Sour milk cheese

Sour milk cheese or acid-set cheese is cheese that has been curdled (coagulated) by natural souring or by the addition of lactic acid bacteria. This type of cheese is considered "technologically simple" to produce. When making soft acid-set cheese the coagulum results from production of lactic acid by the starter microorganisms.[1]

Homemade cottage cheese made with milk and vinegar

Cheeses can be classified according to a variety of features including ripening characteristics, special processing techniques (such as cheddaring) or method of coagulation. Acid-setting is a method of coagulation that accounts for around 25% of production. These are generally fresh cheeses like cottage cheese, queso blanco, quark and cream cheese. The other 75%, which includes almost all ripened cheeses, are rennet cheeses. Some cheeses like ricotta and ziger are made by first heating the milk to between 90-92 degrees Celsius to create coprecipitation of casein and whey protein before addition of lactic or citric acid.[2]

Production

Traditional cottage cheese can be made without any coagulating enzymes, though modern processing techniques often do make use of such enzymes to increase yield and reduce processing times. These methods produce a milder and sweeter flavored cheese then the traditional method.[3] Rennet is also sometimes used in the processing of other fresh, soft cheeses like fromage frais, but it is not an essential ingredient and these cheeses can be produced by traditional methods without rennet or other enzymes.[4]

Ricotta is a high-moisture cheese, like cottage cheese, but it is not a pressed curd cheese. It can be made from whey or a blend of milk and whey. Traditionally, ricotta was produced from the whey byproduct of mozarella and provolone production, but modern techniques usually use whole milk (sometimes without any whey). Milk can be blended into the whey to improve curd cohesiveness, neutralize the acid in whey and increase yield. This mixture of milk and whey is heated before enough food grade acid is added to drop the pH to the needed level (this could be some type of lactic, citric or acetic acid). Whichever type of acid is used by the cheesemaker it is important to maintain correct PH levels for the sweetness of the cheese's flavor. Some methods of mass produced cheeses will use food grade caustic soda to neutralize the acid of the whey, before heating the blend and adding the coagulating acid.[5]

Regional varieties

Ripened Harzer cheese

In Germany the term Sauermilchkäse is usually applied to ripened acid-set cheeses only, but not to fresh cheeses. The various types of ripened sour milk cheese include:

See also

References

  1. Jones, D.G. (2012-12-06). Exploitation of Microorganisms. Springer. p. 284. ISBN 9789401115322. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
  2. Ullmann's Food and Feed, 3 Volume Set. Wiley. 2017-06-19. p. 584. ISBN 9783527339907.
  3. Sinha, Nirmal (2007-04-27). Handbook of Food Products Manufacturing, 2 Volume Set. Wiley. p. 620. ISBN 9780470049648. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
  4. Fundamentals of Cheese Science. Aspen. 2000. p. 363. ISBN 9780834212602. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
  5. Sinha, Nirmal (2007-04-27). Handbook of Food Products Manufacturing, 2 Volume Set. Wiley. p. 638. ISBN 9780470049648. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
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