We weren't able to do much last year, but the year before we had got into a good routine.
It took me ages to stop trying to get precise temperatures to make specific cheeses. Eventually

dawned, and I realised that all these regional cheeses arose from people just making what happened naturally in their locale. So I stopped forcing the issue and let what happened happen
The cheeses vary slightly depending on the weather, what the cows ate, etc. I like that!
We made a basic unpasteurised soft cheese every day as follows :
Before milking, get the saved whey out of the fridge so it's at ambient when you get back. (Ambient 18C minimum.)
2L of milk straight from the cow (filtered but otherwise untouched; still warm from the cow), plus the whey saved from yesterday (now at room temperature) into a pan, stir, leave to stand for a few minutes (while you do your other just-back-from-milking jobs, so about 20-30 mins), add rennet, stir, cover and leave.
Yesterday's pan (or this can be done in the evening of the same day, whatever suits), skim off any unset creamy stuff, pour off some whey for tomorrow's starter into sterilised jar into fridge, cut the curd, heat to 42-45C, stir gently, drain (save whey for pigs), rinse with cold water, strain.
Now cut roughly and leave to drain for a few hours.
I don't add salt but some do add cheese salt at this stage. Let it drain some more after adding salt.
Add other flavourings if required.
Leave as is for cottage-style cheese cheese or pack and press in moulds for a soft cheese tomorrow.
For the cottage-style cheese, we found that draining the curds fairly well and then stirring in a bit of unprocessed thick cream (or the unset creamy stuff off the top of the cheese if you had some and saved it) made the best approximation to a nice cottage cheese like Longleys.
The very first batch, we used the basic cheese culture from Goat Nutrition. After that we just used the whey from the day before. If we started to get odd flavours, go back to a fresh starter.
I am hoping that now we are up to full strength, we can start to make some semi-hard cheeses too - maybe get something akin to a Sharpham Rustic.