Wensleydale CreamerySweet Limestone Pastures
This scheme helps preserve the traditional hay meadows and pastures of the Yorkshire Dales which are ablaze with colourful wild grasses, herbs and flowers during late spring. These traditional meadows are cut later than usual thus allowing time for the grasses to seed. It is these sweet grasses and flowers of the limestone pastures surrounding Hawes that give Wensleydale cheese its distinctive taste; all the milk used at the Hawes Creamery comes from 34 local Wensleydale farms. THE ART OF CHEESE MAKING - MILLING
AFTER 'STARTER' BACTERIA CULTURES have been added to the milk to 'sour' it in a controlled way, rennet is added that allows the milk to 'clot' which when cut separates the curds from the whey.
The next stage of the Wensleydale cheese-making process is pitching, which happens when a certain level of acidity has been reached. The next stage of the Wensleydale Cheese making process is Milling.
The salted curd is allowed to 'mellow' or stand for between 5 and 10 minutes before being shovelled through the cheese mill and shredded into small pieces. The mill stands directly over a stainless steel trough on wheels (the'cooler') into which the milled curd falls.
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