What You Need 1 quart whole milk 2 1/2 tablespoons lemon juice
What Now? Bring the milk to boil. As soon as it begins to bubble, put in the lemon juice, stir once, and take the pot off the heat. Leave it alone for around 15 minutes. The milk will curdle and the curds will separate from the whey.
Strain the curds through 3 layers of cheesecloth. Squeeze out as much whey as you can easily (do not discard the whey, refridgerate it and use for cooking instead of water). Tie the curds in the cheesecloth, using twine to make a small, round bundle. Use sufficient twine, as you now need to hang up this bundle somewhere to drip overnight (hanging it on the tap over the sink works well).
Next morning, remove the hanging bundle and untie it. Gently flatten it out to make a 4 inch (10 cm) patty, keeping the cheese loosely wrapped in the cheesecloth. Put the patty on a sturdy plate and place a very heavy object on top of it. Perhaps a heavy pot filled with water. Or a stack of unread manuals from software. Leave the weight on the cheese for 4 to 5 hours. After the cheese has been pressed, you could cut into diamonds or rectangles with a very sharp knife, about 1 inches/2 1/2 cm long each.
Sometimes paneer is known as chenna when it is soft, and only as paneer when it is pressed.
2 1/2 cups (600 ml) yields 4 oz (100 g) chenna or 3 oz (75 g) pressed paneer 7 cups (1.7 l) yields 9 oz (250 g) chenna or 7 oz (200 g) pressed paneer 12 cups (3 l) yields 14 oz (400 g) chenna or 12 oz (350 g) pressed paneer
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