How to Make Fresh Mozzarella Cheese at Home: Recipe (2024)

The Institute of Culinary Education is one of the largest culinary schools in the world, offering both professional and recreational programs in New York City. Here, Chef Sabrina Sexton, program director of theirSchool of Culinary Arts,gives PEOPLE her insight into making your own fresh mozzarella cheese – it’s so much easier than you can imagine!

One of my favorite things to teach students is to make mozzarella from scratch. This milky, soft, stretched cheese from Campania is definitely a crowd pleaser. And, fortunately, it’s way easier to make than most people think. To start, you just need mozzarella curd, water and salt—that’s it! You can purchase mozzarella curd at your local cheese shop, Italian specialty shop or even order it online. Or, if you want to get really fancy, you can make your own curd—it only takes a few ingredients and there are a lot of online sources that sell complete curd-making kits. The recipe is below if you want to go all out.

How to Make Fresh Mozzarella Cheese at Home: Recipe (1)

Making mozzarella couldn’t be easier, just follow my recipe. You do need to keep a few things in mind:

  • Water Temperature: Make sure your water is the right temperature—there should be bubbles on the surface but it shouldn’t come to a rolling boil. If it boils by accident, turn off the heat and wait a few minutes before adding it to the cheese.
  • Don’t Over Stretch: While stretching is the most fun part of making mozzarella, don’t go too far with it. Overstretched mozzarella will be rubbery. Just stretch it for 1-2 minutes, until it feels smooth and not grainy.
  • Salt is Your Friend: What’s listed in the recipe below may seem like a lot of salt, but relax—it’s really just there to give the cheese flavor. You’re not actually eating all that salt; it’s flavoring the water you pull the cheese in.
  • Keep it Fresh: Mozzarella is best when it’s fresh, so you should enjoy it the same day you make it! If you can’t finish it all, though, you can store it in the refrigerator for about a week.
  • Protect Your Hands: The mozzarella can be very hot so to protect your hands from the heat, dunk them in the ice bath before stretching and shaping the mozzarella. You can also wear gloves if you prefer.

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How to Make Fresh Mozzarella Cheese at Home: Recipe (2)

Mozzarella Cheese
Makes about 1½ pounds
1 gallon (16 cups) water
½ cup salt
2 lbs. (about 4 cups) mozzarella curd, cut into small pieces

1. Prepare the water: Place the water and salt in a large saucepan. Heat the water until bubbles begin to appear on the surface, or an instant read thermometer registers 180° F. Turn off the heat.

2. Heat the cheese curd: While the water is heating, place the cubes of cheese in a large bowl. When the water is ready, carefully ladle the hot water over the cheese until the cheese is covered. Let the cheese cubes sit in the water for about 2-3 minutes without stirring them. After this time, gently stir them with a wooden spoon and look at the curd. If the cheese is heated through, the curd will look smooth (like melted mozzarella) and is ready to be stretched. If the cheese curd is not completely heated through it will look grainy and still have some of the cubes. If so, it needs to sit in the hot water for another few minutes until soft. Keep checking!

3. Stretch the curd: Prepare a bowl of ice for an ice bath. Once the curd is ready, drain the majority of the liquid from the cheese into the bowl of ice to create an ice bath. After submerging your hands into the ice bath for a few seconds (or putting on gloves), working quickly, before the cheese cools down too much, stretch the curd with the wooden spoon until the cheese is smooth and elastic. Lift and stretch the curd to develop a stringy texture. Be careful not to overwork the curd: this will make your cheese heavy and too chewy. As the cheese cools it will begin to stiffen and become harder to stretch. The cheese is ready to be shaped before it cools completely.

4. Shape the cheese: Divide the cheese into two or three pieces and wrap each piece tightly in plastic wrap, twisting the ends of the plastic wrap to help the cheese form a round or cylindrical shape. Place the cheese in the ice bath for a couple of minutes, if desired, to help hold its shape.

5. Serve the cheese immediately or store in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.

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Mozzarella Curd
*I get most of these cheese-making supplies online from either The Cheesemaker or Leeners.

Ingredients
1 gallon whole milk (preferably not ultra-pasteurized)
2 tsp. citric acid dissolved in ¼ cup non-chlorinated water
¼ tsp. liquid rennet diluted in ¼ cup non-chlorinated water
1 tsp. kosher salt

1. Place the milk in a large saucepan or small stock pot. Heat the milk over low heat, stirring occasionally. When the temperature reaches 55° F, add the citric acid and mix thoroughly. Continue to heat the milk until the temperature reaches 87° to 89° F. Remove from the heat.

2. Gently stir in the diluted rennet with an up-and-down motion. Allow the milk to stand until the curds form, 15 to 20 minutes. Cut the curds.

3. Once the curds form, reheat the milk slowly to 108° F. Turn the heat off and let the curds stand for 20 minutes while the whey is dispelled. The whey should be clear and the curd should be slice-able.

4. Scoop out the curds and gently press to release the excess whey.

Interested in learning more from Chef Sabrina? Click here for more information about career training programs at the Institute of Culinary Education.

How to Make Fresh Mozzarella Cheese at Home: Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What are the steps in making fresh mozzarella? ›

Steps in Making Homemade Fresh Mozzarella

You warm the milk with some citric acid (not as scary as it sounds), add the rennet to separate the milk into curds and whey, heat it again, knead stretch knead, and then you have mozzarella. It's basically magic.

What are the steps in making mozzarella cheese? ›

A process of manufacturing a mozzarella (or mozzarella-like) cheese comprising the steps of a) pasteurizing cow's milk; b) acidifying the milk to convert it to a cheese milk; c) coagulating the cheese milk to obtain a coagulum comprised of curd and whey; d) cutting the coagulum and draining the whey therefrom, thereby ...

Is it worth making your own mozzarella? ›

Homemade mozzarella cheese is fresher and more flavorful than the stuff you buy in the store. It requires a few special materials and a bit of patience, but the end result is worth it.

Do you need rennet to make mozzarella? ›

If you want to make the real deal stretchy mozzarella, then you will need to use rennet. Substituting white vinegar for rennet will leave you with more of a farmers cheese. There is a way to make it somewhat like mozzarella, but it will be more crumbly and not stretchy.

How much mozzarella does a gallon of milk make? ›

One gallon of milk will make 1-1.25 lbs. of mozzarella. The following recipe is for one gallon (3.78 liters) of milk.

How long does homemade fresh mozzarella last? ›

With proper storage in a refrigerator, mozzarella cheese can last for up to one to two weeks. In a freezer, mozzarella cheese can last longer, up to approximately three months. If you find any change of shape, color, taste, and aroma of any part of the cheese, cut and throw away that part.

What are the four 4 basic ingredients for cheese production? ›

Natural cheese is made from four basic ingredients including milk, salt, a “good bacteria” and rennet, an enzyme.

How is authentic mozzarella made? ›

There are two basic ways to make mozzarella: direct acidification of the milk to form the curds or the culture/rennet method. In both methods, raw milk is pasteurized and then coagulated to form curds.

What is the difference between mozzarella and fresh mozzarella? ›

“The big difference is that fresh mozzarella is made with vinegar or rennin,” Sommer explains. Traditional mozzarella, meanwhile, “is more similar to cheddar cheese in that it's made with a bacterial culture; the bacteria ferment to develop lactic acid, which curdles the milk.”

How much is 1 lb of mozzarella cheese? ›

There are 4.5 cups of mozzarella cheese in one pound.

Use it to make your life easier when looking up recipes. Reference it when you're eating shredded cheese by the handful.

How much rennet for 1 gallon of milk? ›

When adding rennet only 1/4 tsp is added to each gallon of milk, and much of the rennet runs off with the whey during draining.

Can I use lemon juice instead of rennet? ›

The lemon juice, vinegar and citric acid can coagulate the milk without rennet but frequently work best with hot milk. The use of rennet allows to separate the milk before the acidification of the milk is too high and helps form hard curds and can be used at moderate milk temperature for an extended time.

Can I use vinegar instead of rennet to make cheese? ›

Add a lid to the pot and allow it to sit undisturbed for about 5 minutes. NOTE: Classic cheesemaking uses ingredients like citric acid and rennet. But white distilled vinegar works too!

What milk is best for mozzarella? ›

Pasteurised/hom*ogenised milk with a fat content of at least 3.25% is okay. Pasteurised/Unhom*ogenised milk is much better with a fat content of at least 3.25% or higher. UHT or Ultra-pasteurised milk will not set a curd, and. Skimmed milk is useless for making cheese.

What are the steps in the process of making cheese? ›

The fermentation of milk into finished cheese requires several essential steps: preparing and inoculating the milk with lactic-acid-producing bacteria, curdling the milk, cutting the curd, shrinking the curd (by cooking), draining or dipping the whey, salting, pressing, and ripening.

Do you have to dry fresh mozzarella? ›

You should cut mozzarella balls into thin strips when you use toppings for your pizza. This will help you use them more easily. Moreover, it will allow them to dry out more quickly. Make sure to dry them for at least 15 minutes.

Does fresh mozzarella have to stay in water? ›

So, finding #1: Change fresh mozzarella's water daily.

If the mozz is unsalted and the solution is plain water, then changing the water out with fresh water will keep the mozz from getting slimy on the outside and will also keep it from going rancid as fast (only by a matter of hours though).

What is the fermentation process of mozzarella cheese? ›

Traditional mozzarella is fermented with cultures, to turn the milk's lactose into lactic acid, a process that develops flavor. In contrast, much of the mozzarella made in the United States is treated with vinegar or citric acid to raise its acidity, making it easier to stretch.

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