---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.02

     Title: HOMEMADE RICOTTA CHEESE
Categories: Dairy, Italian
     Yield: 1 servings

          - Chuck Ozburn HBWK07A

 Unlike most other fresh cheeses - cottage and cream
 cheese, for example - the  curd  of  this bland, light
 cheese is formed by the direct addition of acid to the
 milk, not by fermentation. For that reason the time
 required to make it is generally short.

 If you haven't used this Italian favorite before, try
 it in place of cottage cheese, as well as in Italian
 recipes for such dishes as lasagne and manicotti.
 You'll find it is a bit creamier than most cottage
 cheese, with a much  finer curd.

 For a pleasant light milk dessert, sweeten ricotta
 slightly and top it with a  sprinkling  of  grated
 chocolate or cinnamon.

 2 qts  regular milk 3 tbsp distilled white vinegar or
 1/4 cup strained fresh lemon juice Salt, if desired

 Pour  the  milk  into  a  heavy stainless-steel or
 enameled saucepan and stir  in the vinegar  or lemon
 juice; set the pot over very low heat and bring the
 milk very slowly to a simmer ( a reading of 200F on a
 thermometer).  There  will be fine beads around the
 edge of the milk, which will  look foamy but will not
 appear to be boiling; remove the pot from the heat and
 set it, covered, in a spot where the temperature will
 remain fairly uniform at a reading between 80 and 100
 degrees; (an unheated oven, without a pilot light, is
 a good spot) let the milk stand for about 6 hours or
 until a solid curd floats above the liquid (the whey);
 more or less time may  be  required, depending on the
 temperature of the environment and the characteristics
 of the milk; line a fine sieve with doubled dampened
 cheesecloth (or better yet, two layers of very
 fine-meshed nylon curtain netting, dampened) and set
 it over a bowl; dump the curds and whey into the sieve
 and allow the whey to drain off until the ricotta is
 yogurtlike; if you want a firmer cheese, tie the
 corners of the cloth to form a bag and hang it up to
 drain further; (in warm weather, the draining might
 well be completed in the refrigerator; when the
 texture of the cheese is to your liking, add a little
 salt (from 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon) if you wish; store the
 cheese, covered, in the refrigerator; it will be at
 its best after it has chilled for  24 hours, and it
 will keep well for 4 or 5 days. Makes about 1 pound.

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