This past Saturday we hosted our first hopefully annual Bain Brewery, Wine, and Foods Tasting Party. It was a great success. We had great time with Brittany, Melanie, Jason, Mitch, Joseph, Rich, Christina, Sean, and Stacey. Earlier in the day I made two types of mozzarella. I started by heating two gallons of milk and adding citric acid and then rennet.
After letting it coagulate for fifteen minutes, I cut the curds with a long knife and stirred it. The curds separate from the whey and then I begin to heat and press the cheese to remove more of the whey. Right now I just throw away the whey but it is often used for protein shakes and supplements (whey protein).
After extracting the whey, I added flavoring. I added Italian seasoning to half and then fresh pesto to the other half. I then spent the next thirty minutes stretching and folding the cheese to get the classic mozzarella texture. I ended up with slightly less than a pound of the pesto mozzarella and slightly over a pound of the Italian seasoning mozzarella.
I took the Gouda out of the aging fridge. I made this in August (http://bainbrewery.blogspot.com/2015/08/making-gouda.html). The bacteria cultures I used ended up being more appropriate for French style cheeses so the final product wasn't that similar to store bought Gouda.
I brewed a Scottish Spiced Winter Ale this week. I made this last year and it was one of my favorites. I am making it a bit late so it won't be ready for Christmas like I wanted but it will be nice in the "winter" months. I took the spent grains from the brew and used them to make granola bars. This is my third time doing it and it certainly turned out the best. The main difference is I dried the grains first prior to mixing with the wet ingredients. I also added flacked oats and roasted it with the grains at 375 for the last thirty minutes. I made two batches. The first batch had mixed nuts, peanut butter, and honey. The second batch was peanut free. I didn't added more sticky ingredients so it fakes apart and doesn't stick into bars.
A few days prior to the party, I bought four bottles of wine at Walmart for a blind wine tasting. I bought a cheap (~$3) and nice (~$10) Riesling and Pinot Noir. I then wrapped then in brown paper and had Brittany randomly label them 1-3.
The cheeses were a big hit with the Gouda being the favorite. It didn't last very long. Everybody liked the mozzarella with the pesto variety being more popular. The wine scores were interesting. They were rated from 1 to 5 with ties allowed. Several people rated both the cheap and expensive Riesling the best with my wine usually second or third. The average score was a virtual tie between the cheap (Sutter Home) and expensive (Chateau Ste Michelle). The Pinot Noir numbers were more conclusive. The expensive (Mark West) received seven of nine first place votes with the Bain Brewery receiving the other two. The cheapest (Liberty Creek) received very low scores. I think the lesson here is to buy cheap whites and nicer reds. It was great to get solid feedback with a blind test. I'll have to do it again.
Right now I am brewing a Gewürztraminer white wine. It is a German variety similar to Riesling but sweater and more aromatic.