By Antonio Carluccio and Priscilla Carluccio
Published 1997
Originally from Naples, caciocavallo is an uncooked cheese made with cows’ milk. Using the pasta filata method, the curds are worked when hot into a stringy mass, which is moulded by hand into a pear shape, then hung to dry. Like burrino, they are tied in pairs (a cavallo, from which it possibly gets its name) over a stick. These are then hung from the ceiling for 3 to 12 months, depending on whether they are to be eaten fresh or grated, until dried and matured. The finished cheese weighs around 1-2 kg (2¼-4½ lb).
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