Partitioning of starter bacteria and added exogenous enzyme activities between curd and whey during Cheddar cheese manufacture

I. A. Doolan, A. B. Nongonierma, K. N. Kilcawley, M. G. Wilkinson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Partitioning of starter bacteria and enzyme activities was investigated at different stages of Cheddar cheese manufacture using three exogenous commercial enzyme preparations added to milk or at salting. The enzyme preparations used were: Accelase AM317, Accelase AHC50, Accelerzyme CPG. Flow cytometric analysis indicated that AHC50 or AM317 consisted of permeabilised or dead cells and contained a range of enzyme activities. The CPG preparation contained only carboxypeptidase activity. Approximately 90% of starter bacteria cells partitioned with the curd at whey drainage. However, key enzyme activities partitioned with the bulk whey in the range of 22%-90%. An increased level of enzyme partitioning with the curd was observed for AHC50 which was added at salting, indicating that the mode of addition influenced partitioning. These findings suggest that further scope exists to optimise both bacterial and exogenous enzyme incorporation into cheese curd to accelerate ripening.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)159-166
Number of pages8
JournalInternational Dairy Journal
Volume34
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2014

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