Not for many moons, I'd suspect.
Beekeeping especially can be slow and tedious. Set up a ton (literally) of hives immediately and have a (single) beekeeper collect all the wild bee hives on your map. The reason I'd suggest only letting one beekeeper work at a time is because there' some sort fo bug in which multiple beekeepers will all try to collect the same hive, preventing any of them from ever actually doing so. So they'll stand there for months on end until they're dehydrated and tantrumming as they run back inside to drink and die halfway there or get killed by an ambush or something.
Once they've all been collected, let them breed and the colonies be split until they're all occupied, then let only 1/5-1/4 of them be collected from. What I learned is that you can't afford to get overzealous about collecting products from all your hives, or you may wind up with periods of extreme shortages in the beekeeping industry.
And for milking; that'd be a hell of a lot of grazers to worry about. Might as well have some meat and bread☼Horse Intestine Bisquits☼ to go with your cheese. I'd suggest sheep, llamas, alpacas and pigs because of the lower grazing costs. Pigs don't graze at all, in fact. Maybe if you refuse to butcher any of them (except the sub-par males, because they're useless and contaminate the gene pool with their crappy genomes), ever, you'd be able to get a big enough population of pigs to keep the workshops milking and producing cheese non-stop without ever running out of animals to milk, buckets and barrels to hold the milk, and milk to process into cheese. I haven't been successful in getting a population that large before, though.