What Exactly Is Farmer's Cheese? | America's Test Kitchen (2024)

Ingredients

Farmer's cheese can be found in many supermarkets. What is it? How do you use it?

What Exactly Is Farmer's Cheese? | America's Test Kitchen (1)By

Published Oct. 22, 2021.

What Exactly Is Farmer's Cheese? | America's Test Kitchen (2)

My grandfather, whose parents immigrated to Canada from a Polish shtetl, loved farmer’s cheese. It was always on the table at breakfast in his house, next to the cereal and grapefruit halves my grandparents also liked to eat.

After my grandparents died, I forgot about farmer’s cheese until I saw a whole refrigerated section devoted to it at a local Slavic grocery. I took a tub home. It was bright, tangy, and surprisingly lean-tasting, falling somewhere in between a labne and a dry ricotta. But what exactly was it?

To find out, I talked to Dean Sommer, cheese technologist at the University of Wisconsin–Madison’s Center for Dairy Research. Sommer explained that what I was eating was one of two styles of soft, fresh farmer’s cheese.

  • European-Style Farmer’s Cheese. Also called twaróg, tvorog, or syr, among other names. Found in almost every Slavic, Baltic, and Germanic country.
  • American-Style Farmer’s Cheese. This is basically cottage cheese that has been pressed to remove water.

(There’s also a third kind of farmer’s cheese, Wisconsin-/Amish-style Farmer’s Cheese, but it’s firm and more similar to a reduced-fat Monterey Jack.)

What Exactly Is Farmer's Cheese? | America's Test Kitchen (3)

European- and American-style farmer’s cheeses are similar in many ways. They’re both simple cheeses that are easy to make at home—many cooks did and still do. They’re also acid-set cheeses, meaning that they’re made when milk is soured to a point where it can coagulate, using either vinegar or a cultured product such as yogurt or buttermilk. The main difference between them is how the coagulated milk is processed.

With European-style farmer’s cheese, the coagulated milk is simply ladled into a sack and drained, yielding a creamy, spreadable finished texture. With American-style farmer’s cheese, it’s cut into curds, drained, and pressed, creating a firmer, drier texture. But they’re both refreshingly bright and tart.

The simplest way to eat either is to treat them like plain yogurt, eaten with a little jam, honey, or fruit. Or you can spread the farmer’s cheese on toast, with either more jam or savory accompaniments such as green onions or tomatoes.

European-style farmer’s cheese is traditionally used in a host of other applications, both sweet and savory, cooked and uncooked. Uses vary regionally, but some commonalities remain. It’s critical to making different types of cheesecake—käsekuchen in Germany and sernik in Poland, biezpienmaize in Latvia and varškės pyragas in Lithuania. It’s often used as a filling (either on its own, or mixed with potato) for pierogi and vareniki. And it’s mixed with chives and radish to make a savory Polish spread called gzik.

No matter how you use these two fresh cheeses, they’re delicious—and worth seeking out.

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What Exactly Is Farmer's Cheese? | America's Test Kitchen (2024)

FAQs

What Exactly Is Farmer's Cheese? | America's Test Kitchen? ›

With European-style farmer's cheese, the coagulated milk is simply ladled into a sack and drained, yielding a creamy, spreadable finished texture. With American-style farmer's cheese, it's cut into curds, drained, and pressed, creating a firmer, drier texture.

What is considered farmer's cheese? ›

What is farmer's cheese? Farmer's cheese, a fresh cheese variety, is a pressed cottage cheese that is slightly more acidic and has a firmer texture, thanks to a lower moisture content. Farmer's cheese can be made from the milk of cows, sheep, or goats and can be rolled in different herbs or seasonings for extra flavor.

What is a good substitute for farmers cheese? ›

What's a good substitute for farmer's cheese? We've already mentioned that cottage cheese is a good alternative, but Indian paneer and ricotta work too. That said, certain Slavic recipes (like pierogis, blintzes, and vareniki) are simply not as authentic without it.

What does farmer cheese taste like? ›

Farmer cheese is a mild white fresh cheese with a crumbly texture and subtle, milky flavor. It's super-easy to make at home—it requires just three ingredients and some patience. And because it isn't aged or pressed for a long period of time, you can make it and eat it on the same day.

What's the difference between ricotta and farmer's cheese? ›

While most cheeses are made with casein proteins, both casein and whey can be used to make cheese. Cottage cheese and Farmer's cheese are casein cheeses while ricotta is a whey cheese.

How healthy is farmer cheese? ›

The health benefits of farmer's cheese. Beyond the probiotics some farmer's cheese varieties can contain, there are many nutrients found in this cheese that qualify it as a healthy choice. These include calcium, phosphorus, protein, and B vitamins.

What is American farmer cheese? ›

American-style farmer cheese (also farmer's cheese or farmers' cheese) is pressed curds, an unripened cheese made by adding rennet and bacterial starter to coagulate and acidify milk.

Which is healthier, cottage cheese or farmers cheese? ›

Both Farmer Cheese and cottage cheese are equally good sources of protein. And while there is no difference in quality and amount, consuming the fermented variety could be easier on the stomach for some.

Is queso fresco the same as farmer's cheese? ›

Cheese History: The story behind queso fresco

Queso fresco was born as a humble farmers cheese—no complex cheese aging techniques here, just simple and delicious fresh cheese. Queso fresco quickly gained popularity in Mexico and abroad, and today it's one of the most popular cheeses used in a variety of Mexican dishes.

Why is my farmers cheese rubbery? ›

Too much rennet was used or too much butterfat, left your cheese during the process. Rubbery cheese can happen when an excess amount of rennet is used, too much rennet equals a rubber ball, too little, soup!

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