Publication | Open Access
Proteolysis During Cheese Manufacture and Ripening
592
Citations
142
References
1989
Year
Proteolysis in cheese can be divided into three phases: proteolysis in milk before cheese manufacture, the enzymatically induced coagulation of the milk, and proteolysis during cheese ripening. Extracellular proteinases from psychrotrophs may cause reduced cheese yields and off-flavors, but the problem does not appear to be significant at populations <106 cfu/ml. Proteinases from leucocytes may also reduce yields, but these are less active than bacterial proteinases. Plasmin (indigenous milk proteinase)causes significant hydrolysis of [$-casein, especially in late lactation, but because most of this occurs prior to milking, yield losses due to plasmin activity (i.e., via formation of proteose peptones) are largely unavoidable.
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