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Effect of pH and time on the quantity of readily available water within fresh cheese curd
Some of the textural changes that occur early in cheese maturation may be related to the redistribution of water within the cheese matrix. To examine this, a model cheese curd system was devised and explored. Initially, cheese curd was prepared using starter and chymosin and the curd pH was controll...
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Published in: | Journal of dairy research 1997-02, Vol.64 (1), p.123-134 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Some of the textural changes that occur early in cheese maturation
may
be related to the redistribution of water within the cheese matrix. To
examine this,
a model cheese curd system was devised and explored. Initially, cheese
curd was
prepared using starter and chymosin and the curd pH was controlled by varying
the
draining and salting pH values. The quantity of serum that could be centrifuged
from the resultant curd was less for lower pH curd and decreased in volume
with
time. The curd pH decreased with time. In the protocol finally adopted,
milk was
acidified with lactic acid and coagulated with Rennilase 46L. After cheddaring,
salting and light pressing, the samples of this curd were finely diced
and mixed with
glucono-δ-lactone to give curd samples with comparable
moisture contents, similar
casein proteolysis rates but different pH values. The quantity
of serum that could be
centrifuged from these samples was greater for pH 5·6 curd
than for pH 5·2 curd and
decreased faster for the lower pH curd. Neither the curd moisture nor the
pH
changed significantly during curd storage and the casein proteolysis was
low. These
results for the model curd system are consistent with known water absorption
characteristics of casein curd under ‘equilibrium’
conditions and the effects of pH
and mineral salts on this absorption. It was concluded that, during the
early stages
of cheese ripening, there may be a redistribution of moisture within the
cheese,
related to the basic properties of the protein matrix and the
transient effects of curd
salting, rather than as a direct consequence of glycolytic and proteolytic
changes. |
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ISSN: | 0022-0299 1469-7629 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0022029996001914 |