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2025-09-03 19:13:35
BEST QUALITY , MANY FUNCTIONS USES , STRAINS PERFECT , PERFECT SIZE FOR EASE OF USE , WEIGHT IS LIKE A FEATHER BUT IS DURABLE AND REUSEABLE
Reader-Writer
2025-08-31 12:37:19
The last time I bought cheese cloth, it was a package with a gauzy cotton fabric on a fairly long folded "roll." It wasn't expensive and I'm sure I bought it in a grocery store. I rarely use cheesecloth, but was told by a cheese monger in Italy that the best way to store the real parmigiano reggiano is to wrap it in cheesecloth and then it can last almost forever in the frig. Plastic is used by shops in the US to comply with state health regulations but isn't good for the cheese.I ordered these cheese clothes thinking that the small size would encourage me to protect my more expensive cheeses so that they stay in good shape longer. I was a little surprised that this cloth is very fine, more like a muslin. It's very nice and probably what I would use if I were making my own cheese from scratch, or draining something like yogurt. But because they are a convenient size, I will use these to store my good cheeses. I haven't tried them yet, but I plan to wash one first and let it dry, and then will plan to wash it occasionally. Maybe these will inspire me to make my own cheese!
Ning Du
2025-08-29 17:10:39
Not as thick as described
Pattep
2025-06-13 15:21:29
I have used cheesecloth in the past to wrap fruitcakes and soak them in rum. Since fruitcakes are not as much in demand, I have taken on making my own Greek Yogurt. Cheesecloth is necessary to strain the finished product. The food-safe fibers have to be close/dense enough to capture the yogurt and let just the whey leach out. I can use it to strain broth soups I make too. Here is that I think about this cheese cloth. The left side of the photo shows my regular cheesecloth I get from the grocery store....so thin and open that I have to stack many layers to strain my yogurt or other food products. On the right side is this new denser cheesecloth that seems so adequate as to allow me to use just one single layer to strain. Looks great. When I finish using the cheesecloth, I have to wash and bleach it for food safety. I feel confident it will hold up for reuse. This package of cheesecloth came in with six 19" square sheets which work fine for me. Other manufacturers sell theirs by the yard. I know I could use it when I stain wood and for other household/cooking purposes. But for my purposes, I like I like these sheets for their quality and density.
laurboh
2025-06-06 12:12:48
Seem to be well made and good quality. Use them for covering my kombucha container. Lets the tea breath while keeping anything from falling inside. Good product!
Customer
2025-04-10 12:13:30
i used them to help strain some homemade butter. everything held together without any issues
Murphy
2024-12-27 20:25:46
The item I received was not in a retail package and instead came vacuum sealed as one might expect from bulk packaging that was broken down (see photos). The cheesecloth itself was as advertised, it is a fine mesh with hemmed edges and worked well for straining fine materials. I used it as the final two filtering steps when rendering tallow and it worked well to capture the small bits of material that was missed by the cheesecloth from that giant box store based in Arkansas.
Kim G.
2024-12-06 14:04:00
This cheesecloth is good quality. It is not Hemmed, but rather surged around the edges. The only thing I didn't anticipate was the timeframe in which they chose to ship. I ordered on the 26th, it didn't ship until the 8th and I received it the next day. I don't know why the long wait; I guess I didn't check the shipping timeframe before ordering.
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