Cheese melting guide
Cheese melting guide


Cheese melting guide
What about trisodium citrate or Na3C6H5O7? The emulsion stabilizer that gave the world nacho cheese! Add it to any cheese and it’ll keep the fats from separating during melting, giving you a really smooth consistency!
Tip: reacting baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) with citrus juice (citric acid) will yeild a solution of sodium citrate of you don't have any/don't want to buy some just to try it out
What ratio?
Yeah, this is crucial. Some of the cheeses under melting won't melt easily and will instead break under higher heats. Emulsifiers will prevent breaking and turn a lot of cheeses into melting cheeses.
It’s in American cheese
this is paneer erasure and I won't stand for it
I like referring to halloumi as European Paneer.
Fwiw, American is just a mild cheddar processed with sodium citrate.
And sometimes it isn’t even cheese at all (since "cheese" needs to contain at least 51% cheese, which American cheese sometimes doesn’t. It is then usually labeled as "cheese product" instead of "cheese")
Yah, the labeling laws are overly complicated in the favor of corporate bullshit. It hides the stuff that's little more than oil that's been thickened up and laced with flavoring behind the association with what was originally just cheese with some emulsifier.
I've got family that runs a dairy farm, and makes some cheese, the basic kind that's used to make old school American. There's about three grades of things that are allowed to have cheese on the label, with other words in fine print before they start saying "American slices", or "sandwich slices" and can't put cheese on there.
NileBlue – Making American cheese to debunk a conspiracy
[holds hand out to pat the Piped link bot on its good boi head]
Anybody know if the maggots will melt if I heat my casu martzu?
No. But you can fry until crisp in whale blubber. Dust fried cheese and maggots with midges and serve with a garnish of dung beetle legs.
I've never gotten Brie to melt smoothly, it just turns into an oily puddle of melted plastic. What's the trick? I'm correct in cutting off the rind first, right?
You have to keep the rind on if you're baking it. Also, the rind is edible and (if you like mushrooms) tasty!
I love the rind, but I assumed that was the source of the oil I'm seeing. It doesn't seem to be!
You have to add a bit starch.
Good idea, thanks!
Get some sodium citrate powder, it's the secret to making smooth cheese sauce.
I'll look into it! Saw it elsewhere in the thread.
Really low heat is my trick, all cheeses have a point where they separate and Brie is already basically melted to begin with, so just get it extra warm but not hot and you're golden.
If you've got a quality cheese shop on hand, try Shropshire Blue. A strong cheddar with blue cheese veins.
Where tf is Asiago, ya goddamned bastards
I'll have a lancre blue, hold the homicidal rage
Damnit, now I want some really good fondue ...
Can't beat a layer of strong cheddar for flavour, topped with a sprinkling of mozzarella for texture.
This is a good post. Don't forget emulsion stabilizers though, like chongli said!
I'm both surprised and happy to see Oaxaca cheese in this list
I want a cemita now.
When I see “Оахаса”, my brain assumes it’s Cyrillic and reads it “wah-kha-suh”. I’m not even Eastern European!
Actually that's pretty close to the proper pronouncation wah-kha-ka
Thanks, I'd have assumed "oh-whuck-sucka"
For lidl shoppers carski can be stretchy if you put enough of it in or crispy.
Isn't goat just a type of milk that can be made into any of these cheeses?
Queso fresco melts though? I bought it thinking it would hold its shape like paneer and was disappointed
Say that third one 5 times fast.
Shit. Say it once even.
Wa Ha Ka
Gesundheit.
What about vegan cheeses?
they're currently the wild west and it depends on their intended function and ingredients, in my experience (lactose intolerant ☹️)
my first thought though was "this is a fairly handy guide for food nerds who are into crafting non dairy cheese"
Hard cheese like cheddar doesn't contain much lactose (if any), and is generally considered OK.
Dairy intolerance is another matter though.
I found that the melt-ability of most vegan cheeses drastically increases if you mix it with a little bit of water and oil before dispersing it.
Its not cheese
iT's NoT cHeEsE
It's all over the board. Most don't melt, in my experience. Some become crispy.