Abstract
This study characterised exopolysaccharide-producing lactic acid bacteria and examined their potential for use in Cheddar cheese manufacture. Two strains were chosen for incorporation as adjunct cultures in Cheddar cheese manufacture: namely, the homopolysaccharide-producers Weissella cibaria MG1 and Lactobacillus reuteri cc2. These strains both produce dextrans with molecular masses ranging from 105 to 107 Da. Both strains were used in the production of miniature Cheddar cheeses that employed a conventional commercial cheese starter culture Lactococcus lactis R604. A cheese was also included that used purified dextran as an ingredient. The W. cibaria strain survived in cheese with levels increasing by 1.5 log cycles over the ripening period. All experimental cheeses (adjunct or exopolysaccharide ingredient) had higher moisture levels compared with the control cheese made using starter alone. Inclusion of the adjunct strains had no detectable negative effects on cheeses in terms of proteolysis.
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