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1.
Rindless Swiss cheese was made from a mixture of pasteurized whole and skim milk that was inoculated to contain 10(4) to 10(5) cfu of Listeria monocytogenes (strain Ohio, California, or V7)/ml. During clotting of milk, numbers of L. monocytogenes remained nearly unchanged. When the curd was heated gradually to attain the cooking temperature (50 degrees C), numbers of L. monocytogenes increased by approximately 40 to 45% over those in inoculated milk. Cooking curd at 50 degrees C (122 degrees F) for 30 to 40 min resulted in resilient curd having a pH of 6.40 to 6.45 and decreased L. monocytogenes by 48% compared with numbers of the pathogen in inoculated milk. After curd was pressed under whey, numbers of L. monocytogenes increased by approximately 52% over those in inoculated milk and reached their maxima at the end of this stage. A sharp decrease in numbers of L. monocytogenes occurred during brining of cheese blocks (7 degrees C for 30 h). The population of L. monocytogenes continued to decrease during cheese ripening. Average D values for strains California, Ohio, and V7 were 29.2, 24, and 22.5 d, respectively. Listeria was not detected (direct plating, and cold enrichment) after 80, 77, and 66 d of ripening of Swiss cheese made from milk inoculated with strains California, Ohio, and V7, respectively. Thus, Swiss cheese made in this study did not permit extended survival of L. monocytogenes.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of several alternative methods including addition of rennet, addition of carrageenan and use of 2:1 (v/v) preconcentrated skim milk by ultrafiltration (UF) upon calcium retention, yield, composition and sensory properties of dry curd cottage cheese was investigated. Although each of the processing methods resulted in the manufacture of dry curd cottage cheese with different compositions and properties, none of them was satisfactory for increasing calcium retention. Added carrageenan bound additional whey proteins, added rennet interfered with curd syneresis and whey expulsion during cooking and use of UF preconcentrated skim milk resulted in an increase in yield, total solids and protein of the curd.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of microfiltration (MF) on proteolysis, hardness, and flavor of Cheddar cheese during 6 mo of aging was determined. Raw skim milk was microfiltered two-fold in two cheese making trials. In trial 1, four vats of cheese were made in 1 d using unconcentrated milk (1X), 1.26X, 1.51X, and 1.82X concentration factors (CF). Casein-(CN)-to-fat ratio was constant among treatments. Proteolysis during cheese aging decreased with increasing CF due to either limitation of substrate availability for chymosin due to low moisture in the nonfat substance (MNFS), inhibition of chymosin activity by high molecular weight milk serum proteins, such as alpha2-macroglobulin, retained in the cheese or low residual chymosin in the cheese. Hardness of fresh cheese increased, and cheese flavor intensity decreased with increasing CF. In trial 2, the 1X and 1.8X CF were compared directly. Changes made in the cheese making procedure for the 1.8X CF (more chymosin and less cooking) increased the MNFS and made proteolysis during aging more comparable for the 1X and 1.8X cheeses. The significant difference in cheese hardness due to CF in trial 1 was eliminated in trial 2. In a triangle test, panelists could not differentiate between the 1X and 1.8X cheeses. Therefore, increasing chymosin and making the composition of the two cheeses more similar allowed production of aged Cheddar cheese from milk concentrated up to 1.8X by MF that was not perceived as different from aged Cheddar cheese produced without MF.  相似文献   

4.
Glycolysis and related reactions during cheese manufacture and ripening   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Fermentation of lactose to lactic acid by lactic acid bacteria is an essential primary reaction in the manufacture of all cheese varieties. The reduced pH of cheese curd, which reaches 4.5 to 5.2, depending on the variety, affects at least the following characteristics of curd and cheese: syneresis (and hence cheese composition), retention of calcium (which affects cheese texture), retention and activity of coagulant (which influences the extent and type of proteolysis during ripening), the growth of contaminating bacteria. Most (98%) of the lactose in milk is removed in the whey during cheesemaking, either as lactose or lactic acid. The residual lactose in cheese curd is metabolized during the early stages of ripening. During ripening lactic acid is also altered, mainly through the action of nonstarter bacteria. The principal changes are (1) conversion of L-lactate to D-lactate such that a racemic mixture exists in most cheeses at the end of ripening; (2) in Swiss-type cheeses, L-lactate is metabolized to propionate, acetate, and CO2, which are responsible for eye formation and contribute to typical flavor; (3) in surface mold, and probably in surface bacterially ripened cheese, lactate is metabolized to CO2 and H2O, which contributes to the increase in pH characteristic of such cheeses and that is responsible for textural changes, (4) in Cheddar and Dutch-type cheeses, some lactate may be oxidized to acetate by Pediococci. Cheese contains a low level of citrate, metabolism of which by Streptococcus diacetylactis leads to the production of diacetyl, which contributes to the flavor and is responsible for the limited eye formation characteristic of such cheeses.  相似文献   

5.
Partitioning of starter bacteria and enzyme activities was investigated at different stages of Cheddar cheese manufacture using three exogenous commercial enzyme preparations added to milk or at salting. The enzyme preparations used were: Accelase AM317, Accelase AHC50, Accelerzyme CPG. Flow cytometric analysis indicated that AHC50 or AM317 consisted of permeabilised or dead cells and contained a range of enzyme activities. The CPG preparation contained only carboxypeptidase activity. Approximately 90% of starter bacteria cells partitioned with the curd at whey drainage. However, key enzyme activities partitioned with the bulk whey in the range of 22%–90%. An increased level of enzyme partitioning with the curd was observed for AHC50 which was added at salting, indicating that the mode of addition influenced partitioning. These findings suggest that further scope exists to optimise both bacterial and exogenous enzyme incorporation into cheese curd to accelerate ripening.  相似文献   

6.
Acid whey resulting from the production of soft cheeses is a disposal problem for the dairy industry. Few uses have been found for acid whey because of its high ash content, low pH, and high organic acid content. The objective of this study was to explore the potential of recovery of whey protein from cottage cheese acid whey for use in yogurt. Cottage cheese acid whey and Cheddar cheese whey were produced from standard cottage cheese and Cheddar cheese-making procedures, respectively. The whey was separated and pasteurized by high temperature, short time pasteurization and stored at 4°C. Food-grade ammonium hydroxide was used to neutralize the acid whey to a pH of 6.4. The whey was heated to 50°C and concentrated using ultrafiltration and diafiltration with 11 polyethersulfone cartridge membrane filters (10,000-kDa cutoff) to 25% total solids and 80% protein. Skim milk was concentrated to 6% total protein. Nonfat, unflavored set-style yogurts (6.0 ± 0.1% protein, 15 ± 1.0% solids) were made from skim milk with added acid whey protein concentrate, skim milk with added sweet whey protein concentrate, or skim milk concentrate. Yogurt mixes were standardized to lactose and fat of 6.50% and 0.10%, respectively. Yogurt was fermented at 43°C to pH 4.6 and stored at 4°C. The experiment was replicated in triplicate. Titratable acidity, pH, whey separation, color, and gel strength were measured weekly in yogurts through 8 wk. Trained panel profiling was conducted on 0, 14, 28, and 56 d. Fat-free yogurts produced with added neutralized fresh liquid acid whey protein concentrate had flavor attributes similar those with added fresh liquid sweet whey protein but had lower gel strength attributes, which translated to differences in trained panel texture attributes and lower consumer liking scores for fat-free yogurt made with added acid whey protein ingredient. Difference in pH was the main contributor to texture differences, as higher pH in acid whey protein yogurts changed gel structure formation and water-holding capacity of the yogurt gel. In a second part of the study, the yogurt mix was reformulated to address texture differences. The reformulated yogurt mix at 2% milkfat and using a lower level of sweet and acid whey ingredient performed at parity with control yogurts in consumer sensory trials. Fresh liquid acid whey protein concentrates from cottage cheese manufacture can be used as a liquid protein ingredient source for manufacture of yogurt in the same factory.  相似文献   

7.
Retained coagulant in cheese initiates casein breakdown and influences cheese structure and flavour formation. This study investigated the influence of milk pH on retention of camel chymosin in curd and compared it with bovine chymosin. Milk at five different pH levels was coagulated with same coagulant activity of each chymosin and centrifuged. Chymosin activity in whey was determined using the synthetic peptide Pro-Thr-Glu-Phe-(NO2-Phe)-Arg-Leu as substrate and HPLC analysis of the resulting product. Camel chymosin had 2.7 times lower activity in milk than bovine chymosin at the same coagulation activity. The retention of camel chymosin in curd was rather constant at ∼20% between pH 6.65 and 6.00, while it increased almost linear from 2 to 21% for bovine chymosin. The lower pH dependence for retention of camel chymosin than of bovine chymosin may be explained by a lower negative charge of the camel chymosin molecule.  相似文献   

8.
The objectives were to reduce bitterness in reduced-fat Cheddar cheese made with an exopolysaccharide (EPS)-producing culture and study relationships among ultra-filtration (UF), residual chymosin activity (RCA), and cheese bitterness. In previous studies, EPS-producing cultures improved the textural, melting, and viscoelastic properties of reduced-fat Cheddar cheese. However, the EPS-positive cheese developed bitterness after 2 to 3 mo of ripening due to increased RCA. We hypothesized that the reduced amount of chymosin needed to coagulate UF milk might result in reduced RCA and bitterness in cheese. Reduced-fat Cheddar cheeses were manufactured with EPS-producing and nonproducing cultures using skim milk or UF milk (1.2×) adjusted to a casein:fat ratio of 1.35. The EPS-producing culture increased moisture and RCA in reduced-fat Cheddar cheese. Lower RCA was found in cheese made from UF milk compared with that in cheese made from control milk. Ultrafiltration at a low concentration rate (1.2×) produced EPS-positive, reduced-fat cheese with similar RCA to that in the EPS-negative cheese. Slower proteolysis was observed in UF cheeses compared with non-UF cheeses. Panelists reported that UF EPS-positive cheese was less bitter than EPS-positive cheese made from control milk. This study showed that UF at a low concentration factor (1.2×) could successfully reduce bitterness in cheese containing a high moisture level. Because this technology reduced the RCA level (per g of protein) to a level similar to that in the control cheeses, the contribution of chymosin to cheese proteolysis would be similar in both cheeses.  相似文献   

9.
Reduced fat milks were pasteurized, for 15 s, at temperatures ranging from 72 to 88°C to give levels of whey protein denaturation varying from ˜ 3 to 35%. The milks were converted into reduced fat cheddar cheese (16–18% fat) in 500 litre cheese vats; the resultant cheese curds were milled at pH values of 5.75 and 5.35. Raising the milk pasteurization temperature resulted in impaired rennet coagulation properties, longer set-to-cut times during cheese manufacture, higher cheese moisture and moisture in the non-fat cheese substance, lower levels of protein and calcium and lower cheese firmness. Increasing the pH at curd milling from 5.35 to 5.75 affected cheese composition and firmness, during ripening, in a manner similar to that of increasing milk pasteurization temperature. Despite their effects on cheese composition and rheology, pasteurization temperature and pH at curd milling had little influence on proteolysis or on the grading scores awarded by commercial graders during ripening over 303 days .  相似文献   

10.
Full fat, milled-curd Cheddar cheeses (2 kg) were manufactured with 0.0 (control), 0.1, 1.0, or 10.0 μmol of pepstatin (a potent competitive inhibitor of chymosin) added per liter of curds/whey mixture at the start of cooking to obtain residual chymosin levels that were 100, 89, 55, and 16% of the activity in the control cheese, respectively. The cheeses were ripened at 8°C for 180 d. There were no significant differences in the pH values of the cheeses; however, the moisture content of the cheeses decreased with increasing level of pepstatin addition. The levels of pH 4.6-soluble nitrogen in the 3 cheeses with added pepstatin were significantly lower than that of the control cheese at 1 d and throughout ripening. Densitometric analysis of urea-PAGE electro-phoretograms of the pH 4.6-insoluble fractions of the cheese made with 10.0 μmol/L of pepstatin showed complete inhibition of hydrolysis of αS1-casein (CN) at Phe23-Phe24 at all stages of ripening. The level of insoluble calcium in each of 4 cheeses decreased significantly during the first 21 d of ripening, irrespective of the level of pepstatin addition. Concurrently, there was a significant reduction in hardness in each of the 4 cheeses during the first 21 d of ripening. The softening of texture was more highly correlated with the level of insoluble calcium than with the level of intact αS1-CN in each of the 4 cheeses early in ripening. It is concluded that hydrolysis of αS1-CN at Phe23-Phe24 is not a prerequisite for softening of Cheddar cheese during the early stages of ripening. We propose that this softening of texture is principally due to the partial solubilization of colloidal calcium phosphate associated with the para-CN matrix of the curd.  相似文献   

11.
Curd was washed to varying degrees during Cheddar cheese manufacture, by partial replacement of whey with water at the early stages of cooking, to give target levels of lactose plus lactic acid in cheese moisture of 5.3 (control), 4.5, 4.3 and 3.9% (w/w). The cheeses were matured at 8 °C for 270 days. While curd washing had little effect on composition or the mean levels of proteolysis (as measured by pH 4.6 soluble nitrogen and levels of free amino acids), it led to cheeses that were, overall, firmer and less brittle. Curd washing resulted in cheeses having lower levels of some volatile compounds, and being less acid, more buttery, sweeter, saltier and creamier than non-washed cheeses that had more 'sweaty', pungent and farmyard-like sensory notes. The results suggest that curd washing during Cheddar manufacture may be used as a means of creating variants with distinctive flavour profiles.  相似文献   

12.
The addition of calcium is widely accepted as a tool in cheese-making but the effect on the microstructure of cheese during and following manufacture is not known. In this study, cheeses made with milk containing 200–600 mg L−1 of additional CaCl2 had significantly lower fat loss into the whey collected after cooking; however, the final fat composition or yield of cheese did not change. The microstructure of the gel with 300 or 600 mg L−1 CaCl2 addition was less porous and the cooked curd consisted of a denser protein network that may retain more fat during the early stages of manufacture. In contrast, the cheddared curd and cheese contained more micro-pores than cheeses with lower or no calcium addition. Such micro-pores could possibly be the channels by which fat escaped during pressing. This study shows that calcium addition altered the microstructure and pattern of fat loss during Cheddar manufacture.  相似文献   

13.
The pH of cheese is determined by the amount of lactose fermented and the buffering capacity of the cheese. The buffering capacity of cheese is largely determined by the protein contents of milk and cheese and the amount of insoluble calcium phosphate in the curd, which is related to the rate of acidification. The objective of this study was to standardize both the lactose and casein contents of milk to better control final pH and prevent the development of excessive acidity in Cheddar cheese. This approach involved the use of low-concentration factor ultrafiltration of milk to increase the casein content (~5%), followed by the addition of water, ultrafiltration permeate, or both to the retentate to adjust the lactose content. We evaluated milks with 4 different lactose-to-casein ratios (L:CN): 1.8 (control milk), 1.4, 1.1, and 0.9. All cheesemilks had similar total casein (2.3%) and fat (3.4%) contents. These milks were used to make milled-curd Cheddar cheese, and we evaluated cheese composition, texture, functionality, and sensory properties over 9 mo of ripening. Cheeses made from milks with varying levels of L:CN had similar moisture, protein, fat, and salt contents, due to slight modifications during manufacture (i.e., cutting the gel at a smaller size than control) as well as control of acid development at critical steps (i.e., cutting the gel, whey drainage, salting). As expected, decreasing the L:CN led to cheeses with lower lactic acid, residual lactose, and insoluble Ca contents, as well as a substantial pH increase during cheese ripening in cheeses. The L:CN ratio had no significant effect on the levels of primary and secondary proteolysis. Texture profile analysis showed no significant differences in hardness values during ripening. Maximum loss tangent, an index of cheese meltability, was lower until 45 d for the L:CN 1.4 and 0.9 treatments, but after 45 d, all reduced L:CN cheeses had higher maximum loss tangent values than the control cheese (L:CN 1.8). Sensory analyses showed that cheeses made from milks with reduced L:CN contents had lower acidity, sourness, sulfury notes, and chewdown cohesiveness. Standardization of milk to a specific L:CN ratio, while maintaining a constant casein level in the milk, would allow Cheddar cheese manufacturers to have tighter control of pH and acidity.  相似文献   

14.
15.
A method for the large-scale isolation of β-casein from renneted skim milk was developed. The curd from renneted skim milk was dispersed in hot (?70 °C) water to inactivate residual chymosin. The heated curd was subsequently recovered by centrifugation, resuspended in water and incubated at 5 °C, during which β-casein dissociated from the curd; the suspension was centrifuged and the aqueous phase lyophilised. The isolated protein consisted mainly of β-casein, containing a minor amount of γ-caseins and traces of other caseins. Unless chymosin was fully inactivated by heating, some β-casein was hydrolysed at the Leu192–Tyr193 bond. The yield of β-casein increased with incubation time, up to ∼20% of the β-casein present in the milk after 24 h at 5 °C. Reducing milk pH to 5.5 or 6.0, prior to renneting, caused a high level of contamination with αs-caseins. This isolation procedure can be easily scaled-up to an industrial process and the β-casein-depleted curd may be used for the manufacture of rennet casein or processed cheese.  相似文献   

16.
This study compared the effect of coagulum firmness at cutting on composition of 50% reduced-fat Cheddar cheese. Coagulum firmness was determined by subjective evaluation by the cheese maker. Three firmness levels were tested, and these corresponded to average times of coagulant addition to cutting the curd of 25, 48, and 65 min. A slow acid-producing culture was used, and ripening times were altered to give similar curd pH values throughout cheese making. A longer rennet coagulation time (firmer coagulum at cutting) resulted in an increase in cheese moisture as well as an increase in cheese yield. The percentages of fat recovered in the cheese decreased with increasing curd firmness. The percentage of nitrogen recovered in the cheese was similar among the treatments. The amount of whey collected from the curd after milling increased as the coagulum firmness at cutting increased. Higher moisture content and lower pH of cheese made from the firmer curd at cutting contributed to softer, smoother-bodied cheeses, but the Cheddar flavor intensity was not affected.  相似文献   

17.
Erkmen O 《Die Nahrung》2001,45(1):55-58
Listeria monocytogenes was enumerated during the manufacture and ripening of Turkish White cheese with particular reference to a) pasteurized milk, b) cheese milk after inoculation with L. monocytogenes (0 h), c) after curd formation (2 h), d) curd after pressing (6 h), e) curd after pH was reduced (17 h), f) curd after salting (32 h), and g) cheeses during ripening. Cheeses were also examined periodically for total solids, moisture and salt contents, pH values and aerobic plate count. An increase in the number of L. monocytogenes was observed during manufacture. Following salting and throughout the storage period, numbers of L. monocytogenes decreased at a rate depending on the salt concentration, starter activity and storage time. The initial microbial number had a significant (P < 0.01) effect on the survival of L. monocytogenes during the storage period.  相似文献   

18.
Very diverse cutting and cooking intensity processes are currently used in small artisan dairies to manufacture Idiazabal cheese. The combination of the technical settings used during cheese manufacturing is known to affect cheese composition and yield, as well as whey losses. However, the information regarding the effect on microstructure and texture of cheese is scarce, especially in commercial productions. Therefore, the effect of moderate- and high-intensity cutting and cooking processes on whey losses, curd-grain characteristics, microstructure and cheese properties, and yield were analyzed. Three trials were monitored in each of 2 different small dairies during the cheesemaking of Idiazabal cheese, which is a semihard cheese made from raw sheep milk. The role and know-how of the cheesemakers are crucial in these productions because they determine the cutting point and handle semi-automatic vats. The 2 dairies studied used the following settings: dairy A used moderate-intensity cutting and cooking conditions, and dairy B used high-intensity cutting and cooking settings. Multiple relationships between cheese-processing conditions and curd, whey, and cheese properties as well as yield were obtained from a partial least square regression analysis. An increased amount of fat and casein losses were generated due to a combination of an excessively firm gel at cutting point together with high-intensity cutting and cooking processes. The microstructural analysis revealed that the porosity of the protein matrix of curd grains after cooking and cheese after pressing was the main feature affected, developing a less porous structure with a more intense process. Moderate-intensity cutting and cooking processes were associated with a higher cheese yield, regardless of the longer pressing process applied. No significant differences were observed in cheese composition. After 1 mo of ripening, however, the cheese was more brittle and adhesive when the high-intensity cutting and cooking process was applied. This could be associated with the composition, characteristics, and size distribution of curd grains due to differences in the compaction degree during pressing. These results could help to modify specific conditions used in cheesemaking, especially improving the process in those small dairies where the role of the cheesemaker is crucial.  相似文献   

19.
This report concerns measurement of paracasein in milk and transfer of protein from milk to cheese. In the main experiment, two vats of Cheddar cheese were made from each of 11 lots of milk from one large herd over a period of 7 mo. Exclusion of solutes from moisture in paracasein micelles in milk and cheese was central to estimation of paracasein and to the transfer of protein from milk to cheese and whey. Solute-exclusion by paracasein and its changes during cheesemaking could be visualized by considering paracasein micelles to be a very fine sponge. The sponge excludes solutes, especially the large solutes like whey proteins. The sponge shrinks during cheesemaking and expels solute-free liquid, thereby slightly diluting the whey surrounding the micelles inside the curd. Paracasein N in milk was calculated as the difference between total milk N and rennet whey N, the latter adjusted to its level in milk. Adjustment used appropriate solute-exclusion factors (h) of the protein fractions of whey and 1.08 for paracasein and associated salts. They were combined to give a factor Fpc, which adjusted the level of rennet whey N to its level in milk: 1.001 x (1 - 1.01 x FM/100 - Fpc x pc/100), where FM = fat in milk, pc = estimated paracasein, and 1.001 = dilution of milk by chymosin and CaCl2. The mean Fpc was 3.03. Differences in values were small among different procedures for calculating paracasein, but they are considered to be important because they represent biases, which, in turn, are important in analyses commercially. We conclude that solute exclusion by moisture in paracasein must have decreased during cheesemaking because the ratio of moisture to paracasein in the final cheese was 1.5, much less than the h of 2.6 for serum proteins by paracasein. Release of solute-excluding moisture from paracasein during cooking was likely the reason for lower total N in cheese whey than in the rennet whey in the paracasein analysis. Paracasein, estimated to be in cheese, curd fines, salted whey, and whey during cheddaring, was 98.21, 0.20, 0.25 and 0.19%, respectively, of the paracasein in milk for a total of 98.85% (SD of 22 vats = 0.46); the location of the missing paracasein is not known. On the other hand, recovery of milk N in cheese and wheys was 99.92% (SD = 0.37%). Nitrogen in paracasein and its hydrolysis products in cheese was estimated to be 98.51% of total cheese N. Proteose-peptone from milk appeared not to be included with the paracasein in appreciable amounts. Some was apparently included with denatured serum proteins during Rowland fractionation of whey, perhaps as a coprecipitate. Measured paracasein would include fat globule membrane proteins in milk containing fat, and denatured whey proteins in heated milks. It was concluded that the method of measurement and the associated calculations are integral parts of the definition and quantification of paracasein in milk.  相似文献   

20.
In this study, the growth of chloramphenicol‐resistant bacteriocin‐sensitive indicator strain Lactobacillus casei DPC 2048CM was evaluated in Cheddar cheese made with bacteriocin‐producing Lactobacillus paracasei DPC 4715. No suppression of growth of the indicator strain was observed in the cheese during ripening, and no bacteriocin production by L. paracasei DPC 4715 was detected by the well diffusion method in cheese and cheese extracts. The bacteriocin produced by L. paracasei DPC 4715 was sensitive to chymosin and cathepsin D, and it may have been hydrolysed by the rennet used for cheese manufacture or by indigenous milk proteases.  相似文献   

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