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Comments on How to get my cheese to melt completely

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How to get my cheese to melt completely

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I emigrated from the United States and one thing I really miss is the meltability of American "cheese". (The scare quotes are because it's a cheese-based product rather than real cheese.) There's no such product here and the solid cheeses I've found here1 don't melt the same way. American "cheese" when melted in milk over a flame forms a liquid; real solid cheese when melted in milk over a flame forms… milk with semisolid cheese in it.

So my question is twofold:

  • Maybe I'm doing it wrong. Is there a way to melt, say, gouda, in milk to form a liquid?

If not, then:

  • I understand that the reason American cheese melts so nicely is that it has sodium citrate. Assuming I can get hold of some (which is a separate question), what do I do with it? That is, at what stage in my cooking do I add it, and how much do I add?
  1. though they have definite advantages over American "cheese"

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2 comment threads

Ah, yes. American Processed "Cheese food" (1 comment)
General comments (2 comments)
Ah, yes. American Processed "Cheese food"
Spamalot‭ wrote 6 months ago

I've often wondered why it's labeled as "Cheese food"

  • Because otherwise one might assume that it's plastic that shouldn't be eaten
  • Or if, in fact, we are supposed to feed an actual cheese with it...

The horror movie resulting from the second option should be fun.