Cow vs. Water Buffalo Mozzarella (2011)

(itscheese.com)

54 points | by indigodaddy 4 days ago ago

55 comments

  • tony_cannistra a day ago

    Fun article, but the comments did it for me. Just a reminder of a different Internet.

    • rootsudo 12 hours ago

      I was reading Reddit comments from a decade ago.

      It’s chilling how much changed in the last decade and then then from two decades ago.

      It’s too nice, you can’t be mean anymore and it’s no longer to the point. Eternal summer forever. But pre 2010 comments really are before smartphones took over.

    • shermantanktop a day ago

      Now I want to know if the Lebanon cheese deal goes through.

    • indigodaddy a day ago

      It doesn't seem like WP, wonder if it's some kind of Joomla type deal

  • kazinator a day ago

    Mozarelle di Bufala di Buffalo bufalano Mozarelle di Bufala di Bufallo que Mozarella di Bufala di Buffalo bufalano

  • FredPret a day ago

    Reading this, I thought some madman was milking a Cape water buffalo, which have been known to beat lions in 1-v-1 fights, and is only capable of one emotion: murder.

    But turns out this milk is from the Asian water buffalo, which is even bigger than the African kind, but can be domesticated.

    • colingauvin a day ago

      I was surprised to find that there is an Italian Mediterranean buffalo species/breed [1] that is thought to be descended from an altogether distinct lineage that went extinct around the last ice age [2].

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Mediterranean_buffalo

      [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubalus_murrensis

    • technothrasher a day ago

      Not to rain on your buffalo vs lion parade, but the Cape buffalo is a sub-species of the African buffalo, not the water buffalo. There's no such thing as a Cape water buffalo.

    • hi_hi 18 hours ago

      I've always wondered, who was the first person to milk a cow, and then...drink it?

    • pm3003 20 hours ago

      "Italian" (and Egyptian) water buffaloes are not really bigger than regular cows. They are said to have come to the Middle East then to Italy through gifts from the Arabs or by Crusaders I believe.

    • idontwantthis a day ago

      I saw an Asian water buffalo almost gore Scott Stokely in Cambodia. Fortunately it was on a short rope and when it’s farmer mama came out and slapped it, it calmed down. The thing was probably 3 tons!

      • decimalenough a day ago

        Fun fact: in Thailand, a common derogatory term for westerners, or any kind of big, stupid creature, is water buffalo (ควาย khwai).

        • aitchnyu 13 hours ago

          Malayalam speaker here, പോത്ത് (potthu) for big and/or clumsy people.

    • api a day ago

      Now someone’s gonna go milk Cape buffalo to make deadly lion smashing death buffalo cheese to sell on Joe Rogan.

      Kinda like that killer bee honey thing.

      • a day ago
        [deleted]
    • rngecounty a day ago

      [flagged]

  • pfooti a day ago

    I make pizza at home in an outdoor pizza oven (gozney dome). My recipe cooks at about 850F. All forms (skim or otherwise) of cow mozzarella scorch fiercely at that temperature before the crust is done. Buffalo mozzarella does not. Some of my local markets carry Buf brand buffalo mozz, which is not from italy but is from the same animal (I think).

    The buf mozz is the thing that takes my homemade pizza from "meh" to "actually, this is pretty good". I'm working on getting it to "wow, this is great" but that will require further refinement of my crust technique, I think.

    • jonah-archive 7 hours ago

      I cook in a Gozney as well and the things that have made the biggest difference for me are a slow-rise dough (I've found that the really high-hydration recipes didn't make a huge difference for me and made the dough way more difficult to handle, so I haven't been doing that) and putting the sauce on hot (I keep it at a low simmer on the stove and dress directly from there). Shaving some parm over the whole thing with a microplane and adding a quick drizzle of olive oil right before popping it in also makes a big difference (I crank the oven to around 900F and my pizzas usually cook in ~75 seconds).

      Ken Forkish's _The Elements of Pizza_ is a great resource though it's more focused on standard home oven cooking. His slow-rise recipe is roughly: 350g water (at ~95F), 13g salt, 1.5g instant dry yeast, 500g white flour (I use Caputo 00), mix the first three and let the yeast hydrate, then mix in the flour, rest 20 minutes, knead briefly until smooth, two hour room-temp rise in an oiled tub, shape into balls, then fridge rise (until either the next day or the day after, but best the next day). I do it with 310g of water to get a 60% hydration dough which is my preference.

    • danparsonson a day ago

      Wow I didn't realise pizza ovens were so hot! A little web searching led me to this, for anyone else who's interested: https://www.crustkingdom.com/pizza-oven-temperature-guidelin...

      • Klonoar a day ago

        There’s an infamous HN post of a guy who like broke his cleaning cycle on his oven to get it hot enough to do it “right”.

      • duskwuff 20 hours ago

        It depends on the style. The super-hot (~900°F) brick ovens are primarily used for Neapolitan-style pizzas (thin crust, light toppings), which cook in as little as a minute. A denser pizza like a Chicago-style deep dish couldn't be cooked in that sort of oven.

      • defrost a day ago

        By fortunate happenstance it's much the same as the annealing temperature of glass

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annealing_(glass)

        which means you can throw in a pizza when you've finished at the kiln for a day and pull it out ready a minute or so later (depending on when you start the temp. step down cycle, current annealing oven temp. etc.)

    • darth_avocado a day ago

      The way I do it is buffalo mozzarella goes well for fresh stuff: salads, sandwiches, popping some cheese in your mouth like a degenerate

      Anything you’re going to cook at high temperatures, use cow mozzarella. Pizzas, casseroles, sauces etc.

      (Also I’m amazed that buffalo mozzarella isn’t that known, I thought that’s what mozzarella was supposed to be).

      • tmtvl a day ago

        I had a salad with buffalo mozzarella once and it was awful. Made me think the restaurant had an anti-vegetarian agenda (which probably is true, considering I'm in Belgium).

    • tayo42 21 hours ago

      poolish Pizza dough I thought was the thing that brought my pizza from that's pretty good to one of the better pizzas I've eaten.

      • pfooti 11 hours ago

        I'll give that a try, thanks! I'm currently doing a 10h room temp ferment (from 1/4t of yeast) and a 48h fridge rest. I think I got that from kenji alt. I'm satisfied with some of it, but I wish the crust was a bit more chewy and able to stand up to the sauce. The slices all flop over, but that may also be from over-saucing.

  • beeb 9 hours ago

    The Italians I know swear that mozzarella should be consumed within a day of being made. And I must say that freshly made mozzarella tastes best! But also maybe because what I can get fresh was made with love and good quality milk, as opposed to the supermarket stuff.

  • Sayrus a day ago

    Site is marked as suspended if you get redirected to HTTPS. It has been archived:

    https://web.archive.org/web/20250715171604/http://itscheese....

    https://archive.is/3cJcu

    • indigodaddy a day ago

      How/why would you get redirected? The site itself doesn't appear to be redirecting to https correct?

      • denkmoon a day ago

        Plugins or browser settings that prefer HTTPS. Eg Firefox HTTPS-Only mode.

        • indigodaddy a day ago

          Huh, never had a need for that. Most sites either they auto redirect to the https version, or they dont have one, eg in this case. Don't really see the need.

          • Sayrus 16 hours ago

            HTTPS-only mode doesn't do the initial HTTP request if HTTPS is available. This prevents downgrade attacks, prevents leaking private information such as the entire URLs (many email tracking links default to HTTP so you leak the token contained in there) or if the website supports it even the domain name you access. It's not "needed", sometimes it breaks things (HTTP-only website but with HTTPS port opened), sometimes it fixes things (HTTPS-only website with HTTP-port opened).

          • smallerize a day ago

            It doesn't matter if the site is trying to redirect you to an encrypted connection. An attacker in the middle could send any data in the unencrypted response. It's better to just skip it.

  • aitchnyu 13 hours ago

    Amul in India has "milk" (unspecified cow and buffalo milk ratio) Mozz as well as buffalo, which is marketed as more premium. Didnt know the Italians set the precedent. IME both are untangy.

    Their copy: "The cheese is made out of pure buffalo milk, which makes the melted cheese creamier and whiter in appearance.When heated the product develops stretching property and melts uniformly on the food surface."

  • kurthr a day ago

    Not only are the protein ratios different in the Buffalo milk, but the fat content is radically different (buffalo 7-9% cow 3-4% jersey 5%). It's hard to even call anything but Jersey Mozzarella the same cheese.

    And of course the much harder american "mozzarella" stuff thrown on most pizzas is something entirely different.

    • jefftk a day ago

      > And of course the much harder american "mozzarella" stuff thrown on most pizzas is something entirely different.

      Not really! It's essentially the same cheese, but instead of put fresh into brine the stretched curds have the water pressed out and then they're aged.

  • Semaphor a day ago

    Hah, timely. Apparently there is a current (or at least I only encountered it recently) marketing trend in (at least) Germany and the USA of calling cow mozzarella "Fior di latte", to make it out as something special, when all it means is that it’s the slightly cheaper Mozzarella made from cow’s milk instead of buffalo’s, and is what the vast majority of Mozzarella is made out of in both countries.

    • octo888 21 hours ago

      > fior di latte

      Same in the UK at fancy pizza places. It's £2-4 extra for buffalo mozzarella

      • qsort 20 hours ago

        Buffalo mozzarella is actually a trap on pizza. It contains more water and it tends to dampen the dough as it melts. Fiordilatte or Treccia are actually better, even though they're cheaper.

        • octo888 13 hours ago

          Oh that's interesting. Soggy pizza is the worst.

          Not sure why they'd even offer it as an option but I think they've given up with the British public as they even let you order a pizza with a topping of fries !

  • davidw a day ago

    I'm not a cheese snob at all, but having lived in Italy for a while, I definitely prefer the buffalo mozzarella to eat fresh. It's richer tasting, somehow.

  • csours a day ago

    Making of (by Claudia Romeo): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJKIA2sAE38

  • pmalynin a day ago

    These days its pretty easy to get from Whole Foods or Eataly if you have one nearby. Definitely worth, especially if you're making Caprese.

    • tptacek a day ago

      Whole Foods tends to carry Buf brand, which is made from water buffalo milk in Colombia.

  • sudhirb a day ago

    I am suspicious that the buffalo mozzarella registers as "tangy" at all - though I suppose it travelled quite a long way

  • selimthegrim a day ago

    I am reasonably sure some guy in Lahore was making this too.

  • gnabgib a day ago

    (2011)

    • indigodaddy a day ago

      I feel like there are many articles/webpages where tacking on a year matters very little (eg doesn't add much either way). This is one of those cases I thought..