Showing posts with label Boss Mouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boss Mouse. Show all posts

Monday, July 11, 2016

young'n



Jeremiah, the newest Boss Mouse staff member.  He's 14, smart and funny, and a great worker.  He loved the mouse hat and wore it the whole work day.

Friday, November 20, 2015

inspector Buffy



Cheese room renovation update: concrete footings approved, plumbing approved, insulating foam board down - next up: concrete floor being poured.  Buffy the hen approves!

Thursday, November 5, 2015

garage full of dirt



Construction has begun on the cheese barn renovation - so far, they've dug out the old concrete floor of the barn in preparation for pouring the new one.  It's a huge mess, and so exciting!


Friday, February 13, 2015

stacked 5 deep



cheese cave clean out this week

Saturday, January 24, 2015

I'm a pepper too



Big & baby wheels of pepper jack, with my home grown pickles peppers

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Boss Press

Cheese industry poised for expansion in Michigan

Sue Kurta making Swiss.
Sue Kurta making Swiss.
Credit Tom Carr
Artisan cheesemaking is on the rise in Michigan, though it’s not an easy business to get into. The number of small, independent cheese producers in Michigan is expected to nearly double in the near future.
Sue Kurta is among those leading the way. As she stirs the curdling milk that will become Swiss cheese, you can see the colorful tattoos that cover her arms. They’re pictures of pineapples, a cruise ship and other upbeat things.
“It stirs for quite a long time like this and if you don’t give it a toss, it can mat together,” Kurta says.
Kurta’s business is called Boss Mouse Cheese, a memorable name that comes from an antique photo of her Aunt Julia as a child. In it, Julia wears an outsized bow in her hair that looks kind of like mouse ears.
“And so Boss Mouse to me is like BOSS -- but it’s a little mouse,” Kurta says. “And then she’s this sort of startled little Victorian girl with big mouse ears. The whole thing is so funny to me, and it’s fun to say.” 
Boss Mouse is one of about 20 small, artisan cheese makers in Michigan. Most are also dairy farmers.
“For the most part, it’s people who already have milking animals and decide to go into the production side of things,” says Terry Philibeck, deputy director of the Michigan agriculture department.
Boss Mouse is one of just a few that only make cheese. Leelanau Cheese Company of Suttons Bay is another. Kurta buys her milk from Moomer’s Dairy near Traverse City. Getting milk can be a challenge for somebody that wants to open a cheesery. 
“The problem with our dairy production today is that it’s in larger volumes," says Philibeck. "It’s difficult to purchase a smaller volume of milk.”
Kurta started Boss Mouse cheese as a part-time job out of her passion about two years ago. She’s full-time now and a regular at local farm markets, but also sells at upscale markets and restaurants downstate. She specializes in Montasio cheese, which is the base to which she adds flavors like Sriracha hot sauce, or the Frenchherbs du provence.
Her cheese curds are popular and so is an experiment she tried with smoked butter. The Rachael Ray Show, a cooking show on Food Network, has ordered some of her butter.
From Wall Street to cheese
Kurta lived in New York City and was a secretary for Wall Street bankers when she took a class in how to make cheese in her kitchen. Then, in the 1990s, she took a break from her job.
“I had a really great boss I had been with for a few years -- a really good man,” she says. “I asked if I could take a leave of absence from my job, unpaid, to go live in the country in Maine and go work on a cheese farm for about three months and I did. And then I really fell in love. Then it totally sealed the deal.”
That was several years before she moved back to Michigan and started making cheese to sell. Now, she works long days purchasing milk, making cheese, packaging it, distributing it and selling it face to face to customers.
The 20 artisan cheese makers already operating in Michigan may soon have more company, as another 15 or so are trying to get licensed. That process usually takes about two years, with numerous health regulations and other hurdles. Kurta has chosen to go even further and achieved state certification as an environmentally sound operation through the Michigan Agriculture Environmental Assurance Program.
She says her formula for success is simple.
“No matter how cute your logo is or how cool you are, or whatever, if your cheese, if your food isn’t good, it doesn’t matter,” she says. “So I think the first thing is make a superior product. Make the best possible cheese you know how to make. And then be really nice to people.”
Kurta sells her cheeses through the winter at the Indoor Farmers Market at Grand Traverse Commons.

Saturday, March 1, 2014

new cheese flavas



To make an herb crusted brie, you have to roll the fresh cheese in herbs before the white mold rind begins to form


I tried it here with a batch of Mt. Holiday


Montasio with Kalamata olives 

Thursday, January 23, 2014

we're hiring



Inaugural Boss Mouse staffers, the awesome Sarah and Austin!  

Thursday, August 22, 2013

more cheese deciples


I had the pleasure of working with two aspiring culinary world young people who wanted to see what goes on at Boss Mouse Cheese.  Aiden and LJ are smart, interested kids who are bound for glory.  They generously helped me in the cheese room brushing wheels, packaging and doing dishes, bless their hearts.


Aiden cuts the cheese


LJ cuts the curd

Sunday, September 16, 2012

legalize it



Boss Mouse passed the Department of Agriculture inspection!  
Wanna buy some cheese?

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Saturday, July 21, 2012

the hoist



blueprint of how to lift a 100+ pound milk canister

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Cutting the cheese. No, I'm serious. Really.



Cutting large amounts of cheese curd usually employs the use of a curd "harp", like the two in this picture.  Harps are super expensive and have to be custom ordered to fit your kettle.  I have always just used a long knife and make the cuts by hand.  This works fine, but makes uneven slices of curd, and you can never reach the bottom of the kettle.


My Dad and I have been trying to design a home made harp for months, with ideas ranging from wide tooth hair combs to cutting apart and reassembling metal shelving units.  The other day I was in a hardware store and struck gold:  a $16 garden rake - the perfect Boss harp!

Monday, June 11, 2012

The Building of Boss Mouse #17: the inaugural cheese


it's true
emptying milk into the vat
cheese curd
whey drinking contest
cheese molds and pressing
the debris
a lot of cheese making is doing dishes
Two 12-pound wheels of Swiss cheese on the shelves of the cheese cave

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Dry; no, wet run



I filled up the cheese kettle with water to test it's capacity and see if it warms to the correct temperature.  Cheese rooms are wet places and Boss Mouse is no exception. I sloshed water everywhere and spilled a few gallons onto the floor during the experiment, but that was OK - I got to test the sloped floor drain!

Friday, April 20, 2012

Alpine cheese style



I found this cabinet at a thrift shop in Traverse City - on the back it says "Thomasville Furniture, 1968", and we hung it in the hallway of the cheese workshop.  I think it adds vintage Scandinavian style to the lab, and will undoubtedly make my Swiss cheese taste much more authentic.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

The Building of Boss Mouse, Part 16: the works



One side of the Boss Mouse utility room- water heater, pressure tank, and a maze of plumbing.  This is what you'll be looking at when you use the bathroom at Boss Mouse, which is on the opposite side of the room.

Monday, April 2, 2012

The Building of Boss Mouse, Part 15: sunk



The sink is installed - this was constructed from two separate pieces found at a used restaurant equipment place