Journal of Dairy Science
Volume 90, Issue 7 , Pages 3110-3117, July 2007

Ultrafiltered Milk Reduces Bitterness in Reduced-Fat Cheddar Cheese Made with an Exopolysaccharide-Producing Culture1

  • P. Agrawal

      Affiliations

    • Current address: Morningstar Foods, Gustine, CA.
  • ,
  • A.N. Hassan

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author.

Dairy Science Department, South Dakota State University, Brookings 57007

Received 23 January 2007; accepted 8 March 2007.

Abstract 

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.

Key words: reduced-fat Cheddar cheese, exopolysaccharide, ultrafiltration, bitterness

 

PII: S0022-0302(07)71758-7

doi:10.3168/jds.2007-0049

Journal of Dairy Science
Volume 90, Issue 7 , Pages 3110-3117, July 2007