AI Article Synopsis

  • Making cheese from camel milk poses unique challenges due to its different properties compared to cow milk.
  • In this study, low-fat Cheddar cheese (LFCC) was produced using cow milk alone or blended with 15% and 30% camel milk, and analyzed over 180 days of ripening.
  • Key findings indicated that while the chemical composition was largely similar, the addition of camel milk improved meltability and altered texture, color, and rheological properties of the cheese, especially in the 30% camel milk blend.
  • Further research is suggested to explore how camel and cow milk interact within the cheese matrix.

Article Abstract

Making cheese from camel milk (CM) presents various challenges due to its different physicochemical properties compared with bovine milk (BM). In this study, we investigated the chemical composition, proteolysis, meltability, oiling off, texture profile, color, microstructure, and rheological properties of low-fat Cheddar cheese (LFCC) prepared from BM-CM blends. LFCC was produced from BM or BM supplemented with 15% CM (CM15) and 30% CM (CM30), and analyzed after 14, 60, 120, and 180 d of ripening at 8°C. Except for salt content, no significant differences were observed among LFCC from BM, CM15, and CM30. The addition of CM increased the meltability and oiling off in the resulting cheese throughout storage. With respect to color properties, after melting, LFCC CM30 showed lower L* values than LFCC made from BM and CM15, and a* and b* values were higher than those of BM and CM15 samples. LFCC from CM30 also exhibited lower hardness compared with the other cheeses. Moreover, LFCC made from BM showed a rough granular surface, but cheese samples made from BM-CM blends exhibited a smooth surface. The rheological parameters, including storage modulus, loss modulus, and loss tangent, varied among cheese treatments. The determined acetoin and short-chain volatile acids (C2-C6) in LFCC were affected by the use of CM, because CM15 showed significantly higher amounts than BM and CM30, respectively. The detailed interactions between BM and CM in the cheese matrix should be further investigated.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3168/jds.2023-23795DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

lfcc cm15
12
properties low-fat
8
low-fat cheddar
8
cheddar cheese
8
chemical composition
8
meltability oiling
8
lfcc
8
bm-cm blends
8
lfcc cm30
8
modulus loss
8

Similar Publications

Article Synopsis
  • Making cheese from camel milk poses unique challenges due to its different properties compared to cow milk.
  • In this study, low-fat Cheddar cheese (LFCC) was produced using cow milk alone or blended with 15% and 30% camel milk, and analyzed over 180 days of ripening.
  • Key findings indicated that while the chemical composition was largely similar, the addition of camel milk improved meltability and altered texture, color, and rheological properties of the cheese, especially in the 30% camel milk blend.
  • Further research is suggested to explore how camel and cow milk interact within the cheese matrix.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!