Homemade Farmer’s Cheese (tvorog)
My mom’s method for Homemade Farmer’s Cheese. So easy, fresh and delicious every time. Takes less than an hour to make and enjoy hours later once cooled and drained. A 2-ingredient recipe that you will always want to make and keep in your fridge!
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Homemade Farmer’s Cheese is very easy to make. It only requires 2 ingredients: milk and vinegar. It’s truly amazing and if you try it, you will want to always have some on hand in your refrigerator. We like to enjoy it for breakfast or as snack with cup of tea or coffee. It’s good idea to always have some already made in refrigerator.
My mom always made this cheese with vinegar and it works magic every time. It’s cheap to make as you don’t need any extra dairy to make it besides milk. It’s a huge time saver as it only takes less than an hour to make and once cooled, you drain it and use it. There is no way I would want to wait days for cheese to form. When I start something, I like to get it done that same day (preferably). I have seen different methods online for homemade farmer’s cheese, but I found my mom’s recipe to always have the best flavor, texture and no unusual aroma to it.
I had never seen farmer’s cheese at my local stores. Probably because not all stores sell it, therefore, I never noticed. Fresh homemade is always better and I know the quality of my cheese. With organic milk and vinegar, I spend $7 maximum to make around 4-5 cups of farmer’s cheese. Most times, I would catch organic milk reduced in price with few days left until expiration date and that would make my cheese about $4. Such a great penny saver!
Farmer’s cheese is one of the easiest and delicious fillings to use for rolls, pastries, cakes and more. Like most Ukrainians, I LOVE farmer’s cheese and I bake a lot with it.
Best Milk for Homemade Farmer’s Cheese:
Try to use good quality milk. How do you know if it’s good quality? You really don’t. But, brands such as Organic Valley or Smith Brothers always were the best and always provide quality cheese. In fact, Organic Valley is the only milk I buy lately.
Use 2% or whole milk. Try avoiding 1% or anything below. Cheese with 1% turns out like sand. The million pieces don’t really connect and it’s hard to work with when baking. It just falls apart. Whole milk creates the best cheese. The cheese turns out thick and rich in flavor. The 2% is a bit thinner and works great as well. I try my best to avoid half & half and heavy cream, even if to add a bit to the rest of the milk. You will have hard time draining the cheese, as the cheese will look more like pudding in your pot and get stuck in the cheese cloth.
Can You Freeze Homemade Farmer’s Cheese?
Yes! I sometimes do it, but not often. To freeze cheese: cool, wrap in plastic food wrap and place into freezer bag. Keep up to 3 months. The frozen cheese texture differs a bit from freshly made cheese and becomes a bit fall-apart, but works great for Cheese Pancakes (sirniki) and other breakfast recipes. Therefore, I do it all the time. I take the cheese out to thaw overnight at room temperature to use in the morning. My family loves sirniki; kids especially.
Important Tips for Making Farmer’s Cheese:
1. Use Heinz distilled white vinegar for best results. My mom has tested different brands and from some of the brands the cheese didn’t want to turn out the way it’s supposed to.
2. Use stainless steel pot if you have one. The nonstick takes forever to bring the milk to bubble and you will most likely end up with milk scorching at the bottom of the pot.
3. Use Flour Sack Towel instead of cheese cloth. I bought it at my local Walmart and cut into 4 squares. It’s thick and works perfect for cheese making. Wash used flour sack towel in hot water with lightly soapy water, dry and re-use. From experience, cheese gets stuck in cheese cloth and usually they are pricier and one time use.
Farmer’s Cheese Ingredients:
- 1 gallon whole milk (I use Organic Valley)
- 1/2 cup Heinz distilled white vinegar
How to Make Farmer’s Cheese:
- Heat milk over medium-low until you see hundreds little bubbles appear, but do not bring to a boil. (it would take 30-40 minutes). Stir occasionally to prevent the milk from scorching at the bottom of the pot.
- Once you see lots of bubbles popping, slowly add distilled white vinegar and give it a gentle stir and wait for 30-60 seconds. Then stir again. The cheese will curdle (become crumbly) and the water should be lime-yellow-ish color. If it doesn’t, add a bit more vinegar until you do see that color of water. Remove from heat to cool to room temperature.
- Line a sieve or a colander with a flour sack towel. Slowly pour the cheese into the cloth to catch the curds. Gather the cloth around cheese and squeeze it as much as you can to get all the whey out. When you start seeing white-ish liquid coming out instead of lime color, you can stop there. *If saving whey (the lime water), drain the cheese into a bowl. People use whey for bread, different cooking and gardening.
- Refrigerate farmer’s cheese once cooled and keep it in refrigerator for up to a week.
Enjoy These Farmer’s Cheese Recipes:
- Cheese Pancakes (Sirniki) + Video – favorite breakfast
- Crepes With Cheese (nalisniki) – thin and delicate with creamy cheese filling
- Farmer’s Cheese Blueberry Crumb Cake – flaky, buttery and so easy
- Farmer’s Cheese Sweet Rolls (pirozhki) – so fluffy and mouth-watering
Homemade Farmer's Cheese (tvorog)
Ingredients
- 1 gallon whole milk (preferably organic)
- 1/2 cup Heinz distilled white vinegar
Instructions
- Heat 1 gallon milk over medium-low until you see hundreds little bubbles appear, but do not bring to a boil. (it would take 30-40 minutes). Stir occasionally to prevent the milk from scorching at the bottom of the pot.
- Once you see lots of bubbles popping, slowly add 1/2 cup distilled white vinegar, give it a gentle stir and wait for 30-60 seconds. Then stir again. The cheese will curdle (become crumbly) and the water should be lime/yellow-ish color. If it doesn’t, add a bit more vinegar until you do see that color of water. Remove from heat to cool to room temperature.
- Line a sieve or a colander with a flour sack towel. Slowly pour the cheese into the cloth to catch the curds. Gather the cloth around cheese and squeeze it as much as you can to get all the whey out. When you start seeing white-ish liquid coming out instead of lime color, you can stop there. *If saving whey (the lime water), drain the cheese into a bowl. People use whey for bread, different cooking and gardening.
- Refrigerate farmer’s cheese once cooled and keep it in refrigerator for up to a week.
Notes
- Use Heinz distilled white vinegar for best results.
- Use stainless steel pot to less likely end up with scorching at the bottom of the pot.
- Use Flour Sack Towel instead of cheese cloth.
- To freeze farmer's cheese: cool, wrap in plastic food wrap and place into freezer bag. Keep up to 3 months. The frozen cheese texture differs a bit from freshly made cheese and becomes a bit fall-apart, but works great for Cheese Pancakes and other breakfast recipes. Take the cheese out to thaw overnight at room temperature to use in the morning.
Lisa says:
How far down can I scale this recipe? I would like to make no more than 2 cups at a time. Would it still work? Thanks!
Olga in the Kitchen says:
Hi Lisa! You can simply half the recipe to get 2 cups of cheese. Just to clarify, that would be 2 cups crumbled cheese, so not packed (like brown sugar). If using 1% or 2% milk, it would be slightly less since they are less fattier than whole milk.
Candace says:
The easiest homemade cheese recipe I have tried. For years I spent days making cheese and it needed my constant attention to make sure everything went okay. When I tried your recipe, I scratched off the one I did for years and now I only make your way. This is a easy-peasy recipe that takes like 1 hour (if that) compared for days, and you can’t go wrong with it. We like to enjoy it for breakfast very often. Amazing recipe!
Olga in the Kitchen says:
Thank you for sharing that with us, Candace! I’m so happy to hear you enjoyed this recipe! 🙂
Lasker says:
Recipe works great and used to make sirniki! My kids loved them.
Olga in the Kitchen says:
I’m happy to hear you enjoyed this recipe!
Ron says:
Hello Olga. Thank you for the straightforward information on farmers cheese.Good to know it can be frozen.
I am buying it locally and use it in my potato/cheese pierogi. I will try the nalisniki recipe, sounds good.
Olga in the Kitchen says:
You’re very welcome, Ron!
Ludmilla Pompadur says:
I used your recipe to make farmer’s cheese and it turned out very good, but a bit too dry. Did I do something wrong or maybe I pressed it too long before eating. Also can I make this with goat milk?
Will definitely do it again. Thank you.?
Olga in the Kitchen says:
His Ludmilla! There are 2 reasons why it might turn our a bit too dry. (1) you kept it too long on the heat before adding vinegar (you don’t want it steaming, just as soon as you start seeing many little bubbles – see photos in post). (2) you pressed it too much. I only press until the clear whey comes out. If you see white liquid starting to come out when you press, then you would stop. That’s the good stuff that keeps the cheese moist if you need it moist. Hope this helps 🙂
Judit says:
Can i use 1% milk?
Olga in the Kitchen says:
You can, but you will have much less cheese than from 2% or whole and the texture will be more fall apart, the crumbs will be much smaller than from fattier milk.
Eva says:
How much cheese comes out??
Also can you make it with skim milk????
Olga in the Kitchen says:
Hi Eva! About 4 cups from whole milk, almost 4 cups from 2%, a bit less from 1%. I have not tried with skim milk, therefore I cannot say without testing it. The fattier the milk, the more cheese. If you do decide to try from skim milk, please share with us how it turned out. Thanks!
Janice says:
OMGOODNESS I CANNOT wait to make this. Grandma made cheese pierogi and now I can..
I’d love to make meat pierogi if you have a recipe..?
Olga in the Kitchen says:
That’s wonderful, Janice! I don’t have a recipe for meat pierogi, but I will make sure to make a note of it. 🙂
Virginia says:
We went to the dairy this morning and picked up several gallons Of raw milk. We wanted to use the freshest we could get. The cheese turned out great it’s so springy. And taste great too can’t wait to have company and share.
I added a little extra vinegar to get that watercolor. Thank you so much
Olga in the Kitchen says:
That’s so wonderful, Virginia! Thank you for sharing that with us. I hope your company enjoyed the cheese too! 🙂
Kimberly VanAlstine says:
I made this cheese and tried to eat it on toast with butter and a slice of tomato. It was really good and the cheese was easy to make. Thank you for the cheese recipe.
Olga in the Kitchen says:
Thank you for sharing that with us and the great review, Kimberly! That does sounds delicious 🙂