Microbiology and Biochemistry of Cheese and Fermented Milk

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The first edition of Advances in the Microbiology and Biochemistry of Cheese and Fermented Milk was aimed at the gap in the literature between the many excellent technical texts on the one hand, and the widely scattered scientific literature on the other. We tried to present the state of the art in preĀ­ competitive research in a predigested, yet scientifically coherent form, and relate it to the marketable properties of fermented dairy products. In this way, researchers could use the book to mentally step back from their specializations and see how far they had progressed as a community; at the same time we hoped that R&D-based companies could use it to assess the utility (or lack of it) of the research output in setting out their research acquisition strategy for product improvement and innovation. In a sense, the first edition could claim to have initiated Technology Foresight in its limited field before Government caught the idea, and it certainly gave the science base an opportunity to display its talents and resources as a potential source of wealth creation, well before this became an 'official' function of publicly funded science and technology. Thus, the first edition was intended as a progressive move within the growing science and technology literature, and judged by its market success, it seems to have served precisely that purpose.

Author(s): P. F. Fox, P. L. H. McSweeney (auth.), B. A. Law (eds.)
Edition: 2
Publisher: Springer US
Year: 1997

Language: English
Pages: 365
City: Boston, MA
Tags: Food Science

Front Matter....Pages i-xviii
Rennets: their role in milk coagulation and cheese ripening....Pages 1-49
Classification and identification of bacteria important in the manufacture of cheese....Pages 50-56
Microbiology and technology of fermented milks....Pages 57-152
Physiology and biochemistry of fermented milks....Pages 153-192
Flavour and texture in soft cheese....Pages 193-206
Flavour and texture in low-fat cheese....Pages 207-218
Control and enhancement of flavour in cheese....Pages 219-252
The chemical and biochemical basis of cheese and milk aroma....Pages 253-298
Proteolytic systems of dairy lactic acid bacteria....Pages 299-318
Molecular genetics of dairy lactic acid bacteria....Pages 319-340
Sensory evaluation of dairy flavours....Pages 341-362
Back Matter....Pages 363-365