Danish scientists have created a sourdough starter that accelerates the maturation of cheese twice

Published 2023년 8월 18일

Tridge summary

Researchers from the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) have developed a new strain of mesophilic bacteria that accelerates the ripening process of cheese without the need for additional cultures. The newly developed culture can help cheeses such as cheddar and Gouda mature almost twice as fast. In addition, the culture also eliminates the bitterness in low-fat cheeses, reducing the need for additional cultures and therefore lowering production costs.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Researchers at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) have grown a new strain of mesophilic bacteria from scratch that releases enzymes for cheese maturation faster and does not require the addition of additional cultures. Scientists say a newly developed sourdough can help cheeses like cheddar and gouda ripen almost twice as fast. The new sourdough has been tested on semi-hard Danbo cheese and has reduced maturation time from 25 to 13 weeks. Making cheese, especially hard cheeses, is an expensive and time-consuming procedure, requiring several weeks to more than a year of product storage. For example, according to a study conducted in 2003, the cost of aging cheddar was estimated at about $640-1025 per ton of cheese aged for nine months. Approaches to accelerate the ripening process are different: from raising the temperature to using genetically modified starter cultures or enzyme mixtures. However, all of these methods are expensive, contribute to off-flavours, and are ...
Source: Milknews

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