228 Chapter 10
The average fat in dry matter (FDM) of
whole milk is 100 × 3.6/12.6 = 28.6%. In
cheddar cheese, the legal minimum for FDM
is 50% and the moisture maximum is 39%.
In fact, the Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR, 2009 ) defi nes the composition of
major cheese varieties in terms of fat and
moisture content (Table 10.1 ). Cheese manu-
facturers must conform to these standards.
attention is warranted in the milk procure-
ment, handling, and processing phases of
the cheese operation. The average content
of 100 lbs of milk is 3.6 lbs of fat, 2.7 lbs of
casein, 0.7 lb of whey proteins, 4.9 lbs of lac-
tose, 0.7 lb of minerals, and 87.4 lbs of water
(Chandan, 2007a ). Thus, milk contains
12.6 lbs of total solids or dry matter, com-
prised of fat, protein, lactose, and minerals.
Figure 10.1. A classifi cation of cheese based on whether the cheese is ripened and the type of ripening.
Adapted from Fox (2003a).
Cheeses
Unripened, acid
coagulated cheeses
Baker’s,
Cottage,
Cream,
Neufchatel,
Quark
Queso
Blanco,
Paneer,
Ricotta
Gjetost,
Mysost
Hot
coagulation
Ambient
coagulation
Condense/
crystallize
Ripened cheeses,
coagulation by rennet and
culture derived acid
Mold
ripening
Bacterial
ripening
Internal External Internal External
Brie,
Camembert,
Carre del
Est
Blue,
Danablu,
Gorgonzola,
Roquefort,
Stilton
Brick,
Havarti,
Limburger,
Muenster,
Port du
Salut,
Trappist,
Teleggio,
Tilsit
Extra hard Hard Semi-Hard Pasta Filata Highly Salted Cheese with eyes
Grana
Padano,
Parmesan,
Asiago,
Sbrinz
Cheddar,
Cheshire,
Graviera,
Ras
Caerphilly,
Mahon,
Monterey
Jack
Mozzarella,
Kashkaval,
Provolone
Domiati,
Feta
Dutch-type-
Edam,
Gouda
Swiss Type-
Emmental,
Gruyer,
Massadam