|
|
Join Our Free Monthly Moosletter
 |
|
|
Coeur a la Creme-1
Item #:M184 |
|
|
|
|
4" Wide x 1-3/4"High with a closed bottom. Heart shaped food grade polypropylene cheese mold made in France. These are often used to mold a desert called Couer a la Creme. They have also been used for Creole Cream Cheese Molds. QUANTITY: One RETURN INFORMATION: We are sorry but we cannot accept returns of used equipment. For our full return policy, please click here.
Molds ... What they are and which ones do I choose for my cheese.
The final step for for the curds in cheese making is the draining and forming a good shape and proper rind for the final aging steps. The most practical shape for these molds or forms (hence the word Formagio) is a cylinder. One of the most practical shapes short of being a sphere and most suited to sit on a flat shelf for aging. There will be many other considerations such as, height, width, number of holes (and spacing) as well as bottom less or not. These will all be determined by final size, moisture, and surface preparations (waxed, rubbed, washed, etc)
We get many questions on which molds should be used for which cheese. The molds used for cheese have all evolved from regional uses over the past several hundred years.
There are two primary considerations in choosing the molds:
- How large is the cheese you would like to make and will the mold hold all of the curd for this cheese? Do remember that high moisture curd cheeses (for earlier ripening) will press lower in the molds when the weight is applied than will drier curd cheeses.
|
Large Hard Cheese Mold
|
|
Small Hard Cheese Mold |
M2

5-7 gallons of milk |
|
M3
with no bottom needs lighter press weight
2-3 gallons of milk |
2. What is the height to diameter proportion for this cheese? this is important for the types of cheese you intend to make:
- Pressed and aged cheese need a closer ratio of the height to width of the finished cheese. This will be most efficient at keeping the cheese from excess moisture loss
|
Large Hard Cheese Mold |
Small Hard Cheese Mold |
Tomme (Large) |
|
|
M3
 with no bottom needs lighter press weight |
|
|
5-7 gallons of milk
|
2-3 gallons of milk
|
3-4 gallons of milk
|
They are designed to accommodate more pressure for a longer aging cheese These molds work well for classic aged cheese such as Cheddar, Gouda, Montasio and other recipes for aged cheese found in Ricki's book |
- Surface ripened cheese (red and white molds and yeast) such as Camembert/Brie Munster and some of the moister Tomme styles, etc will need a lower format where the height is much less than the diameter. These are all higher moisture cheese and the primary reason for this is that the surface growth produces enzymes that need to move to the center of the cheese for ripening results. The shorter the height the more efficient this can be done.
|
Tomme (Large) |
|
Tomme (Small) |
|
|
|
|
|
3-4 Gallons of milk
. For Larger Tomme style cheese such as Tomme De Savoie and small Alpine style Cheese |
|
1 Gallon of milk
. For smaller washed and surface ripened cheeses such as Reblochon and Munster |
Our Basket molds can be used for fresh cheese and smaller blues since little to no weight is applied on these.
Basic Basket Mold
M222
 2-3 Gallons of milk |
Small Basket Mold
M232

1-2 Gallons of milk |
Both of these can be used for making Ricotta or any small cheeses requiring little weight such as an early ripening (high moisture) Cheddar/Gouda or a blue which needs no weight
For Goat Cheese and other fresh cheeses any of our smaller molds will work
The perfect gift for your sweetheart! In French, Coeur a la Crème means "Heart with Cream." I believe there is no better gift for your sweetie than a plate of Coeur a la Crème, smothered in succulent strawberries.
Things to have on hand:
What you will need:
- 2 cups (16 ounces) Fromagina
- 2 T granulated sugar
- 2 T heavy cream
- 4 egg whites, beaten until stiff
Instructions:
- Combine the Fromagina, sugar and cream in a medium bowl.
- Genltly fold egg whites into Fromagina mixture.
- Spoon mixture evenly into two Coeur a la Creme molds lined with butter muslin. (It will help if the butter muslin is wet. This keeps it from sticking to the mold.)
- Let set for 6-10 hours in the fridge.
- Gently pull up the butter muslin to remove the heart from the mold.
- Serve with fresh fruit, syrup, or melted chocolate. Enjoy!!
Click here and here for more information on Coeur a la Creme on our bolg.
|
|
What are people saying about us? Check it out here.

The Cheese Queen is in Food and Wine and Barbara Kingsolver's book Animal, Vegetable, Miracle!
Thanks for joining our cheese making family, keep those stories & photos coming. We love to hear from you!
In Peace, Ricki, the cheese queen | |