[Sca-cooks] Almond milk cheese
Stefan li Rous
StefanliRous at austin.rr.com
Tue Jun 17 16:18:44 PDT 2008
Mike Acord asked:
<<< I have recently begun making almond milk, mostly to show I
could. However,
it has turned out to be a VERY nice alternative to milk, at least as a
refreshing beverage. I have seen references to an "cheese" made from
almond milk, but I couldn't find a recipe, even in the Florelegium. >>>
Lol.
<<< Does anyone out there have such a recipe? >>>
Hmmm. Maybe it depends upon your definition of "almond cheese". But
using the search engine, available from the top page of the
Florilegium, I get four possible hits searching for the phrase
"almond cheese" using the "use this exact wording or phrase" option.
Okay, two of these are just period mentions of almond cheese, but the
other two include:
In the almond-milk-msg file:
------
Date: Tue, 16 Mar 1999 00:05:23 -0500
From: Christine A Seelye-King <mermayde at juno.com>
Subject: Re: SC - more almond milk questions
On Mon, 15 Mar 1999 21:32:05 -0600 Helen <him at gte.net> writes:
>How much milk yield do you get out of a pound of almonds?
You can get about 1 gallon of almond milk for every pound of almonds.
The method Ras describes works well, but you can re-grind your almonds
3,4,or 5 times with new water, as you will get more almond solids and
oil
out of every grind. When we did it last month, what was left tasted
like
sawdust. We drained it well, and a friend took it home to incorporate
into soaps as almond fibre. Mix all of the batches together.
To make almond cheese, take the milk (say 2 cups worth) and put it in a
pot with about 2 tsp. sugar and a splash of rose water. Let it boil for
some time (a large enamel pot works well, as the small volume of liquid
when boiling will climb the sides of the pot just like milk). When it
has
boiled for a while, you will see that it has separated into curds and
whey. Using your trusty cloth and collander again, pour your mixture
into it and let it strain. The foam on top of the liquid is your curds,
and the whey that drains out is very pale, moreso than skim milk. (We
fed the whey to the dogs). Take the cloth with the drained curds, and
squeeze it to remove leftover moisture. I put a plate on mine and
pressed it for a while, and then squeezed again. When it is drained, it
will form a ball. Refrigerate this and let it rest for a while. It
sets
up to the consistancy of firm sour cream, or whipped cream cheese.
It is
delightful as a spread. I would do it without the rosewater for a more
savory spread. There are several recipies for this in Digby, Plat, and
Guter Spice. They are called Almond Cheese and Almond Butter, both
names
pretty much describe the same product. It makes a nice alternative to
dairy for Lent (or for those of us doing with less dairy).
Mistress Christianna MacGrain
------
Date: Sun, 29 Aug 1999 23:45:00 -0400
From: Christine A Seelye-King <mermayde at juno.com>
Subject: Re: SC - uses for leftover almond crumbs?
> You mentioned leftover walnuts and it made me think of the leftover
almond crumbs left from making almond milk. I'm thinking of the stuff
that is strained out of the almond milk solution after your mix the
ground almonds in the water or broth. The liquid becomes the almond
milk, but what do most folks do with the almond crumbs or mash? I think
there are some period recipes that use this mash. Can this be used for
marchepane? Seems a waste to throw this out, especially for a large
feast.
Lord Stefan li Rous
Having just recently made almond milk from scratch, I am here to tell
you
that the only thing I left in that batch of ground almonds was the
dietary fiber. I milked them 'til they screamed. There was absolutely
no flavor left in it when we were done, after about 5 runs. One of the
ladies in the household took it home and was going to use it as
scrubby/pumice in homemade soap.
It was great almond milk, though, as well as almond cheese (the oils and
the solids from the almonds help it congeal.)
Christianna
------
There are several more messages on this in this file from
Christianna. then there is this message:
------
Date: Tue, 16 Mar 2004 18:09:53 -0500
From: "PhilTroy / G. Tacitus Adamantius" <adamantius.magister at
verizon.net>
Subject: Re: [Sca-cooks] Almond milk question
To: Cooks within the SCA <sca-cooks at ansteorra.org>
Also sprach AEllin Olafs dotter:
> So I'm finally trying this. Working with a recipe that blithely
> tells me to take my good almond milk...
>
> Do I strain it first? I'm then going to be thickening it, and
> draining it, and using eveything left in the cloth... but I'm not
> sure if "everything" includes the suspended solids or not. I do know
> I should blanch the almonds first, so I don't have any peel, which
> suggests I don't strain? I was originally assuming that to get milk,
> I would - but now I'm not sure.
>
> AEllin
Period people used a fairly large amount of almonds to get a smallish
amount of milk. They were known to re-use almond draff to get more
than one batch of milk, just as brewers did to make different grades
of ale. n general, though, almond milk was strained. The reason some
modern recipes don't always recommend this is that they assume you're
using a blenderrather than a mortar, and that any solids in your milk
will be so finely ground as to be indistinguishable frm the little
curds you get when you cook the milk.
_Could_ be true! ;-) (Dat's da ticket!)
In any case, the theory behind almond milk is that some of the
thickness comes from emulsified almond oil. some, perhaps, from
gelatinized starches, but (again, i theory), almost none of it comes
from almond solids. In practice this may not be completely true.
In theory, if you're using one of the neato fifteenth-century (I
think I remember that was where they come from) English recipes for
almond cheese and/or butter, you strain the milk. You blanch and peel
the almonds first not so much to prevent coloring the stuff, but also
to keep unpleasant tannin flavors from getting into your milk. For
some savory applications (maybe mirrauste or Le Menagier's
tile-coloreddish) this is less of an issue, but I'm thinking you
strain the milk, which will, we hope, still be fairly thick when
you're done, if you did it right and used the right proportion of
almonds to water, said your prayers, etc.
You then bring it to a boil nd, depending on your recipe, curdle it
like cheese with an acid, or simply boil it until the emulsion starts
to break, the proteins start to coagulate somewhat, and it all
becomes somewhat reduced, and you end up with what looks like
significantly thickened almond milk. (I think the recipe you're
talking about is the one that calls for boiling with no vinegar or
other coagulant added; the one which, when sweetened, would make a
great filling for cannole?)
Anyway, you boil your strained milk until it's thick, being careful
not to let it burn (it thickens a bit faster than you might expect,
and if you stir it frequently, it shouldn't burn). As it cools it'll
thicken further. Pour this creamy stuff onto a suitable cloth, like a
tea towel, which will absorb some excess liquid, without being nappy
enough to get almond crud stuck in its fibers. You should be able to
gather up the corners and let it hang up and drip, but it also
shouldn't really be necessary unless you want it really solid. If you
spread it fairl thinly on a large enough towel (and I suppose only
experience will really settle these questions), it should become the
consistency of a thick custard or ricotta fairly quickly. I believe
the recipe says to sweeten the stuff.
As I say, it would be real good in cannole or perhaps in little
tartlets (think in terms of an early frangipane cream).
Adamantius
-----
From the nuts-msg file:
----
I think my recipes came from Huswife's Jewel (Dawson? I'm going on
sleepy
memory, aided by 2 two-year olds). They are self-explanatory, so I'll
leave
you to look them up, at least until my nephew goes home and I can
type in peace.
At any rate, Almond Cheese is merely thicker almond butter. The
recipe I am
thinking of is Almond butter "After the Latest Fashion" or some such
wording
(newest and best fahsion??), which won me an Ice Dragon Category when
combined with the preserved oranges and some flaky pastry from the same
book. Somebody correct me if I'm wrong about the title of the recipe.
Anyhooo, it's a process whereby you pound the almonds, seive them
through
the water, grind/pound 'em again, etc, until you get quite a
concentration
of "Almond Milk. This is heated till the bits swell and make a thickened
mixture, which is then strained through cheesecloth to make a more solid
mass. Viola, smooth creamy almond butter. Drain more water, and it
would be
cheese. It keeps well, but weeps.
Aoife
From: L Herr-Gelatt and J R Gelatt <liontamr at postoffice.ptd.net>
Date: Mon, 16 Jun 1997 11:06:44 -0500 (CDT)
Subject: SC - Almond Butter
To Make Almond Butter
Take Almondes and blanch them, and beate them in a morter verye small
and in
the beating put in a little water, and when they be beaten, poure in
water
into two pots, and put in halfe into one and halfe into another, and
put in
suger, and stirre them still, and let them boyle a good while, then
straine
it through a strainer with rose water and so dish it up.
**I believe the two pots were meant to be colored differently, then
served
parti-colored.
Also:
To make Almond butter after the best and newest fashion.
take a pound of Almondes or more, and blanch themin cold water or in
warme
water as you may have leysure, after the blanching let themlye one
houre in
cold water, then stamp them inm faire cold water as fine as you can,
then
put your Almondes in a cloth, and gather your cloth round up in your
hands,
and press out the iuice as much as you can, if you thinke they be not
small
enough, beate them again, and so get out milke as long as you can,
then set
it ove the fire, and when it is ready to seeth, put in a good
quantitie of
salte, and Rosewater that will turne it, after that is in, let it
have one
boyling, and then take it from the fire, and cast it abroad upon a
linnen
cloth, and underneath the Cloth scrape of the Whay so long as it will
runne,
then put the butter togetherinto the midest of the cloth, binding the
cloth
together, and let it hang so long as it will drop, then take peeces of
Suger, and so much fine pouder of Saffron as you think will colour
it, then
let both your suger and saffron steep together in the quantitye of
Rosewater, and with that season up your butter when you will make it.
**I believe the bit about rosewater and saffron should be inserted
into the
bit about using "Rosewater to Turn it" if the directions are to be
listed in
correct order. Strictly speaking, since this is not a milk product, it
cannot be 'turned' by the addition of a clotting agent. So although the
flavor would be different, it is perfectly possible to omit the
rosewater
and still have a wonderful end result. This additon, however, would
give you
your butter color, along with the saffron. Scraping the cloth is
excellent
advice, so that the butter will drain well without 'clogging' the
holes in
the cloth. My personal experience tells me to call this more of a Cheese
rather than a Butter.
Have fun.
Aoife
-------
Also using a similar process but adding a sweetener, you get the
stuff described in this file in the FOOD-SWEETS section:
almond-cream-msg (28K) 2/ 7/08 A sweet custard filling used in
sotelties.
Stefan
--------
THLord Stefan li Rous Barony of Bryn Gwlad Kingdom of Ansteorra
Mark S. Harris Austin, Texas
StefanliRous at austin.rr.com
**** See Stefan's Florilegium files at: http://www.florilegium.org ****
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