I mix a bag of dry curd cottage cheese with some regular "wet" cottage cheese. Mix it really well or even give it some pulses in a processor.
I add a shot glass of lime juice before processing the mix. That's a secret a friend of the family told me and it's good. But you can leave it out if you prefer.
Put the mixture in a jelly bag and hang it over the sink until any liquid drips out.
Tie the top of the bag tight and place it between two boards. Weigh it down with something heavy for 24 hours. Remove the cheese and sprinkle with salt on both sides if you like the salt.
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The old fashioned version is this from the Lith Cookbook:
Make some soured milk:
Put about 3 or 4 tablespoons of buttermilk or plain yogurt in a crock (I use a bean crock).
Pour in milk and cover.
Place in a warm spot for 24 hours
When it starts forming a solid, put it in the fridge to serve with hot potatoes or go on to use it for making farmer cheese.
Heat soured milk on a slow fire about 100 degrees until warm and thick - don't overheat.
Pour into triangular cloth bag (jelly bag), hang over a sink or pan until liquid drains out. Turn into a bowl and salt lightly.
Then follow my quick recipe about putting the bag between the two boards. A friend of my folks drilled holes in the two boards for ventilation. He then drilled holes for screws so he didn't have to weigh it down. He'd tighten the screws and set the cheese outdoors. He'd put one of those gauze picnic bowl umbrellas over it to protect it.
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I visited a friend who lives outside of Chicago. We went to the Lithuanian store. They sell all sorts of Lith foods. They have a farmer cheese with chives in it and it's fabulous on some buttered Lithuanian rye and a cup of coffee.
Their site
http://www.andrulischeese.com/index.html