Impact of New Milk Clotting Enzymes on Cheese Technology

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Abstract

Veal rennet now plays a minor role in United States cheese production, reflecting an inadequate and continually decreasing supply. Rennet has been supplanted principally by rennet-pepsin blends which also usually contain bovine pepsin, and by fermentation-derived rennets. The description, classification, and specification of rennets and swine pepsin are included in the First Supplement to the Food Chemicals Codex, 2nd ed. A wide array of techniques for differentiating milk clotting enzymes has been published; however, none of these techniques is employed interlaboratory. All commercially marketed milk clotting enzyme preparations incorporating various rennets or rennet-pepsin blends generally exhibit satisfactory performance during the cheesemaking process. Cheese yields with various commercial milk clotting enzyme preparations are comparable. Utilization of fermentation-derived rennets in long-hold cheese is limited by their alleged implication in the protein related defects of short acid body and astringent or bitter flavor. The greater thermostability of Mucor-derived rennets combined with the relatively high carryover into the whey poses concern for the whey processing industries. © 1975, American Dairy Science Association. All rights reserved.

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APA

Nelson, J. H. (1975). Impact of New Milk Clotting Enzymes on Cheese Technology. Journal of Dairy Science, 58(11), 1739–1750. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(75)84778-3

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