high multiplier and the curd is going to retain more whey. The time for setting the curd is going to be substantially longer.

With this method, instead of following a specific time based on the recipe, you can determine when is the best time to cut the curd with the milk you are using. There are other methods of determining the point flocculation has occurred but this one is really simple. I can’t wait to give it a try. By the way, I got this information from a YouTube channel that I love. It is Gavin Webber (spell it out). He is a master at making cheese at home. Check out his channel. Just go to YouTube and search for Gavin Webber and his channel will pop right up.

His method was so simple I just had to share it. This will truly take your cheesemaking to the next level. Simply take a plastic lid the size of small-mouth mason jar. Just about any pint-sized jar with a plastic lid will be the right size. After adding the rennet, Gavin starts a timer and waits about 8 minutes into the process. Then he takes that lid, lays the flat top of the lid on the surface of the milk and spins it. It is light and will easily float. As long as it continues to spin, you need more time. As soon as it stops spinning, note that time on your timer and multiply by the appropriate factor for the cheese you are making. That is the perfect time to cut the curd. I’ll leave a link to his video in the show notes. Now on to next steps.

Step 5 – cutting the curd.

Cutting the curd can be tricky at home. I use a variety of utensils. Ideally you have some kind of device specifically made for cutting the curd, but usually we do not have that. I use a 14” long spatula. I cut straight down into the curd in ½” increments. First one direction and then rotate ninety degrees and cut again. This forms ½” tubes. To make them into cubes requires some way to cut vertically. This is where having a tool uniquely designed for this process. A small wire curd harp is blessing I cannot describe. However, without that, we do the best we can to cut at a 45-degree angle. Again, cutting one way, rotating the pot 90 degrees and cutting again. Sometimes I will rotate two more times so that I have used the 45-degree angle cut in all four directions. This method creates curds that are not exactly cubes, but it does work. The curds need to be pretty close to the same size.

Step 6 – cooking the curds

This process involves raising the temperature of the curds and whey to the appropriate temperature for the cheese you are making. The recipe will tell you the desired end temperature, how long it should take to get there and how long to hold at that temperature. This will further develop your cultures. There may even be steps involved such as washing the curd or adding salt. I won’t get into that now. That will have to be another podcast.

Step – 7 draining and molding the curds

Once your cheese has reached the proper temperature and has cooked for the proper amount of time, you drain the whey. In a pot in a sink or on a stove, this involves dipping the whey off the top or simply pouring the curds and whey into a colander lined with a cheesecloth to catch the curds.

Transfer the curds to your cheese mold or form.

Step 8 – salt the curd

This may happen prior to getting the curds into the mold, but most cheeses are salted after being formed in the mold or immediately after coming out the mold. After the cheese comes out of the mold it might be put in a salt water brine or simply sprinkled with salt as with camembert.

Step 9 – pressing the curds

There are various presses out there to accomplish this task. The idea here is to get more of the whey out of the curds. Some pressing only requires the weight of the cheese itself. Others require the use of some kind of press or a setup where you can add weight on top of your mold. Making cheddar requires a really, really good press. The cheddaring process makes pressing a bit of a unique issue.

Step 10 – aging the cheese

Depending on the type of cheese will determine what kind of rind your cheese will have. Some cheeses offer various types of rinds. You might even use a wax or cream cheese coating. In any event, the moisture needs to be maintained for the amount of time the cheese will age. The time the cheese ages increases and deepens the flavor profile.

Those the steps.

  1. Sanitize everything
  2. Heat the milk
  3. add cultures and ripen
  4. add rennet to create a solid curd
  5. cut the curd
  6. cook the curd
  7. drain the curd and put the curds in a mold
  8. salt the curd
  9. press the cheese into the form
  10. age the cheese for the desired amount of time
  11. Enjoy Your Cheese

Once you understand that these are the steps and they are simply altered in one way or another depending on the cheese you are making, it all starts to make sense. You will be amazed at how a simple change in temperature, size of cut curds, amount of time and temperature to cook will change your milk from one cheese to another.

Final Thoughts

That’s it for this episode. I hope you enjoyed the updates on the homestead. I truly enjoy sharing our beautiful life with all of you. And I look forward to meeting many of you in the future if I have not already. Your support is amazing.

I hope this episode helped you understand the steps of cheesemaking a bit more clearly. Again, once you get those steps in mind, you can make just about any cheese you want. The method I described for determining flocculation is an easy addition for those of you already making great cheeses at home.

If you enjoyed this podcast, please hop over to Apple Podcasts or whatever podcasting service you use, SUBSCRIBE and give me a 5-star rating and review. If you like this content and want to help out the show, the absolute best way you can do that is to share it on all of your social media with any friends or family who might be interested in this type of content. Let them know about the Peaceful Heart Farmcast.

Thank you so much for stopping by the homestead and until next time, may God fill your life with grace and peace.

References:

You Can Make Your Own Cheese Part 1

You Can Make Your Own Cheese Part 2

Gavin Webber – The Curd Nerd – Flocculation Method for a Better Curd Set

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Farm News, Herd Share Pickups, Farmers Market Info: 1/21/2021

Hello beautiful peeps,

Hope your new year continues to be a great one!!. We are just now getting into winter. I keep waiting for the big freeze to happen. We usually have at least a few days when it is cold enough to freeze the ponds. That means we have to go break up the ice so the animals can have water. Nothing so far, but we still have a long time to go before spring. 

It’s market time again. This Saturday 1/23/2021 is the 2nd market for January. The hours at the Farmer’s Market this time are 10:00 am to 12:00 noon. It’s going to be a great market. Come on out and get some sunshine and vitamin D, see what we have to offer. We will have our lovely quail eggs for $3 a dozen. I have a couple of pickled quail egg recipes that are working well for me. I’ll have jars of pickled quail eggs as examples of how they look. Three different varieties to give you an idea what can be done. Again, I’ll have pickled peppers (not very hot) for $5 a jar, pepper jam (HOT, Medium and mild) for $5 a jar and apple pie jam, $8 a jar. We have the usual grass-fed meats available – ground beef $7 per package (approx 1 lb), ground goat $12 per package (approx 1 lb) and ground lamb $10 per package (approx 1 lb). Quail meat packages are available 1 lb – $20.00, and pickled peppers $5.00. 

If you are a Herd Share member, this week you can pickup between 10:00 am and 12:00 noon. Email me to let me know want anything extra this time. To get to the product section, you can jump down the page here

Quail

The quail are still laying lots of eggs. Again, check out my pickled quail eggs at the market. And think about giving it a try yourself. They are easy to make and oh so tasty. Just yesterday I was thinking about when I’m going to start incubating eggs again. That is still a couple of months in the future, but I’m getting set in my mind exactly how many I want to raise in the coming year.

Cows 

Scott told me yesterday that all of the cows are now on hay. This is the farthest we have ever got into the winter before having to feed hay to the main herd. The smaller groups of animals have been eating hay since some time in December, but the main herd had access to 4 or 5 paddocks that we saved for their winter foraging enjoyment. It’s finally gone and they will be eating stored grass until the new spring growth. 

Rosie and Buttercup are doing great. I mentioned last time that we moved around some of the animals and that we put Buttercup in with Rosie. We have Rosie close because she is pregnant and very small. She still has about 2 and a half months to go before giving birth. So far so good.

Creamery

Scott has finished the roof. Now he is working on the three dormer walls. I checked with him and after finishing this current part, the entire outside will be done except for painting and perhaps a few odds and ends. Places where the animals, birds, insects and such need to be kept out. I won’t pretend to know the exact terminology of what needs to be done there. Follow Scott’s posts on Facebook and he will give you the details. 

That’s it for farm news. Now on to the farmer’s market update. 

Farmer’s Market

I will be at the Wytheville Farmer’s Market on Saturday 10 am to 12 noon. 

Our items for sale include apple pie jam and hot, medium, or mild pepper jam. 

We have all of our meats back in stock for you.  

We have ground lamb as well as rib chops and loin chops.

We have ground beef and ground goat.

I’ll have lots of quail eggs!!. 

Herd Shares

Herd Share Peeps, I’ll see you in my usual location. Add on as you desire and all cheeses and butter are at your service. Looking forward to seeing you on Saturday and/or Tuesday. 

I still have new herd shares available. Contact me via email (melanie@peacefulheartfarm.com) or phone (276-694-4369).

Please go HERE to learn all about Herd Shares and get on our waiting list. 


 News This Week 


Products Available to Herd Share Owners

Choose 1 per week 1/2 Share Whole Share
Butter 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Ararat Legend 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Peaceful Heart Gold 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Pinnacle 1/4 pound 1/2 pound
Clau d’ville Cheddar 1/4 pound 1/2 pound

Products Available to the General Public

Quail Price / Pound
Quail Eggs (1 dozen) $3.00
Quail meat (approx 1 lb) $20.00
Beef Price / Pound
Ground (approx 1 lb) $7.00
Lamb Price / Pound
Lamb Loin Chops $18
Lamb Rib Chops $18
Lamb Kabobs SOLD OUT
Ground Lamb (approx 1 lb) $10
Chev (Goat) Price / Pound
Ground Chev (approx 1 lb) $12
Jams and Jellies Price / 8 oz Jar
Apple Pie Jam $8
HOT, Medium, or Mild Pepper Jam $5

Let’s Get Together

As always, we love meeting you in person.  You can find us at the Wytheville Farmers Market on Saturday from 10:00 am to Noon. Special procedures are in place for your health and safety. Masks are still recommended but not required as far as I know. 

As always, you may visit us at our dairy farm in Claudville, Virginia Tuesdays from 10 am to 12 noon and Saturday afternoons from 3 pm to 5 pm. Find out how we raise our animals and why you will love the taste of tradition that is inherent in all of our products. Herd share holders will be able to see up close how their cows are cared for and the cheese operation and where it is stored. 


Peaceful Heart FarmCast

In this week’s podcast, “Be Prepared For Disaster,” I’m going over the basics of being prepared for a local disaster such as extended power outage. Because it is winter, this is the time to be better prepared. You never know when a big snow storm is going to take out the power and your ability to travel to get food. I go over quite a few things but the greatest focus is on food and water.


Free Downloads

I want to follow up on my previous FarmCast, The Taste of Cheese where I talked about developing your expertise with using descriptive words. The FREE downloads of Classifying Cheese by Type and Category and Expand Your Cheese Vocabulary are still available at our website. Please stop by and get your FREE resources. 

You can LISTEN TO THE PODCAST HEREOr, if you have an Alexa device, just say:Alexa, play podcast Peaceful Heart FarmCast.

And don’t miss an episode! Subscribe to the Peaceful Heart Farm podcast on Apple PodcastsAndroidTuneIn, Stitcher or Spotify


You found our farm!

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FARM STORE HOURS:

Tuesday and Wednesday:  10am – 12pm
Tuesday:  4pm – 6pm
Saturday:  by appointment

Peaceful Heart Farm

224 Cox Ridge Road, Claudville, VA 24076

Can you find our products?

We'd like to make sure we have cheese available where you can get it. Whether it be at the Farmers Market or a specialty food store.

Let us know where you'd like to see us and we'll try to make it happen. We'll notify you via email when we get our products to your favorite shopping destination.

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FARM STORE HOURS:

Tuesday and Wednesday:  10am – 12pm
Tuesday:  4pm – 6pm

Saturday:  by appointment

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Independence Farmers Market:

Fridays:  9am – 1pm (May thru October)
Fridays: 11am - 12pm (October thru April)

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