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Crystals in cheese: More than a curiosity

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 104, Issue 2, Pages 1233-1250

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2020-19119

Keywords

X-ray diffraction; texture; quality

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Scientific interest in cheese crystals has grown significantly since the 1970s, as advancements in technology and analytics have allowed for the identification and understanding of various crystalline species in natural cheeses. While the presence of crystals in cheese can greatly impact texture, consumer response to their occurrence in the marketplace is mixed. Traditional artisanal cheesemakers have the potential to leverage the science behind cheese crystals to create engaging narratives that add value to their products and enhance consumer enjoyment.
Scientific interest in cheese crystals extends back more than a century. However, starting around the 1970s, industry interest, and interest on the part of cheese scientists, grew dramatically as changes in cheesemaking technology and market changes caused the presence of crystals in the marketplace to increase; advanced analytical capabilities enabled new crystalline species to be identified, their origins and causative factors to be elucidated, and their contributions to cheese texture to be better understood. It is now evident that a host of organic- and inorganic-based crystals occur in natural cheeses. Some crystals form preferentially at the surface of rindless or rinded cheeses, others in the irregular openings or spherical eyes that occur within the body of some cheeses, and still others embedded within the cheese matrix. It is also evident that crystals may profoundly influence cheese texture, both as a direct consequence of their abundance, size, shape, and hardness, and as an indirect result of cascading physiochemical events initiated by crystal formation. Consumer response to increased incidence of crystals in the marketplace has been mixed. On the one hand, surface crystals of calcium lactate pentahydrate on Cheddar cheese came to be viewed quite negatively in some markets, often being mistaken for mold growth and spoilage. This triggered industry concern and led to considerable research to determine the underlying causes and to develop strategies to limit or prevent calcium lactate pentahydrate formation. At the same time, other forms of crystallization increasingly came to be viewed as positive features in the growing market dedicated to artisanal and traditional cheeses, giving rise to a bifurcated consumer response to cheese crystals that is evident today. Traditional artisanal cheesemakers perhaps have the most to gain from advances in cheese-crystal research. Traditional artisanal cheeses rely heavily on stories that are weaved around their identity to create uniqueness and add value. A challenge and opportunity for these cheesemakers in the United States and globally will be to translate the fascinating science of their cheese crystals into engaging narratives that capture the imagination, add value to their cheese, and enhance the enjoyment of their cheese by consumers.

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