Teaching Resources & Guides > Science Lessons > Learn About Cheesemaking 

Learn About Cheesemaking

Cheese is usually made from cow or goat’s milk.  Cheeses come in lots of different tastes and textures.  You might be able to make your favorite cheese at home, using milk and rennet (or use a Cheesemaking Kit).

Rennet is used to make milk form solids. Rennet is an enzyme, and helps break down milk proteins.  It is found in most mammals’ stomach linings, to help the digestive system. Most rennet used for cheese making comes from vegetables, though it can also come from sheep or other animals.  Rennet is necessary for making cheese, because it separates the milk into curds and whey.  This process is called coagulation (or curdling). Curdled milk usually contains less than 5% rennet, so only a small amount is necessary to make cheese.

Milk contains water, fat, casein, albumins, and lactose.  Casein is the protein in milk, which gives it nutritional value. Albumins are a group of amino acids in milk which also provide nutrients. Lactose is a kind of sugar (or glucose) contained only in milk. When you add rennet and heat, milk separates into two parts – curds (which eventually become cheese) and whey.  More than 90% of the fat and casein go into the curds, along with small amounts of water, albumins, and lactose.  Whey looks like watery milk, with a faint yellow color. Curds form white chunks, that are strained through cheesecloth to remove extra moisture, then pressed together to form a block of cheese.

Some cheeses, like ricotta or cottage cheese, are just curds, with some whey left, that has not been drained.  These cheeses can be made quickly, and eaten immediately.  Other cheeses must age before they are good to eat.  Some cheeses age for several years! You can make cheeses like cheddar or parmesan at home, and age them for a few weeks (or up to 6 months).

Whether you like hard cheese, soft cheese, cheese with a strong flavor, or a sweet taste like cottage cheese, there is science behind the way it is made! If you have a recipe, and some rennet (also found in most grocery stores), you can make cheese in your own kitchen and experiment with how different kinds of milk (e.g. goat milk) or different aging times impact texture, taste, and more.

Teaching Homeschool

Welcome! After you finish this article, we invite you to read other articles to assist you in teaching science at home on the Resource Center, which consists of hundreds of free science articles!

Shop for Science Supplies!

Home Science Tools offers a wide variety of science products and kits. Find affordable beakers, dissection supplies, chemicals, microscopes, and everything else you need to teach science for all ages!

Related Articles

Making Science Fun with Outdoor Toys for Kids

Making Science Fun with Outdoor Toys for Kids

Childhood is filled with questions, discoveries, and small moments that shape how the world is understood. Around the age of four, curiosity becomes more intentional. There is a growing interest in how things work, what things are made of, and why nature behaves the...

What Makes Science Instruction Actually Stick? 

What Makes Science Instruction Actually Stick? 

The Case for Hands-On, Phenomenon-Based Learning in K–12 Science  Home Science Tools | Summer of Success Series You already know the research on hands-on science exists. Chances are, you've cited it yourself in a curriculum proposal, a professional...

Guiding Thinking, Not Managing Chaos 

Guiding Thinking, Not Managing Chaos 

How One Extended Learning Program Transformed What Science Instruction Looks Like  Home Science Tools | Summer of Success Series  There is a version of after-school science that most programs know well: a facilitator who is doing their best, working from a...

When After-School Science Works: Lessons from the Field

When After-School Science Works: Lessons from the Field

Home Science Tools | Summer of Success Series Out-of-school time programs occupy a position in a student's educational life that is genuinely different from the regular school day — not supplementary to it, but distinct from it in ways that matter for how...

should I learn computer coding