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Journal of Dairy Science Vol. 68 No. 12 3148-3154
© 1985 by American Dairy Science Association ®
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Cheddar Cheese from Ultrafiltered Whole Milk Retentates in Industrial Cheese Making

K. S. Kealey and F. V. Kosikowski

Department of Food Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853

ABSTRACT

Transporting whole milk retentates of ultrafiltration to a distant large industrial Cheddar cheese making site resulted in 16 lots of Cheddar cheese from vats containing 2,546 to 16,360 kg of cheese milk. Whole milk retentates concentrated by ultrafiltration to 4.5:1 were added to cheese milks to give mixtures concentrated 1.2:1 and 1.3:1 with approximately 20 and 30% more protein and fat, respectively, than in unsupplemented control whole milks or unsupplemented commercial reference milks.

Gross composition of Cheddar cheese made from commercial reference, control, and retentate-supplemented milk generally showed no major differences. Yield increased in cheese made from retentate-supplemented milk. Yield efficiency per kilogram total solids rose in retentate cheese over controls but not among commercial reference, control, and retentate lots based on per kilogram fat or total protein. Milk components were higher in wheys from retentate cheeses, but loss of components per kilogram cheese obtained generally showed lower values in whey from retentate cheese.

General quality of retentate Cheddar cheese was equal to that of reference unsupplemented commercial cheese and higher than unsupplemented control Cheddar cheeses. It appears technically feasible to ultrafilter milk at one site, such as the farm, collecting station, or specialized center, and transport it to an industrial site for Cheddar cheese making.




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M. R. Acharya and V. V. Mistry
Comparison of Effect of Vacuum-Condensed and Ultrafiltered Milk on Cheddar Cheese
J Dairy Sci, December 1, 2004; 87(12): 4004 - 4012.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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