Mozzarella di capra?
Cathy2 wrote:Mozzarella has a very nice, creamy taste especially when fresh. It can be used in many ways because the flavor is not very assertive.
Well, to me good quality, fresh
fior di latte is perhaps not assertive, in the sense one uses the word in connexion with many goat's and sheep's milk cheeses, but it is hardly bland in the way lesser versions of it are: it should have a complex flavour, including 'milkiness', sweetness, a good salty edge and a nice little tang.
Mozzarella di bufala is more intense in flavour and the sour element is a little more pronounced and the overall balance of things is therefore a little different; it's also noticeably richer than the pure cow's milk.
In this connexion, I have to say that to my mind, the restrained use of mozzarella on Neapolitan pizze (and there are some where none at all is used), has in good measure to do with the fact that the cheese does indeed have a pronounced flavour and too much of it on a pizza would take away from the primary element's flavour (the bread) as well as from the other elements of the dressing, whichever ones are being used. On the other hand, American pizza, which is so often made with both inferior cheese and inferior bread (or--God save us--pastry dough), is a dish gone haywire, with the focus switched from the bread to ever-increasing and now commonly massive quantities of inferior cheese.
Mozzarella Company site wrote:It is most often made from cow's milk; however it can be made from a combination of other milks such as cow's milk and goat's milk mixed.
Pace the claim from the Moz. Co. site I have never, ever heard of "mozzarella" being made with goat's milk; it might be an interesting product but it's perhaps noteworthy that the hills above the coastal plains in Campania, where the buffaloes are raised, abound in goats and sheep (whose milk is used extensively for cheese making), and there has apparently been no inclination there to make such a version of mozzarella.*
There are two possible sources for the milk in Italy:
di bufala or
di mucca. In the area where my relatives live, one of the DOC mozzarella zones in Campania, they used to produce three types: pure buffalo's milk, pure cow's milk and a mixture of the two, which was for many the preferred sort. I'm sure that now that the pure
mozzarella di bufala fetches so much money with its DOC label, the mixed variety is made less and less if at all. I've had the lot of them, including the buffalo milk version fresh and still very warm inside at a small-scale maker of high repute, just minutes out of the hands of the guys who formed the balls -- it was the best cheese I've ever eaten in my life. The cow's milk version there is commonly smoked or aged (
scamorza, caciocavallo).
It would suggest goat milk by itself would not make Mozzarella but combining it with cow's milk allows a goat-milk component. It would also modulate the strong goat taste. Someday we'll experiment and see.
Experimentation along these lines might well be interesting, but unless there is something about sheep's milk that lends itself less well to the pasta filata process, I think a sheep's/cow's milk mixture might be more appealing by flavour, or at least a little less jarringly different from the traditional sorts, than goat's milk. But...
* I poked around the Mozzarella Company site and found that they sell a partly goat's milk "mozzarella". Perhaps I've become a curmudgeon but I once saw the owner and founder of the Mozzarella Company on Food TV (I bleieve it was on the show of the executive chef of Gourmet magazine) and she made some very wrong claims and thus she seemed to me not all that knowledgeable. But I'll admit that I should rein in some of my curmudgeonly inclinations and maybe try her cheese. I would like to try the goat's milk stuff, but the old problem of how to get it fresh arises and I'm unlikely to find myself in Dallas in the near future.
A
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.