Swiss-Type Cheeses (Propionic Acid Cheeses)
Version
Published
Date Issued
2018
Author(s)
Hartmann, Katja
Fröhlich-Wyder, Marie-Therese
Jakob, Ernst
Wechsler, Daniel
Ardö, Ylva
Düsterhöft, Eva-Maria
Engels, Wim
Huppertz, Thom
Hynes, Erica R.
Cristina Perotti, Maria
Bergamini, Carina V.
Type
Book Chapter
Language
English
Abstract
Allgau Emmental cheese is a well‐known and popular cheese in Germany which is consumed throughout the year. Emmentaler must have good storage qualities, allowing it to reach its optimal maturity without any loss in quality. Emmentaler PDO is characterised by its regular round eyes and its sweet and nutty flavour. After Mozzarella and Gruyere PDO, Emmentaler is the third most produced cheese in Switzerland and is the most exported. Greve cheese gets its typical characteristics from a combination of mesophilic DL‐starter and a culture of propionic acid bacteria (PAB). Maasdammer was created in the 1970s as an alternative to (Swiss) Emmental cheese. The production of Maasdammer cheese is essentially in the Netherlands. The main (key) flavour compounds in Maasdammer cheese are those that yield the typical sweet and nutty flavour notes: pyrazines, branched‐chain aldehydes and benzaldehyde, methyl‐ketones, lactones and ethyl esters seem important.
Subjects
SF Animal culture
T Technology (General)
ISBN
978-1-119-04615-8
Publisher DOI
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons
Submitter
Lutz, Simon
Citation apa
Hartmann, K., Eugster, E., Fröhlich-Wyder, M.-T., Jakob, E., Wechsler, D., Ardö, Y., Düsterhöft, E.-M., Engels, W., Huppertz, T., Hynes, E. R., Cristina Perotti, M., & Bergamini, C. V. (2018). Swiss-Type Cheeses (Propionic Acid Cheeses). In Global cheesemaking technology : cheese quality and characteristics (pp. 336–348). John Wiley & Sons. https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/39561
