Cheese Yield Calculator for Milk and Cheese Style

Milk solids, moisture, curd loss, and aging math

Cheese Yield Calculator

Estimate how much finished cheese a batch of milk can make by volume, cheese style, fat and protein level, moisture target, curd loss, salt, efficiency, and aging shrinkage.

🧀Cheese Yield Presets

Each preset loads a practical cheesemaking batch with style-specific moisture, component recovery, curd handling loss, and aging loss already filled in.

🥛Milk And Cheese Inputs
Enter the milk going into the vat, pot, or make tub.
Use a milk test when available; otherwise pick a profile.
Cow milk often sits near 78 percent casein of total protein.
Covers fines, fat in whey, ladle loss, draining loss, and handling waste.
Use 0.5 to 1.5 for fresh cheese, 1.5 to 2.5 for many aged cheeses.
Adjust for make skill, cut size, stirring, flocculation, and draining control.
Finished Cheese 0 lb 0 kg
Fresh Curd Before Aging 0 lb after curd loss
Milk To Cheese Ratio 0:1 finished yield
Whey Drained 0 lb solids captured

Batch Breakdown

Milk weight in vat0 lb
Selected styleCheddar
Milk fat and protein3.8% fat / 3.3% protein
Estimated casein2.57%
Target moisture and salt38% / 1.7%
Curd loss and aging loss3% / 5%
Theoretical fresh yield0 lb
Finished yield per 100 lb milk0 lb
Fat Retained93%
Casein Retained96%
Dry Matter62%
Vat Efficiency96%
📊Core Cheese Yield Benchmarks
9-10 lbmilk for 1 lb hard cheese
8.6 lbmilk per US gallon
0.93common fat recovery factor
37-40%typical cheddar moisture
📋Real Milk To Cheese Yield Data
Cheese style Typical yield from 100 lb milk Milk needed for 1 lb cheese Typical moisture Yield note
Cheddar or hard pressed cheese9.5 to 11 lb9 to 10.5 lb36 to 39%Yield follows fat, casein, salt, and aging loss closely.
Mozzarella or pasta filata9 to 11.5 lb8.7 to 11 lb45 to 52%Higher moisture raises fresh yield, but stretching can shed whey.
Feta or brined curd11 to 14 lb7 to 9 lb52 to 56%Brine and moisture retention make yield higher than hard cheese.
Paneer or acid-set fresh cheese13 to 17 lb6 to 8 lb55 to 60%Acid-set curds hold more moisture and some whey proteins.
Brie or camembert style11 to 13 lb7.5 to 9 lb48 to 54%Soft ripened cheese starts wet and loses moisture during ripening.
Cottage cheese curd14 to 18 lb5.5 to 7 lb68 to 73%Cream dressing can raise finished serving weight further.
Cream cheese style25 to 33 lb3 to 4 lb68 to 74%High moisture and cream addition create a very high finished yield.
Swiss or alpine cheese8.5 to 10.5 lb9.5 to 12 lb38 to 41%Cooked curd and aging loss make finished yield lower.
🧪Milk Composition Reference
Milk profile Fat % Protein % Casein share Best yield use
Whole cow milk3.6 to 4.03.1 to 3.476 to 80%Balanced benchmark for Cheddar, mozzarella, and fresh cheeses.
Jersey cow milk4.8 to 5.53.6 to 4.077 to 81%Higher solids usually lift yield and richness.
Goat milk3.5 to 4.53.0 to 3.572 to 78%Good for feta, chevre, bloomy rind, and lactic styles.
Sheep milk6.0 to 7.55.0 to 6.078 to 82%Very high solids for Pecorino, feta, and dense fresh cheese.
Skim cow milk0.1 to 0.53.2 to 3.576 to 80%Lower yield unless the target style is quark or low-fat curd.
Standardized vat milk3.0 to 3.53.2 to 3.677 to 80%Used when repeatable fat-to-protein balance matters.
🧈Cheese Style Comparison Grid
Hard Pressed9-11%

Cheddar, alpine, and aged styles concentrate solids and lose moisture during pressing and aging.

Pasta Filata9-12%

Mozzarella yield depends on pH, stretch loss, moisture target, and curd handling.

Brined Curd11-14%

Feta-style cheese retains more moisture before brining and usually has moderate aging loss.

Acid Set13-17%

Paneer-style curd captures moisture and some heat-denatured whey proteins.

Soft Ripened10-13%

Bloomy rind cheese begins with high moisture but loses weight as it ripens.

Lactic Fresh18-30%

Quark, cream cheese, and drained lactic curds vary widely with draining time.

Moisture, Loss, And Retention Table
Variable Low range Common range High range How it changes yield
Fat recovery into cheese88%91 to 94%95%+Higher recovery means less butterfat leaves in whey and fines.
Casein recovery into cheese92%95 to 97%98%+Clean coagulation and gentle handling protect casein yield.
Curd solids loss1%2 to 5%8%+Small curd fines and rough stirring quickly reduce recovered cheese.
Aging or drying loss0%2 to 8%12%+Hard, natural-rind, and long-aged cheese loses more water.
Moisture target35%38 to 55%70%+Moisture is often the biggest driver of fresh cheese weight.
Vat efficiency88%94 to 98%100%+Use this field to match the calculator to your actual make notes.
💡Cheesemaker Yield Tips
Component tip: Milk volume alone is only a rough shortcut. If you know fat and protein percentages, the calculator can better reflect the recoverable milk solids in the curd.
Make-note tip: After each batch, weigh the finished cheese and compare it to this estimate. Adjust curd loss and vat efficiency until the calculator matches your process.

Cheese production is the process of turning milk into cheese, and the weight of the resulting cheese depend on several specific factor. Even though you might think that you need alot of cheese from a lot of milk, the amount of cheese that will be produced will be less than the amount of milk you started with. This is because milk contain a large amount of water.

During the cheese production process, the water is removed from the milk and the solids of the milk are left behind. The solids of milk contains the fat and protein components of milk, both of which will eventually become cheese. In order to calculate the amount of cheese that will be produced from the milk, you must account for the fact that milk is mostly water but also contains fat and protein.

How Much Cheese You Get from Milk and What Affects Its Weight

The fat in milk creates the structure for the cheese. The protein in milk forms a structure that holds the fat and water within the cheese. Because different animal produce milk with different levels of fat and protein, you can have two batches of milk that appear to be the same but contain a different amount of solid.

Therefore, you must account for the fat percentage in the milk, the protein percentage in the milk, and the casein percentage in the milk. Casein is the protein in milk that forms the structure of the cheese. The style of the cheese will also impact the final weight of the cheese.

For instance, pressed cheddar will lose water during the cheesemaking process but brined feta is meant to contain more moisture. Therefore, if the target moisture level of the cheese is high, the weight of the cheese will be more higher. However, if the target moisture level of the cheese is low, the weight of the cheese will be lower but it will be densly.

You must decide the target moisture level of the cheese prior to the cheesemaking process. During the cheesemaking process, it is common for some of the curd to be lost. For instance, if the cook stir the curd during the cheesemaking process, the fines that are created can become separated from the curd and enter the whey.

These fines are not going to become cheese. Some of the fat may be lost if the curd is broken up too much or if the milk changes temperature during the cheesemaking process. In these instances, some of the curd can be lost.

Therefore, you must ensure that the curd is not lost in the cheesemaking process. Another reason that the weight of the cheese may be lost is because of the aging process. Cheese will lose moisture during the aging process.

The harder the cheese is going to be, the more water that will be lost while it ages. The longer the cheese ages, the more cheese will be lost in weight. The softer the cheese, the less weight that will be lost during the aging process.

It is important to use the proper aging loss percentage for the specific type of cheese that is being made. Salt is added to the cheese. Salt add some weight to the cheese.

Salt controls the movement of the moisture within the cheese. However, it is not one of the factor that is used to determine the weight of the cheese. Salt is added to ensure that the cheese is consistency from batch to batch.

Vat efficiency is a number that helps to reveal how efficient the cheese-producing vat is. The more efficiently you perform the cheesemaking process, the higher the vat efficiency will be. You can use this number to ensure that your cheesemaking process is improving over time.

The higher the vat efficiency, the more cheese you will produce from a given amount of milk. The reference tables for the amount of solids in milk and the amount of cheese produced by different styles of cheese is not the target amounts of cheese that are to be targeted in the cheesemaking process. However, these tables can help to indicate whether or not your cheesemaking process is accurate.

If your yields of cheese are much less than the reference tables indicate, you have a problem in the cheesemaking process. However, if you produce more cheese than the reference tables indicate, then you know your milk contains a high level of solid. Due to the number of variable involved in cheesemaking, the weight of the cheese will likely not equal your first estimate.

The composition of the milk changes with the season and the feed that is provided to the animals that produce the milk. The temperature of the room where the cheese is being made will also affect the amount of cheese that is produced. The best way to monitor the cheesemaking process is to weigh the cheese that is produced after every batch of cheese.

By comparing the weight of the cheese to the estimated weight after many batches, you can adjust the vat efficiency and the curd loss numbers accordingly. Being able to calculate the amount of cheese that can be made from a given amount of milk allows for better decisions to be made in the cheese production process. For instance, you can decide whether the milk that you have is worth the amount of time it will take to produce the cheese.

In addition to this, you can decide whether changing the source of your milk will increase the amount of cheese that you are able to produce. While the calculation is not a replacement for your experience in cheesemaking, it does help to reduce the amount of guesswork that goes into the cheesemaking process.

Cheese Yield Calculator for Milk and Cheese Style

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