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Culinary Science Second years Lesson 3 – dairy How do you make cheese? Proteins in milk Group 1 - the caseins. The caseins exist as big bundles – about a thousand of proteins (micelles), glued together by the calcium ions. Kappa-casein caps micelles when a certain size → stops them getting bigger, and keeps them separate (is negatively charged, so they repel) Very stable to heating Calcium - Capping casein Casein Group 2 - the whey proteins proteins Much less common (Curds:whey (4:1) ). Important in milk foams – lactoglobbulin unwinds and surrounds air bubbles In the presence of acid Milk normally pH 6.5. At pH 5.5, capping caseins negative charge is neutralised, and the micelles can no longer repel, and fall apart At pH 4.7, they start to bond to each other to form a continuous network – the milk solidifes/curdles Add lemon juice/vinegar to milk → small white particles will appear (the casein proteins coagulate). Then heat - lactoglobulin proteins will also coagulate - the white particles become bigger and more visible as they stick together. Making yoghurt and cheese When bacteria contaminate milk, bacteria degrade lactose → lactic acid. ↑ acidity causes the casein proteins to denature + coagulate. The coagulated casein network can trap within it the water and the fatty material Lactococcus lactis, Streptococcus salvarius, Lactobacillus - - -- - -- Soft cheeses - fairly high water content (50-75%), unpressed, short shelf life eg mascarpone, cottage cheese, cream cheese etc Hard cheeses - lower water content. Subjected to large pressure to squeeze out the water – longer shelf life! Cheese manufacture WHEY will not keep - should be drunken directly This acid milk gel, when broken or cut, forms: CURDS can be stored for future use. Shelf-life can be further increased by salting or drying Soon discovered that enzymes (eg the protease from the stomach of a milk-fed calf – rennet) can also cause casein to coagulate. It gives the micelles a haircut – it clips off the capping casein – the micelles clump together without the milk becoming sour Final stages of cheese making: • Salting • Maturing/ripening stage – a complex set of biochemical changes that provides flavour • May take up to two years Make some dairy products! • Make yoghurt • Make paneer – vary the fat content • Make mascarpone Paneer http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/paneer_86451 Ingredients 2 litres whole milk, 2 tbsp lemon juice Preparation method • Bring the milk to the boil in a heavy-based saucepan. • Once the milk starts to boil and rise up, stir in the lemon juice. Keeping the milk on the heat, stir gently to help the milk curdle; it should only take about a minute. The curds will coagulate and separate from the watery whey. • Remove from the heat. • Line a large sieve with muslin or cheesecloth and place over a large bowl or saucepan. Strain the cheese into the sieve and run some cold water through it. Discard the whey or use for another purpose. Mascarpone Recipe from cheese course - Cutting the Curd • Heat the cream to 80C – don't let it catch • Add tartaric acid (1/4 teaspoons for 1 litre double cream) and stir – the mixture should thicken and flecks will form • Strain in cheesecloth Try and make cheese Rennet v bacteria v both • 1 litre whole milk • Warm milk to 38 C • Remove from the heat and add the culture (or rennet if no culture) as per guidelines (4 teaspoons liquid rennet diluted in 4 teaspoons cool, unchlorinated water) • If adding rennet, wait for 45 minutes before adding rennet • Leave some at 37 C overnight Bibliography • McGee on Food and Cooking. By Harold McGee • The Science of Cooking. By Peter Barham • Food Preservation: an introduction, Tim Hutton • Molecular Gastronomy manual from www.inicon.net • Recipe ideas from Herve This • Images/pictures – from Internet