Author:
BUCHIN SOLANGE,MARTIN BRUNO,DUPONT DIDIER,BORNARD ANDRE,ACHILLEOS CHRISTINE
Abstract
A study was undertaken to compare the chemical and sensory
characteristics of Abondance cheeses made with milk from animals grazing areas
within the same highland pasture, but with different predominant plants. Nine
cheeses made during the last 3 d of three successive 7 d periods were evaluated. The
animals grazed on the southern side of the highland pasture during the first period
(15–21 June), on the northern side during the second period (22–29 June) and
returned to the southern side for the third period (30 June–6 July). The gross
composition of the cheeses did not vary between periods. ‘North’ cheeses contained
more plasmin, γ-casein, αs1-I-casein and
water-soluble N than ‘south’ cheeses. Both
sensory and instrumental measurements indicated that north cheeses were less firm,
stickier and more easily fractured than south cheeses. North cheeses were also more
salty, bitter and persistent. Their overall aroma was more intense and they had more
intense sour, burnt, toasted, fermented vegetable and sweat aromas, but less intense
toffee, exotic fruit and acid milk aromas. The texture differences noted between the
cheeses from milk produced on the two areas may come from differences in primary
proteolysis, partly due to different amounts of plasmin and plasminogen in milk and
in cheeses. The aroma differences were related to differences in volatile compounds.
Some compounds had a microbial origin, while some others may have come from
the pasture.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Food Science
Cited by
94 articles.
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