Previous PageTable Of ContentsNext Page


Methods of processing camel milk into cheese

To produce high quality cheese, it is necessary to follow routine practice common to the production of all cheese types. Only the basic steps are outlined below. For more detailed information, reference should be made to specialized publications on the subject (Alais, 1984; Veisseyre, 1975; Ramet, 1985c; Scott, 1986; Fox, 1987; Robinson, 1990a; Eck, 1990). Later in this chapter, processing methods for the main types of camel milk cheese are summarized.


GENERAL GUIDANCE

Basic milk-processing parameters

To achieve a good-quality product, the following recommendations should be followed:

Preparing and using lactic starters

Using the right lactic starter ensures authentic taste and hygienic quality. For cheese made from raw milk, lactic starter addition is recommended to boost the natural population of lactic acid bacteria and inhibit harmful flora such as coliforms and psychrotrophic and pathogenic bacteria. For cheese made from heat-treated milk, lactic starter addition is mandatory to develop proper acidity, drainage and acid preservation of the curd.

Lactic starters can be prepared by simple methods adapted either for household or for industrial production. The recommended method of preparation is as follows:

Adding cheese-ripening moulds

Some types of cheese are traditionally ripened with moulds that develop either on the surface (fresh, soft and some semi-hard cheeses) or in the body of the cheese (blue cheeses). Traditionally, the uptake of moulds occurs through natural inoculation when the cheese is left out in the ripening room, which is full of spores. This method is risky, however, and causes inconsistency in appearance and taste of the cheese. It is better to use a more controlled inoculation of commercially available complementary exogenous cultures, obtainable in dried or liquid form.

The dominant organisms in the surface flora are strains of Penicillium, Geotrichum and, occasionally, Mucor. These moulds are often also associated with yeasts and bacteria. Penicillium camemberti is widely used and gives a typical white appearance to many soft cheeses, such as Camembert or Brie, and to some semi-hard cheese such as White Tomme. Penicillium roqueforti is the typical mould that develops in blue cheeses, growing in the holes in the cheese curd.

Inoculation of spores is carried out by two methods:

Equipment used for inoculation must be thoroughly cleaned and disinfected to avoid contamination by spoilage organisms. The spore concentration is adjusted according to the method given by the manufacturers.

Because the moulds used in cheese ripening are highly aerobic, the cheese is placed on trays or wooden boards, which allow good all-round surface aeration. During ripening, the cheese is regularly turned to ensure even growth of the mycelium. Other environmental factors also need to be closely regulated to optimize mould development. The temperature is usually set between 12 and 14°C, except for blue cheese when it is set at 6 to 7°C. The relative humidity is set between 85 to 95 percent, depending on the sensitivity of the microflora to water activity. Under these conditions, mould growth is quite slow. The mycelium becomes visible after four to six days; full development takes up to 15 to 25 days.

The proteolytic and lipolytic potential of mould enzymes is important and influences significant biochemical changes in the composition and taste of the cheese.

Characterizing and using milk-clotting preparations

The activity of commercially available milk clotting preparations is determined in cheese making by clotting strength, which corresponds to the ratio between a defined amount of the preparation (volume for liquid preparations, weight for dried preparations) and a defined amount of milk to be clotted under precise time-temperature conditions. The standard reference used in Europe indicates that 1 kg of powdered rennet, labelled with a strength of 1/150 000, will coagulate 150 000 litres of milk at 35°C within 40 minutes.

The strength of liquid preparations declines slowly at ambient temperature (15 to 45°C) and refrigerated storage (0 to 6°C) is recommended. Dried preparations are less sensitive, but refrigeration is advisable for prolonged periods of storage.

The clotting enzyme quantities indicated in the following summaries for processing camel milk into cheese are given with reference to enzyme preparations with a strength of 1/100 000. When preparations with different strengths are used, the amount should be corrected according to the strength ratio.


SUMMARIES

The following summaries of making the main cheese types are based on production trials in the field carried out during missions supported by FAO. The processing summaries are based on laboratory experiments in Saudi Arabia (Ramet, 1985a; Ramet, 1990), pilot production in Tunisia (Ramet, 1987) or commercial production in Mauritania (Ramet, 1994b; Ramet, 1995).

The results indicate that camel milk is not readily processed into cheese compared with milk from other dairy animals. This results mainly from its low total solids content, unique composition and casein properties. Its suitability for cheese making decreases significantly in the hot season, when camel milk production is influenced by water and feed availability.

The summaries have been modified to cover processing of poor-quality milk. It is thus recommended that both heat treatment and calcium salt enrichment be employed. To effect the changes set out in Chapter 3, the other corrective steps may be applied. It is also crucial to stress that these additional corrective steps become less essential as the quality of the camel milk for processing improves.


Fresh (cottage) cheese  
   
CHARACTERISTICS  
Raw material Camel milk
Type Fresh cheese
Shape Various, depending on container shape
Weight Various, depending on container size
Appearance Soft, white, moist paste
Taste Acid
Dry matter 18-30%
Fat 10-30%
   
TECHNOLOGY  
Milk preparation  
Fat adjustment Use whole or partly skimmed milk, fresh or slightly acid
Heat treatment Thermizing (62-65°C for 1 min) or low pasteurizing (72-75°C for 1 min)
Coagulation  
Type Mainly acid
Clotting additives  
Ca chloride or phosphate 10-15 g/100 kg liquid milk
Mesophilic lactic starters Liquid form: 1-3 kg/100 kg milk; dried form: 1-3 g/100 kg milk
Clotting enzyme 0.4-1.0 g/100 kg milk
Acidity at renneting 0.16-0.30%, pH 6.8-6.0
Temperature 20-30°C
Clotting time 7-20 hr
Total coagulation time 16-48 hr
   
DRAINING  
Type Spontaneous, enhanced by gentle mechanical action
Making sequence  
Cutting Irregular pieces (1-10 cm)
Moulding Filter cloths or bags
Pressing Self-pressing by curd with turning at 20-28°C for 10-24 hr
Salting Optional dry salting by mixing into curd
Packing Various containers
Ripening  
Type Cheese consumed without ripening: optional ripening by surface microflora or air drying
Storage Unripened cheese at 0-6°C for 5-15 days; ripened cheese at 12-16°C for 10-20 days
Yield 10-28 kg/100 kg milk

Goat-style cheese  
   
CHARACTERISTICS  
Raw material Camel milk
Type Between fresh and soft cheese
Shape Cylinder or pyramid
Weight 20-200 g
Appearance Varied; dry or moist surface or with bacterial or fungal microflora
Taste Acid for unripened cheese; typical camel cheese flavour for ripened cheese.
   
TECHNOLOGY  
Milk preparation  
Fat adjustment Whole or partly skimmed milk, fresh or slightly acid
Heat treatment Thermizing (62-65°C for 1 min)
Coagulation  
Type Combined, mainly acid
Clotting additives  
Ca chloride or phosphate 10-15 g/100 kg milk
Mesophilic lactic starters Liquid form: 1-2 kg/100 kg milk; dried form: 1-2 g/100 kg milk
Clotting preparation 2-3 g/100 kg milk
Acidity at renneting 0.16-0.30%, pH 6.8-6.0
Temperature 22-35°C
Clotting time 30-120 min
Total coagulation time 10-24 hr
   
DRAINING  
Type Spontaneous, enhanced by gentle mechanical action
Making sequence  
Cutting Cubes (2-4 cm)
Moulding Hand-filling into cloths or bags; first draining in bags for 4-8 hr, second draining in moulds for 4-24 hr
Salting Dry salting on surface, 1.5-2%
Drying Limited air-drying on surface
Ripening  
Type Cheese consumed fresh or after short ripening with fungal microflora/optional air-drying
Ripening with moulds Inoculation with Penicillia and Geotricha strains at 12-25°C for 8-15 days at 85-95% humidity
Dried cheese Air- and sun drying at 15-40°C for 4-30 days at 15-90% humidity
Storage Fresh and ripened cheese at 0-6°C for 5-30 days; air-dried cheese at 20-40°C for 1-6 months
Yield Fresh cheese: 9-18 kg/100 kg milk; dried cheese: 4-8 kg/100 kg milk

Soft cheese  
   
CHARACTERISTICS  
Raw material Camel milk
Type Soft cheese
Shape Flat cylinder
Weight 150-300 g
Appearance Uniform paste, some holes, surface microflora
Dry matter 40-50%
Fat 10-30%
   
TECHNOLOGY  
Milk preparation  
Fat adjustment Whole or partly skimmed milk, fresh or slightly acid
Heat treatment Thermizing (62-65°C for 1 min) or low pasteurizing (72-75°C for 1 min)
Coagulation  
Type Combined, with weak acid effect
Clotting additives  
Ca chloride or phosphate 10-15 g/100 kg milk
Mesophilic lactic starters Liquid form: 1-3 kg/100 kg milk, dried form: 1-3 kg/100 kg milk
Clotting preparation 4-8 g/100 kg milk
Acidity at renneting 0.16-0.25%, pH 6.8-6.2
Temperature 28-35°C
Clotting time 10-30 min
Total coagulation time 60-90 min
   
DRAINING  
Type Spontaneous, enhanced by gentle mechanical action
Making sequence  
Cutting Cubic grains (1-4 cm), kept in whey for 30-90 min up to draining off 30-50% whey
Stirring Slow; periodic for 60 sec every 10 min
Whey extraction Scooping out 30-50% whey before moulding
Moulding By hand, into moulds; possibility of gentle mechanical action; 26-28°C for 4-6 hr, 16-22°C for 18-20 hr; turn moulds 3-5 times during draining
Salting 1.5 to 1.8% dry salting on surface or soaking in brine for 10-30 min
Ripening  
Type With surface microflora; moulds: Penicillia and Geotrichum; bacteria and yeasts: Brevibacterium, Micrococcus, Kluyveromyces, etc.
Temperature 12-14°C
Relative humidity 90-95%
Time 15-45 days
Yield 7-10.5 kg/100 kg milk

Semi-hard cheese  
   
CHARACTERISTICS  
Raw material Camel milk
Type Semi-hard, lactose-free
Shape Flat cylinder
Weight 1-2 kg
Taste Smooth, neutral to slightly acid
Dry matter 44-46%
Fat 10-30%
   
TECHNOLOGY  
Milk preparation  
Fat adjustment Whole or partly skimmed milk, fresh or slightly acid
Heat treatment Thermizing (62-65°C for 1 min) or low pasteurizing (72-75°C for 1 min)
Coagulation  
Type Associated with minor enzyme effect
Clotting additives  
Ca chloride/phosphate 10-15 g/100 kg milk
Mesophilic lactic starters Liquid form: 0.5-1.5 kg/100 kg milk; dried form: 0.5-1.5 g/100 kg milk
Clotting preparation 4-8 g/100 kg milk
Acidity at renneting 0.15-0.20%, pH 6.8-6.4
Temperature 30-33°C
Clotting time 6-20 min
Total coagulation time 20-60 min
   
DRAINING  
Type Spontaneous, improved by robust treatment
Making sequence  
Cutting Regular grains (0.5-1.0 cm)
Pitching After 15-30 min to harden grains
Stirring Periodic for 60 sec every 10 min for 30-45 min
Delactosing Removal of 20-60% whey, then addition of equal amount of potable water at 30-33°C
Pre-pressing In wooden or metallic frames for 10-20 min
Moulding In individual cloths and moulds
Pressing 2-6 hr at 22-26°C
Salting Dry salting on surface or soaking in brine; salt concentration: 1.5-2.5%
Ripening  
Type Open air, with/without surface microflora
Temperature 12-16°C
Relative humidity 90-95%
Time 15-45 days
Yield 6-10 kg/100 kg milk

Semi-hard cheese cured in brine

 
   
CHARACTERISTICS  
Raw material Camel milk
Type Semi-hard, eaten fresh or after curing in brine
Shape Oblong portions
Weight

80-500 g

Appearance Smooth texture without holes, thin crust without surface microflora
Taste Acid, salty
Dry matter 35-45%
Fat 10-30%
   
TECHNOLOGY  
Milk preparation/coagulation/draining As for semi-hard lactose-free cheese, except for curd washing
Salting Dry salting on surface of unripened cheese; brine or whey soaking for cured cheese (8-16%), allowing 20-25% brine absorption by the end of ripening and packing into clay jars or cans
Ripening  
Type Slow ripening in brine or oil bath
Temperature 15-40°C outdoor, or in air-conditioned rooms
Time 30-180 days
Yield 6-10 kg/100 kg milk

Blue cheese  
   
CHARACTERISTICS  
   
Raw material Camel milk
Type Blue cheese
Shape Tall cylinder or oblong block
Weight 0.5-5 kg
Appearance White paste with numerous holes covered in blue-green Penicillium roqueforti mould
Taste Strong, piquant, lipolytic
Dry matter 45-50%
Fat 10-30%
   
TECHNOLOGY  
Milk preparation As for semi-hard cheese up to the end of stirring, which is continued for an additional 30-45 min to obtain a better drained, hard grain
Moulding In hanging draining cloths for wheying off for a further 15-30 min, hand crumbling and mixing Penicillium spores, then moulding
Pressing No mechanical pressing, keeping holes open so mould will grow
Salting Dry salting on surface for 4-5 days at 6-15°C; salt concentration: 2-4%
Ripening  
Type Aerobic conditions
Temperature 8-12°C
Relative humidity 90-95%
Time 30-60 days
Special treatment Pricking at the beginning of ripening to improve growth of Penicillium
Yield 6-8 kg/100 kg milk

 


Previous PageTop Of PageNext Page