Rabbi Sholom Estrin starts work at the Cultured Cow Creamery in Durham, North Carolina, at 4:30 a.m., and he works until mid-afternoon four days each week to make cheddar cheese according to Jewish dietary laws.
The creamery is located on the grounds of a dairy farm on Kemp Road. By late morning on Tuesday, milk had already been pumped from cows in a neighboring milking parlor into a cheese vat, and Estrin was leaning inside to flip slabs of cheese curd in order to separate out the liquid whey.
Estrin, who is one of three rabbis at a synagogue in Raleigh, said kosher means “fit.” Kosher foods are prepared to certain standards as dictated by Jewish dietary laws. He said kosher cheeses have wide appeal because of their high preparation standards.
The creamery started cheese production in September, Estrin said. So far, they’ve been producing about 1,000 pounds of cheese per week. The cheese they’ve made so far is in various stages of the aging process.
They’ve been working to sell their finished cheeses to kosher food stores in the Northeast as well as locally to stores and restaurants, Estrin said. Their cheese is at Weaver Street Market and at other area stores and restaurants, according to the company’s website.
Estrin became cheesemaker option No. 2 in the effort when the original cheesemaker backed out of the project.
He said he learned about cheesemaking from books, the Internet and from a consultant brought in to help launch the business. Estrin said he started experimenting with making cheese in April, and was producing cheese by September.
“It’s so amazing,” Estrin said of the process. “There’s a certain element for a person who really works with their hands, does something that takes effort; (you) appreciate life in a bigger way,” he added.
The dairy farm where the creamery is located is owned by David Falk, who has worked in the real estate. Estrin said he knows Falk, and was inspired by what he said was his entrepreneurial vision.
Falk is a partner in a business called Agri-Science Opportunities, which includes the creamery as well as other business divisions. Sam Galphin, a veterinarian who said he’s worked with cattle his whole career, is also a partner.
Galphin said Agri-Science Opportunities incorporates not only cheesemaking, but also milk production. The farm, which is 135 acres, he said, is limited to 100 cows in milk at one time. They’ve been producing milk since January from a herd of Holstein cattle, Galphin said.
They added cheese to their business line-up in order to add what he called a value-added product to help support the business. Galphin said cattle feed prices have increased as a result of last year’s drought, and also as a result of a federal mandate for blending gasoline with ethanol. He said the requirement takes some of the grain supply out of the market, which drives up the price of the remaining grain that’s used for feed.
“The long, story short is I knew that you could not survive in the dairy industry selling food milk with feed prices as high as they are right now,” Galphin said. “Since you can’t do that, I went into this business with the idea of having a value-added product. The cheese is our value-added product.”
In addition to those business divisions, Galphin said they also plan to use the dairy farm as a place that can facilitate research as well as green energy innovation projects. The farm is equipped with wind turbines, solar panels, as well as other energy conservation systems.
Galphin said he’s an adjunct professor at N.C. State University College of Veterinary Medicine, and he said he sees the farm and the business as a means of educating students.
In addition, Galphin is an embryo transfer specialist, and does embryo transfer and in vitro fertilization to produce cows that have traits seen as beneficial by dairy farmers.
He said he sees business and all its divisions as a means to help food production keep pace with the global human population growth, especially in the developing world.
“We have a vision we hope will contribute to help solve this problem,” he said.
We are grass fed/ no added hormones as well as milked straight to vat/ kosher for pesach etc. more info at http://www.cultured-cow.com
I agree!! Use grassfed hormone and antibiotic free milk and I will be banging the door down for some!
Nice SB and honored to have been there at the beginning….and hold the first cheese-only farbrengen in our Sukkah! Continued hatzlocha – The Bernhards – Atlanta
How’s the Pora Aduma doin??
it was from grass fed cows. no hormones etc.
I am sure your experience in new Zealand truly prepared toy for this moment 🙂
Thank you Benz’s Gourmet for bringing this product to Crown Heights!!!
go sb!!!
we miss raleigh!!
we love raleigh! All the shluchim there are truly amazing!!
It’s rich and creamy and I saw Bentzi’s has it from time to time.