Influence of Sodium and Potassium Chloride on Rennet Coagulation and Curd Firmness in Bovine Milk

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Abstract

One of the salting methods in cheese production implies salting the milk before coagulation used in making Domiati-type cheeses and a variety of autochthonous “Lički Škripavac” cheese. The most used sodium replacer is potassium. This study investigated the influence of different added salt concentrations (1%, 1.5%, and 2%) and NaCl to KCl ratios (100%, 50:50%, 25:75%) on the rennet coagulation and curd firmness in bovine milk. The milk coagulation parameters were determined with a computerized renneting meter, Lactodinamograph. The results showed significant interactions between the salt concentrations and NaCl to KCl ratios (p < 0.0001, α = 0.05) by prolonging the beginning of coagulation (10–20 min) and curd firming rate (1–5 min) by an increase in salt concentration for all treatments. The 50:50 treatment values (RCT, k20, a30, a60, amax) were closest to the control (without salt) and had the best results among all treatments in the lower (1%) and medium (1.5%) salt concentration (p > 0.0001, α = 0.05) while in the highest salt concentration (2%) the treatment effect was nonsignificant (p > 0.05). These results should help future studies make a lower sodium product appealing to consumers without losing quality.

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Oštarić, F., Kalit, S., Curik, I., & Mikulec, N. (2023). Influence of Sodium and Potassium Chloride on Rennet Coagulation and Curd Firmness in Bovine Milk. Foods, 12(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12122293

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