1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a cheese curd or young cheese for use in making processed cheese and processed cheese made therefrom. It also relates to a process for manufacturing a curd or young cheese and to the manufacture of processed cheese therefrom.
Processed cheese is made by combining mixtures of young cheese and of matured (flavored) cheese and other ingredients together to obtain the desired combination of compositions texture and flavour. An important attribute of young cheese for this purpose is that it has a high level of intact casein. Intact casein is variously categorised as functional casein, relative casein, structural casein, functional protein and structural protein. All of these meanings and any others understood in the art are intended to be encompassed by this specification.
The terms “curd” and “young cheese” are used interchangeably in this specification. To practise this invention there is no need to determine the precise transition point between them.
2. Description of the Related Art
A cheese may be said to have a life cycle which is divided into three phases. The first of these is the functional phase when the functional properties are predominant. In the second phase the cheese has lost most of its functional properties but not yet developed its flavor. It is used as a filler in the second phase. In the third phase the cheese has ripened to release its flavours. It is a combination of bacterial and enzymatic action causing the maturation or ripening of cheese during the three phases which results in a progressive breakdown of intact casein. It is of benefit to be able to extend the functional or first phase of the cheese aging cycle. It allows the manufacture of cheeses using the functional properties over a greater period of time. Where a market is remote from where the young cheese is made, delays in transport do not cause a loss in value. It also allows cheese to be manufactured over twelve months of the year, rather than being tied to the milking season.
One way of slowing or arresting cheese maturation and the breakdown of intact casein is to chill or freeze young cheese. In U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,773,054 and 5,783,236 there is described a process for producing a young cheese in a particulate form. Fresh cheese curd is drained, salted and milled and cooked in a particulate form. The product is then cooled and optionally dried to a minimum moisture content of 33 to 36% (W/W). The effect of the drying and cooling processes is to yield fresh curd particles which do not knit when they are packaged in bulk and stored. The product may optionally be allowed to mature and is not stable to bacterial or enzymatic maturation processes.
Where young cheese is supplied in bulk (for example 200 kg blocks) it cannot be cooled quickly enough to slow or halt the initial proteolysis reaction.
It would be desirable to be able to produce a cheese curd or a young cheese without the expense of the chilling or freezing. Such a stabilized cheese curd would then be able to be made into processed cheese at a site and time chosen by the processed cheese manufacturer.
It is an object of this invention to go some way towards achieving these desideratum or at least to offer the public a useful choice.
Accordingly, the invention may be said broadly to consist in a method for producing a particulate cheese curd suitable for the preparation of a processed cheese comprising the steps of:
Preferably, said coagulum is formed by adding any source of clotting enzyme or any clotting enzyme to milk.
Preferably said source of clotting enzyme is rennet.
Alternatively, said coagulum is formed by adding food grade acid to milk.
In a third alternative said coagulum is formed by adding both a source of clotting enzyme and a food grade acid.
In one alternative said curd is formed into particles by stirring said coagulum.
In another alternative said curd is formed into particles by milling.
In one alternative said milk is whole milk.
In another alternative said milk is skim milk.
In a third alternative said is a cheese milk.
Preferably, said curd is milled to a particle size no greater than 20 mm mesh.
More preferably, said curd is milled to a particle size no greater than 10 mm mesh.
More preferably, said curd is milled to a particle size no greater than 7.5 mm mesh.
More preferably, said curd is milled to a particle size no greater than 4 mm mesh.
Most preferably, said curd is milled to a particle size no greater than 3 mm mesh.
Preferably, said curd particles are dried to a moisture level of from 5 to 25% (W/W).
More preferably, said curd particles are dried to a moisture level of 22 to 23% (W/W).
In one alternative said drying step is a batch process.
In another alternative said drying step is a continuous process.
Preferably, said continuous process comprises one or more stages carried out in parallel or in sequence.
Preferably, said curd particles are dried with a fluid bed dryer.
More preferably, said dryer is a multi-stage fluid bed dryer.
In one embodiment, where said dryer is a multi-stage fluid bed dryer, partially dried curd is milled after emerging from one stage and before entering a next stage.
Preferably, said curd particles are dried with an air dryer with its air temperature in the range of 20° C. to 80° C.
More preferably said temperature is in the range of 20 to 50° C.
Preferably said particulate curd is dried under conditions where it is not heated to above the melting point of any fat contained therein.
In one embodiment after said cord particles are formed, they are salted.
In another embodiment the invention may be said broadly to consist in a particulate cheese curd produced by the process described herein above.
In another embodiment the invention may be said broadly to consist in a particulate cheese curd having a particle size no greater than 20 mm mesh and having a moisture content between 5% and 30% (W/W).
Preferably, said particle size is no greater than 10 mm mesh.
More preferably, said particle size is no greater than 7.5 mm mesh.
More preferably, said particle size is no greater than 4 mm mesh.
Most preferably, said particle size is no greater than 3 mm mesh.
Preferably, the moisture content of said particles is between 5 and 25% (W/W).
Most preferably, the moisture content of said particles is from 22 to 23% (W/W).
The invention may also be said broadly to consist in the use of a particulate cheese curd as defined above in the manufacture of processed cheese.
The invention may also be said to consist in a processed cheese produced using a particulate cheese curd as defined herein.
This invention may also be said broadly to consist in the parts, elements and features referred to or indicated in the specification of the application, individually or collectively, and any or all combinations of any two or more said parts, elements or features, and where specific integers are mentioned herein which have known equivalents in the art to which this invention relates, such known equivalents are deemed to be incorporated herein as if individually set forth.
The invention consists in the foregoing and also envisages constructions of which the following gives examples only.
The invention may be more fully understood by having reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
We have discovered that drying reduces the rate of breakdown of selected casein proteins in a particulate cheese curd or young cheese. It is believed that the state of the selected proteins reflects the level of intact casein in cheese.
Cheese curd, or cheese-like curd including skim milk cheese curd, may be produced by any means known in the art. Typical methods for producing cheese curd are described in Kosikowsky et al (1997).
In one embodiment, upon the completion of salting and the draining of any excess whey, fresh cheese curd is milled and fed into a dryer. The dryer may be batch or continuous and may consist of one or more stages used in parallel or in sequence.
In an alternative embodiment the whey and curds are stirred continually during cooking. After removal of whey, the curd continues to be stirred during subsequent stages of curd handling including salting. When such a step is employed milling may not be required to put the curd into a particulate form for drying.
A preferred design of dryer is a fluid bed dryer and a more preferred dryer is a multi-stage fluid bed dryer. Optionally between dryer stages further curd milling, size reduction or screening devices may be deployed.
The dryer is supplied with a drying medium. A preferred drying medium is air and more preferably the air is heated. Optionally the drying medium may be dehydrated or dehumidified prior to entry to the fluid bed or contact with the material to be dried. Optionally the drying medium may be recycled.
At the exit of the dryer, the curd particles have a preferred moisture content between 5% and about 30% by weight.
In a preferred embodiment, the air to the dryer should be less than 80° C. and greater than 20° C. Optionally the characteristics of the drying medium (temperature and humidity) supplied to the various stages may be varied between the stages.
Further, we have discovered that we can obtain very desirable intact casein preservation levels at moisture concentrations that serendipitously halt the growth of spoilage organisms at ambient temperature. Thus in a preferred embodiment it is convenient to store the dried product at ambient temperature.
Optionally, the dried product may be stored at below ambient temperature and preferably below 0° C.
Cheddar-style cheese curd was prepared as follows.
A cheese vat was filled with 375 L of pasteurized milk that had been standardized to a protein to fat ratio of 0.78. The temperature of the cheese milk was adjusted to 32° C. Mesophilic starter at the rate of 2.4% of cheese milk, coagulant at the rate of 6 ml/100 L of cheese milk and CaCl2 at the rate of 0.02% were added and thoroughly mixed with the cheese milk.
After about 20 minutes setting, the gel was cut using a 6 mm curd knife. While being stirred, the curds and whey were then heated to 38.5° C. over a period of 40 minutes and allowed to cook.
The whey was drained from the curds after a further 2¾ hours. The curd was stirred six times in the first 18 minutes, then three times in the following 15 minutes and once every 10 minutes. Once the pH had reached approximately 5.2, salt was added to the curd at the rate of 22 g/kg. The curd was mellowed a further 20 minutes.
Four 9 kg batches of milled curd prepared in a manner similar to that in example 1 were dried using a low humidity, low temperature dryer. The samples of curd were dried over two days at 10° C. Approximately 9 kg of curd was weighed out onto 12 drying stainless steel drying trays, and this procedure was repeated with 4 separate drying trials over 2 days. The air temperature, relative humidity and average cheese moisture levels for each dryer trial is own in Table 1.
The average composition of the dried curd samples is shown in Table 2.
1S/M (Salt in moisture)
FDM (Fat in dry matter)
MNFS (Moisture in non-fatty substance)
Dried cheese samples were stored for an extended period (3 months) at 10° C., and sub-sampled at regular intervals. The extent of casein proteolysis was determined using well-established electrophoretic methods (Alkaline Urea PAGE). See Creamer (1991).
The results of the measured casein breakdown from the PAGE analyses were measured and are set out in
The relationship between moisture level of dried cheese curd and the observed rate constants for both αS1- and β-casein were non-linear in nature, but followed similar traits (refer to
The experiments revealed that at moisture levels of <25% w/w the rate of breakdown of casein in cheese curd was so dramatically reduced that there was a likelihood of maintaining satisfactory intact casein levels for a period of some months at ambient temperature or near ambient temperature.
2 kg of salted and drained cheese curd (moisture 38.4%, fat 31%, protein 25.3%, salt 3.13%) prepared as described in example 1 was in a particulate form as a result of the stirring after the whey had been removed. A sieve analysis shown in Table 3.
The particulate curd was dried using a Uniglatt batch fluid bed dryer (Glatt Process Technology GmbH, Binzen, Germany) equipped with a Munters dehumidifier (Munters ML 180E dehumidifier, Munters Europe, Tobo, Sweden) fitted to the dryer air supply.
The dehumidified air had a relative humidity of 6% at 27° C. (absolute humidity 1.3 g/kg dry air). The inlet air was electrically heated to 28° C. prior to entering the fluid bed. An airflow of 3 kg/min was used.
The moisture content of the curd in the dryer was determined by withdrawing small samples (approximately 16 g) at regular intervals for analysis (16-hour oven drying method). The fluid bed temperature and the moisture content over the course of the drying are shown in Table 4.
The ingredients in table 5 were reduced to a uniform particle size by passing through a 5 mm cheese grinder and then placed in a 25 kg capacity Blentech (model no. CC45) cooker.
The ingredients in table 6 were also added to the cheese in the Blentech cooker.
The mixture was blended using an auger speed of 120 rpm. 0.026 kg of citric acid was added and the mixture was to 87° C. over a period of about 1 minute using direct steam injection. This temperature was maintained for about 6 minutes. During the heating, approximately 1.47 kg of condensate was added and incorporated into the mixture.
The molten mixture was poured through a colloid mill before being cast on a chilled table, whereupon the film of cheese was cut into slices. The chilled slices were a processed cheese slice of acceptable quality for IWS application.
It is not the intention to limit the scope of the invention to the above abovementioned examples only. As would be appreciated by a skilled person in the art, many variations are possible without departing from the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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526265 | Jun 2003 | NZ | national |
NZ 517358 | Feb 2002 | NZ | national |