The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Aug. 21, 2009
This recipe was great. I have tried many batters, but the cheese would never stay in and it just made a huge mess. This batter held up and worked just like the MN state fair! I will be making these many more times.
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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Aug. 1, 2009
This recipe is great except it does need some additional Salt and Pepper and I used stale beer instead of the milk. I used cheddar cheese, which I left out on the counter long enough to get a little warm, coated it in the batter and dropped it into hot oil, 375 degrees. They were light and fluffy, YES....they tasted like the state fairs cheese curds. I did houwever use a restaurant fryer, if cooking them at home be sure to cook just a few at a time.
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The reviewer gave this recipe 3 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Jul. 26, 2009
I'm happy to have found a great base recipe for cheese curds, as a homegrown Minnesotan now living in Seattle (where people haven't even heard of cheese curds!). I used garlic & herb cheese curds from the famous Beecher's Cheese at the Pike Place Market (they were out of plain). I followed many recommendations of the reviewers. I used 3/4 cup of beer instead of milk and drained off all of the excess batter before frying. Per recommendations I maintained an oil temperature of 375 which seemed to work perfectly! Also, I fried the curds at room temperature. Thanks for all of the reviews. These turned out light, fluffy and very crispy - just like at the MN State Fair!
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Cooking Level: Intermediate

Home Town: Mahtomedi, Minnesota, USA
Living In: Seattle, Washington, USA

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The reviewer gave this recipe 4 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Feb. 8, 2009
This is a good batter recipe, you might want to add some spice. I knew to drain my batter and shake off some. I have been looking for cheese curds for my son and finally found them this week. Thank you for the batter recipe. I think I like mixing the egg and milk together and leaving the flour seperate to dip back and forth between the two. I had made some chicken fingers the other night from another site and tried a few cheese curds in it and basic the same mixture only you add garlic powder and black pepper and dip back and forth that concept seems to work better. I just took this batter and dipped the rest of the cheese curds to freeze. I will let you know how that comes out.
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Cooking Level: Intermediate

Home Town: Chillicothe, Ohio, USA
Living In: Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA

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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Oct. 26, 2008
Turned out great, I added a little Emeril's Original Essence and they turned out very good!!!
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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Sep. 10, 2008
I tried this recipe for the first time and loved it, as did everyone else who was here.
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Cooking Level: Expert

Home Town: Woodstock, Connecticut, USA
Living In: Lafayette, Georgia, USA

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The reviewer gave this recipe 3 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Aug. 20, 2008
Only because I have spent many years working in restaurants and spent quite a bit of time actually talking with a vendor at the MN State fair who explained his process, I feel the need to weigh in on these reviews. The cheese curds should be fresh, at room temperature and when they at room temp, shake them around in little bit of flour to lightly coat them. When the curds are at room temperature, they "sweat" out some of the natural fat so that the flour will adhere to the curd. This step also ensures that that the batter will stick to the curds in the fryer. The batter should be made with beer, not milk and be fairly thin. Excess batter after dipping the curds should be drained from them in a wire mesh strainer (they actually had a very large flat one for this part) but a larger mesh strainer at home works too. The temperature of the oil is critical, the gentleman I spoke with said they keep their fryer at about 375 degrees. Also, the amount of oil used is very important; keep in mind that at the fairs they are using fryers that hold several gallons of oil, a home fryer uses 1.5 to 2 quarts on average so you can't fry very many at a time if you want them to turn out to be the delicious, golden, melty cheese curds we all love at the fair. I have been making these this way for 15 years or so and always get raves for these. Hope this helps anyone who has had problems with the batter sticking or everything turning into a gooey mess.
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Cooking Level: Intermediate

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The reviewer gave this recipe 4 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Jul. 25, 2008
If you didn't like this recipe substitute beer for the milk. Make sure your cheese curds are room temperature and not straight out of the fridge. Oil temp should be around 425-450 degrees.
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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Jul. 20, 2008
These worked out just fine, no freezing of the cheese needed. I did thin the batter just a bit with about 2-4 TB beer (I dont measure) and added maybe another 1/4 tsp of baking powder to lighten it up... solving the "pancake around cheese" problem. Also if you are burning it your oil is too hot. Get a thermometer and watch it. 350 - 365 is just fine. I eat these (regrettably!) every year at the MN state fair and this is the closest I've been to the real deal.
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Cooking Level: Expert

Home Town: Bronx, New York, USA
Living In: North Branch, Minnesota, USA

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The reviewer gave this recipe 4 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Jun. 4, 2008
I did thin the batter quite a bit more because with the amount of milk called for, turned out VERY thick. I did freeze the curds for about 1 hour before frying as suggested by other reviewers. I had enough to fry 3 batches, and am not sure what happened with the 1st batch, but it lost most of it's batter in the oil. Scooped out all of the mess, and the 2nd and 3rd batches were just fine. Searched for this recipe because we are from South Dakota, and we went to the twin cities and stayed in Savage, MN and ate at a sports bar called the Buffalo Tap, and they have the MOST AWESOME Jalepeno Deep Fried Curds in the world. We were trying to duplicate those. These were good but nowhere near as good as those. Thanks for the recipe though.
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Cooking Level: Expert

Living In: Aberdeen, South Dakota, USA

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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Jan. 20, 2008
Perfect!!! After reading all the reviews I was super worried if they would work, and they work great! I overnight shipped some fresh cheese curds to Wyoming for my fiancee's (from WI) birthday- trust us we KNOW fair cheese curds and these are really pretty close! Only thing I would change would be to thin/add with beer in the batter also: * I froze the curds for an hour already battered as was suggested in another review- and THIS IS KEY!!! I dont think it would work otherwise! * Don't have you oil too hot! they taste really wrong if the oil is too hot. Keep it low and fry until you can see oozing cheese (about a minute) you want a nice blond curd not dark. Good luck! great recipe!
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Cooking Level: Beginning

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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Oct. 5, 2007
Sounds like the last user had the oil way too hot and burnt the outside of the curd which left no time for the inside to cook.
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Home Town: Zumbrota, Minnesota, USA

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The reviewer gave this recipe 2 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Sep. 1, 2006
These were all batter and not good tasting batter either. Next time I'll learn to read the reviews first. I may try this recipe again but taking the advice of many to lightly coat and freeze before frying.
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The reviewer gave this recipe 3 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Aug. 25, 2006
I havent tried this particular recipe, but as the wife of a transplanted born and bred Wisconsinite, I have learned the tricks of making cheese curds and this recipe is missing the most important step...you have to FREEZE the cheese curds after you coat them for AT LEAST an hour before you fry them!
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Cooking Level: Expert

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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Feb. 15, 2006
I made the recipe and it came out great. I used my flash fryer and never had a burnt curd.
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The reviewer gave this recipe 1 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Jul. 4, 2005
They were greasy and messy. The cheese separated from the batter, and I was left with one big mess! The few that I did manage to make were marginal at best. Like everyone else stated: NOT LIKE THE MN STATE FAIR!
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The reviewer gave this recipe 3 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Apr. 4, 2004
Im a southerner living in minnesota. i had fried cheese curds for the first time last year at minnesota state fair. these curds were tasty but no comparison to state fair. they did get all gooey inside but i made a few changes. Since i used fresh curds which are less salty, i added some tony cacheries which gave it some extra saltiness and a little bit of a kick. i aslo omitted some flour and substituted corn meal. will try again with some more variations. thanks for the recipe!
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Cooking Level: Expert

Home Town: New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

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The reviewer gave this recipe 1 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Feb. 3, 2004
I hoped that this recipe being from wisconsin would be an allright tasting way to make homemade cheesecurds. So I tried it out. Followed it to a tea....it tasted somewhat like burnt pancakes with a hint of cheese. I'm used to minnesota state fair cheese curds so maybe my expecations were a little lofty but these curds were way too fluffy and there was barely any cheese left after being fried. I fried them in a deep frier which shouldn't matter since they're submerged in oil either way but in the end I was left with a fluffy pancake type substance with more cheese floating in and stuck to my deep frier than were in the curds. I would not recommend this recipe to anybody unless they want a huge mess with nothing to show for it. P.S. As LIBBYWYNN said in her review "They were just like the ones at the Minnesota State Fair!!". THEY WERE NOT EVEN IN THE SAME BALLPARK OR LEAGUE AS MINNESOTA STATE FAIR CHEESE CURDS. N-O-T-H-I-N-G Close.
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The reviewer gave this recipe 2 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Oct. 18, 2003
This was really easy to make and my cheese did get all gooey and yummy. My biggest complaint is the batter. It was thick and doughy and not anything like state fair curds. I would not use this recipe again.
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The reviewer gave this recipe 5 stars. This recipe averages a 3.71 star rating.
Reviewed: Jul. 3, 2003
I was a little nervous to try these as some of the reviews were negative, but I am really glad I did. They were just like the ones at the Minnesota State Fair!! It was a little tricky to get the temp of the oil just right, but once I did they were a breeze. Thanks for the great recipe!!!
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