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Introduction
to Cheesemaking
.
Cheese is a fermented milk product
made from the curds produced when milk is coagulated. Usually it
is made from cow's milk but there are many varieties made from sheep's
milk and goat's milk. Cheese can also be made from the milk of various
other animals. Real mozzarella, for example, is made from buffaloes'
milk
.
The
Legend
Most cheese authorities
and historians consider that cheese was first made in the Middle East.
The earliest type was a form of sour milk which came into being when it
was discovered that domesticated animals could be milked. A legendary
story has it that cheese was 'discovered' by an unknown Arab nomad. He
is said to have filled a saddlebag with milk to sustain him on a journey
across the desert by horse. After several hours riding he stopped to quench
his thirst, only to find that the milk had separated into a pale watery
liquid and solid white lumps. Because the saddlebag, which was made from
the stomach of a young animal, contained a coagulating enzyme known as
rennin, the milk had been effectively separated into curds and whey by
the combination of the rennin, the hot sun and the galloping motions of
the horse. |