Mozzarella Cheese: Impact of Coagulant Type on Functional Properties
J. Joseph Yun, L. Joseph Kiely, Paul S. Kindstedt, D.M. Barbano
Journal of Dairy Science
Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine the impact of coagulant type and refrigerated storage on functional properties of unmelted and melted Mozzarella cheese. A "no-brine" Mozzarella cheese-making method was used to produce cheese with homogeneous chemical composition. Cultured Mozzarella cheeses were made with three different coagulants (Endothia parasitica protease, chymosin derived by fermentation, and Mucor miehei protease) in 1 d, and cheese making was replicated on 3 different d. During 50 d of storage at 4C, texture profile analysis parameters (hardness, cohesiveness, and springiness) of unmelted cheese decreased, meltability increased, apparent viscosity of melted cheese decreased, and free oil formation from melted cheese increased. Overall, the Mozzarella cheese made using E. parasitica protease was softer in unmelted cheese texture, was more meltable, and had lower apparent viscosity and more free oil release on melting than other cheese. In general, cheeses made with chymosin and Mucor miehei protease were similar in functional characteristics.
Extracted Claims
6 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
chymosin affects Mozzarella cheese functional characteristics
“cheeses made with chymosin and Mucor miehei protease were similar in functional characteristics”
E. parasitica protease affects Mozzarella cheese texture
“Mozzarella cheese made using E. parasitica protease was softer in unmelted cheese texture”
E. parasitica protease affects Mozzarella cheese viscosity
“Mozzarella cheese made using E. parasitica protease had lower apparent viscosity”