Low-Level Clostridial Spores’ Milk to Limit the Onset of Late Blowing Defect in Lysozyme-Free, Grana-Type Cheese

Author:

Carminati Domenico1ORCID,Bonvini Barbara1,Francolino Salvatore1,Ghiglietti Roberta1,Locci Francesco1,Tidona Flavio1,Mariut Monica1,Abeni Fabio1ORCID,Zago Miriam1,Giraffa Giorgio1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Council for Agricultural Research and Economics, Research Centre for Animal Production and Aquaculture (CREA-ZA), Via Lombardo 11, 26900 Lodi, Italy

Abstract

The growth of clostridial spores during ripening leads to late blowing (LB), which is the main cause of spoilage in Grana Padano Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) cheese and other hard, long-ripened cheeses such as Provolone, Comté, and similar cheeses. This study aimed to verify the cause–effect relationship between the level of clostridial butyric spores (BCS) in milk and the onset of the LB defect. To this end, experimental Grana-type cheeses were produced without lysozyme, using bulk milk with different average BCS content. The vat milk from the so-called “virtuous” farms (L1) contained average levels of BCS of 1.93 ± 0.61 log most probable number (MPN) L−1, while the vat milk from farms with the highest load of spores (L2), were in the order of 2.99 ± 0.69 log MPN L−1. Cheeses after seven months of ripening evidenced a strong connection between BCS level in vat milk and the occurrence of LB defect. In L2 cheeses, which showed an average BCS content of 3.53 ± 1.44 log MPN g−1 (range 1.36–5.04 log MPN g−1), significantly higher than that found in L1 cheeses (p < 0.01), the defect of LB was always present, with Clostridium tyrobutyricum as the only clostridial species identified by species-specific PCR from MPN-positive samples. The L1 cheeses produced in the cold season (C-L1) were free of defects whereas those produced in the warm season (W-L1) showed textural defects, such as slits and cracks, rather than irregular eyes. A further analysis of the data, considering the subset of the cheesemaking trials (W-L1 and W-L2), carried out in the warm season, confirmed the presence of a climate effect that, often in addition to the BCS load in the respective bulk milks (L1 vs. L2), may contribute to explain the significant differences in the chemical composition and some technological parameters between the two series of cheeses. Metagenomic analysis showed that it is not the overall structure of the microbial community that differentiates L1 from L2 cheeses but rather the relative distribution of the species between them. The results of our trials on experimental cheeses suggest that a low-level BCS in vat milk (<200 L−1) could prevent, or limit, the onset of LB in Grana-type and similar cheeses produced without lysozyme.

Funder

Cremona Food-LAB project

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Health Professions (miscellaneous),Health (social science),Microbiology,Food Science

Reference31 articles.

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3. Contribution of C. beijerinckii and C. sporogenes in association with C. tyrobutyricum to the butyric fermentation in Emmental type cheese;Dore;Int. J. Food Microbiol.,2007

4. Relevance and analysis of butyric acid producing clostridia in milk and cheese;Domig;Food Control,2016

5. Farm silage facilities and their management for the prevention of anaerobic bacteria spore contamination in raw milk;Abeni;Dairy,2021

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