Eyes_(cheese)

Eyes (cheese)

Eyes (cheese)

Round holes in cheese


Eyes are the round holes that are a characteristic feature of Swiss-type cheese[1] (e.g. Emmentaler cheese) and some Dutch-type cheeses. The eyes are bubbles of carbon dioxide gas. The gas is produced by various species of bacteria in the cheese.[2]

Emmentaler with eyes

Swiss cheese

In Swiss-type cheeses, the eyes form as a result of the activity of propionic acid bacteria (propionibacteria), notably Propionibacterium freudenreichii subsp. shermanii.[3][4] These bacteria transform lactic acid into propionic acid and carbon dioxide, according to the formula:

3 lactate → 2 propionate + acetate + CO2 + H2O[5]

The CO2 so produced accumulates at weak points in the curd, where it forms the bubbles that become the cheese's eyes.[3] Not all CO2 is so trapped: in an 80 kg (180 lb) cheese, about 20 L of CO2 remain in the eyes, while 60 L remain dissolved in the cheese mass and 40 L are lost from the cheese.[1]

Dutch cheese

In Dutch-type cheeses, the CO2 that forms the eyes results from the metabolisation of citrate by citrate-positive ("Cit+") strains of lactococci.[1]

Bibliography

  • Polychroniadou, A. (2001). Eyes in cheese: a concise review. Milchwissenschaft 56, 74–77.

References

  • Fox, P.F., ed. (13 October 2004). Cheese: Chemistry, Physics, and Microbiology, Volume 1: General Aspects. Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-263652-3.

Footnotes

  1. McSweeney, Paul L.H.; Fox, Patrick F. (2004). "Metabolism of Residual Lactose and of Lactate and Citrate". Cheese: Chemistry, Physics and Microbiology. Vol. 2. Elsevier. pp. 366–367. doi:10.1016/S1874-558X(04)80074-5. ISBN 9780122636523.
  2. Clark, William (1917). "On the Formation of "Eyes" in Emmental Cheese". Journal of Dairy Science. 1 (2): 91–113. doi:10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(17)94362-0.
  3. P.L.H. McSweeney, Biochemistry of Cheese Ripening: Introduction and Overview, in: Fox, p. 349
  4. T. Beresford, A. Williams; The Microbiology of Cheese Ripening, in: Fox, p. 303

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Eyes_(cheese), and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.