I agree, I am a fool about cheese lately.
I finished the white cheddar3 and decided to make another white cheddar4 today, both for long aging. They will supposedly be better as time goes on, first at 3 months, then 6, then 9, then 12, then 24, then 36 months...sharper as time goes on. It's cow's milk so it doesn't fully get 'sharp' until some time passes. I'm a fan of long aged cheddars.
I changed my cheese washing schedule, of wiping down the cheeses in the cheese cave, drying them, and turning them, from every 3-4 days to every other day because I'm seeing more mold on the outside of the brine washed cheeses now than when I first started. It takes a little less than a half hour.
We don't have the variety of cheeses for a wine and cheese tasting party just yet but in a few months we should be able to do that. You guys are on my guest list.
Yesterday the Butterkase (a german and austrian cheese) aged out at about 5 weeks since I made it. So we busted it open. We took off the wax and cut the almost 5 lb wheel into quarters. It was white and creamy, soft, it had lovely small hole development (like a havarti, not big holes like some swiss types). The flavor was mild and the texture at room temperature was so soft that thin slices would crush, thicker slices were beautiful. This would melt very well. Husband and son were very happy with it. I was ecstatic. Knowing that it only took 5 weeks to develop into this great cheese that we all really like, I'd make it again.
(I'd recommend making this cheese as a first cheese, it is straight forward following the recipe, easier and less time consuming than cheddar curds or mozzarella. The only drawback is waiting the 5 weeks to maturity.)
We ordered a food saver vacuum sealer, finally, and that will help for storing cheese when they've aged out, so they don't mold. Hopefully that will be here Tuesday.